
back to the cloud. From the console, you can activate
compute nodes, configure networks and storage, and
perform maintenance tasks on the Foundation and Enterprise
appliances.
CloudSystem Portal Web-based interface for creating, launching, and managing
virtual machine instances. The portal can be accessed by
appending /portal to the Foundation appliance URL (for
example, https://192.0.2.2/portal).
HP Operations Orchestration Operations Orchestration Central automates operational
tasks and processes using a set of predefined workflows.
OO Central is packaged with the Foundation appliance
and is launched from the Integrated Tools screen in the
CloudSystem Console. Enterprise integrates with OO Central
to support pre- and post-server group provisioning.
Operations Orchestration Studio is an optional tool for
customizing workflows, which is installed separately. The
OO Studio installation files are included with the
CloudSystem installation tar files. See the HP CloudSystem
Installation and Configuration Guide on the Enterprise
Information Library for more information.
Command line interface csadmin provides command line access for storage system
administrative tasks, private network VLAN management
tasks, appliance management tasks and console user
management tasks.
csstart deploys and configures the Foundation base
appliance on the management cluster or hypervisor. For a
more friendly user experience, launch the csstart GUI; or
you can run csstart from the command line.
Networks in CloudSystem Foundation
CloudSystem Foundation is built on OpenStack Networking technology. The underlying network
infrastructure is managed by a Software Defined Networking (SDN) appliance. Multiple network
node appliances manage network services, such as DHCP and routing. A vCenter proxy appliance
runs the OpenStack agents for use. All of these virtual appliances to support networking are
automatically created when CloudSystem Foundation is configured. You can use the CLI to access
and manage these appliances.
CloudSystem Foundation uses three types of networks:
• Private networks are restricted and can be accessed only by virtual machine instances assigned
to the network. See About Private Networks (page 76).
• Provider networksisc.prov.ntwks.name; are shared networks in the data center on which users
can provision any number of virtual machine instances. See About Provider Networks
(page 74).
• The External Network allows you to route virtual machine instances on Private networks out
from the CloudSystem private cloud to the data center, the corporate intranet, or the Internet..
See About the External Network (page 77).
See also How it works (page 15).
CloudSystem Foundation at a glance 19
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