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Stacki is an extremely fast and scalable data center bare metal installer and is part of the Teradata family of open source projects - developed and supported by the Shared Services team at Teradata (formerly the wacky bunch of engineers from StackIQ).
So yeah, there's that.
On Stacki 5.0 we currently DO NOT support installing CentOS/RHEL 6.x systems.
If any of the terms below are unfamiliar to you, read the Definitions
You need one frontend and at least one backend. They need to be networked. The backend needs to be set to PXE boot.
You can't install a backend without a frontend.
You can't install a frontend without an OS pallet AND the stacki pallet.
Which means the stackios pallet is ideal for the majority of you.
If you're an experiential learner and don't need/want explanations follow the Quickstart.
If you have already installed a CentOS/RHEL/some variant and don't want to rebuild that server, follow: Frontend Install - Existing System.
If you don't have an installed frontend and need painfully detailed instructions, potentially HR-violating side commentary, and general ranting and railing, start with the full stackios iso and use: Frontend Install - New.
If you don't actually have an internal or external DVD, use Frontend Installation From USB.
Then install backends. Either continue using the Quickstart or:
- If you control your installing network and you're lazy, follow: Backend Install - Discovery
- If you have enterprise-y needs, i.e. you have neurotic, paranoid, and/or obstreperous security or network teams who require you to map hostname/ip/mac address to limit the DHCP queries to a specific subnet, use: Backend Install - Spreadsheet
If you give a mouse a cluster.....
Once you've done all that and have a default frontend and a default backend up, you'll want to start Customization.
The general work flow is:
- Create a Cart
- Add packages and kickstart config (partitions, controllers, scripts)
- Reinstall backend(s)
- Check/test.
- Fix or do more configuration.
- Rinse, repeat. Stop when happy.
Get them all right here:
** This pallet is THE recommended pallet **
stackios-5.0_20171128_b0ed4e3-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso (md5: 06a32c320cf8ed546c01d6f5cbe9d31c)
** Individual Pallets **
For building on an already installed server.
stacki-5.0_20171128_b0ed4e3-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso (md5: f4c021dd6d7febe1b72a2a8cb81c8a81)
This is a minimal CentOS 7.4 1708 release.
os-7.4_20171128-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso (md5: bc331bb2589fb2921b9b470e238824fa)
If you don't use the minimal os pallet above you need CentOS 7.4 DVD iso. I use Everything but you can use DVD.
AND
You need CentOS-Updates pallet if you're going to use UEFI. Don't come crying to us if you don't have the minimal os or the CentOS-Updates pallet. It's the first thing we're going to ask you. The second thing will be to check you md5 sums so do that too.
CentOS-Updates-7.4_20171128-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso (md5: b69f015c30f004a1ff27aed49931144e)
If you're installing on a pre-installed CentOS/RHEL machine you'll need the frontend-install.py script as well:
frontend-install.py (md5: f64fc40d45eee0c8f2538b4aeb769011)
Easier to read md5 sums:
stackios-5.0_20171128_b0ed4e3-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso = 06a32c320cf8ed546c01d6f5cbe9d31c
stacki-5.0_20171128_b0ed4e3-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso = f4c021dd6d7febe1b72a2a8cb81c8a81
os-7.4_20171128-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso = bc331bb2589fb2921b9b470e238824fa
CentOS-Updates-7.4_20171128-redhat7.x86_64.disk1.iso = b69f015c30f004a1ff27aed49931144e
Checkout our Google Group or our Slack Team for any support or other questions.
Want to contribute to this Wiki? Fork it and send a pull request.
- Getting Started
- Overview
- Definitions
- Stacki Cheat Sheet
- Installation
- Upgrading
- Customization
- Configuration
- Interacting With Your Cluster
- FAQ/Shooting Your Foot
- Developer
- Reference
- Release Notes
- Licenses