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Creating a Couchbase 2.0 on RHEL 5.8 service offering


This topic describes the tasks that you must perform in BMC Cloud Lifecycle Management to create the service offering that the end user could then use to provision the application infrastructure (for example, an OS and an application package). It includes the following topics:

To create the service and the service offering

In the BMC Cloud Lifecycle Management Administrator console, you must add a service and a service offering.

For Couchbase service blueprint, you can create a service and service offering based on the available deployment model. The Couchbase service blueprint supports the following service deployment models:

Deployment model

Description

Cluster deployment model

In the cluster deployment model, the Couchbase cluster is created on single server instance.

Node deployment model

In the node deployment model, a Couchbase node is created and is then associated to the Couchbase cluster. 

To create a service

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To create a service offering

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To make the provisioning request

To make provisioning request for Couchbase cluster or node:

  1. Access Workspaces > Service Instances to display the Service Instances workspace, and click New Service Request.

    serviceinstances_request1.png
  2. In the New Service Request dialog box, click the server provisioning service you want to display the Submit Request dialog box.
  3. To complete the Service Request for Couchbase cluster, specify the following Parameters:

    Cluster.jpg

     

    Parameter

    Description

    Bucket Name

    This parameter represents the name of the bucket. Buckets are used to compartmentalize data within Couchbase Server.

    Bucket RAM Size

    This parameter is the logical size of a bucket.

    Bucket Replica Count

    This parameter represents the Bucket Replication count.

    Bucket Type

    This parameter represents the bucket type.

    Cluster Password

    This value is the administrator password for accessing the cluster.

    Confirm

    This value is the administrator password for accessing the cluster.

    Cluster RAM Size

    This value is the RAM size quota for specific cluster.

    Cluster Username

    This value is the administrator username for accessing the cluster.

  4. To complete the Service Request for Couchbase node, specify the following Parameters:

    node.jpg

     

    Parameter

    Description

    Cluster IP Address

    IP address for Couchbase server

    Cluster Password

    Password for Couchbase server

    Confirm

    Password for Couchbase server

    Cluster Username

    Username for Couchbase server

  5. Click Next.
  6. Enter the data in the required fields to complete the request for an instance of the service request. You can click Next to review the details.
    serviceinstances_request_submit.png
  7. Click Submit.
  8. The request is added to the Pending Activity list in the Service Instances window.

The request status is displayed in the Pending Activity list of the Service Instances window. You can double-click the service request to see detailed information.

For more detailed procedures, see Requesting cloud services.

To validate the provisioned components

After provisioning the service blueprint, you can validate the Couchbase components setup in your environment.

Component name

How to verify

Results

Verify Selinux status

To verify Selinux status, run the following command:

sestatus

It displays the Selinux status, which is disabled.

Couchbase installation

To verify the Couchbase installation, run the following command:

rpm -qa | grep -i couchbase

It displays the following output:

couchbase-server-2.0.1-170.x86_64

Couchbase server status

To verify the Couchbase server status, run the following command:

service couchbase-server status

It displays the following output:

couchbase-server is running

Start Couchbase server

To start the Couchbase server, run the following command:

service couchbase-server start

The Couchbase service starts.

Couchbase server port

To verify the Couchbase listening ports, run the following command:

netstat -atpn | grep -i beam

It displays Couchbase listening ports.

Check Couchbase server list

To check the Couchbase server list, run the following command:

server-list

It displays the list of all Couchbase servers present in a cluster.

Check Couchbase server information

To check Couchbase server information, run the following command:

server-info

It displays the Couchbase server details.

Check bucket list

To check bucket list in a cluster, run the following command:

bucket-list

It displays all the buckets of a cluster.

Where to go next

After you have created the service offering, the cloud end user can request a service offering from the My Cloud Services console. To view a list of tasks that the cloud end user can perform to manage your cloud services, see Managing cloud services in the BMC Cloud Lifecycle Management online technical documentation.

 

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BMC Cloud Lifecycle Management 3.1