Guide: Load Balancers
Guide: Load Balancers
This guide walks through creating a private network, two web server VMs, and exposing them via an OpenStack load balancer. It covers network creation, VM provisioning, floating IP assignment, basic web server setup, and load balancer configuration and testing.
Network Setup
- Create a private network:
openstack network create myNet
- Create a subnet:
openstack subnet create mySubNet_v4 --network myNet --subnet-range 192.168.100.0/24
- Create a router and connect it to the public network:
openstack router create myRouter openstack router add subnet myRouter mySubNet_v4 openstack router set myRouter --external-gateway provider_net
Example: Two Webserver as Backend for the Load Balancer
Perpare two Web Server VMs
- Create 2 identical VMs as web servers:
openstack server create \ --image ubuntu-24.04 \ --flavor m1.small \ --network myNet \ --key-name myKey \ --min 2 --max 2 \ webserver
- Assign temporary floating IPs to make the VMs accessible:
FIP1=$(openstack floating ip create provider_net -f value -c floating_ip_address) FIP2=$(openstack floating ip create provider_net -f value -c floating_ip_address) openstack server add floating ip webserver-1 $FIP1 openstack server add floating ip webserver-2 $FIP2
Install a basic web server on the VMs
- SSH into each VM and run:
sudo apt update && \ sudo apt -y install apache2 && \ sudo systemctl enable --now apache2 && \ echo webserver-1 | sudo tee /var/www/html/index.html
- Add security rules to allow HTTP access on port 80 as described in the Security section.
- Test the web servers:
curl $FIP1 # Expected output: webserver-1
Integrate the Web Servers with a Load Balancer
Create a Load Balancer
- Create the load balancer:
openstack loadbalancer create \ --name myLB \ --vip-subnet-id mySubNet_v4 \ --provider ovn
- Create a listener on port 80:
openstack loadbalancer listener create \
--name myListener \
--protocol TCP \
--protocol-port 80 \
myLB
- Create a pool for the listener:
openstack loadbalancer pool create \
--name myPool \
--listener myListener \
--protocol TCP \
--lb-algorithm SOURCE_IP_PORT
Add Web Servers to the Pool
- Get the subnet ID and VM IPs:
SUBNET_ID=$(openstack subnet list --network myNet -f value -c ID) WEB1_IP=$(openstack server show webserver-1 -f value -c addresses | grep -o '192\.168\.100\.[0-9]\+') WEB2_IP=$(openstack server show webserver-2 -f value -c addresses | grep -o '192\.168\.100\.[0-9]\+')
- Add each VM to the pool:
openstack loadbalancer member create \
--subnet-id $SUBNET_ID \
--address $WEB1_IP \
--protocol-port 80 \
myPool
openstack loadbalancer member create \
--subnet-id $SUBNET_ID \
--address $WEB2_IP \
--protocol-port 80 \
myPool
Assign a Floating IP to the Load Balancer
- Create a floating IP and associate it with the VIP of the load balancer:
FIP=$(openstack floating ip create provider_net -f value -c floating_ip_address) VIPPORT=$(openstack loadbalancer show myLB -f value -c vip_port_id) openstack floating ip set --port $VIPPORT $FIP
- Test the load balancer:
curl $FIP # Expected output (may alternate between VMs): webserver-1 / webserver-2