We have a very common pattern of periodic tasks that use iter_nodes to fetch some nodes, check them, create a task and conductor some operation. This change introduces a helper decorator for that and migrates the drivers to it. I'm intentionally leaving unit tests intact to demonstrate that the new decorator works exactly the same way (modulo cosmetic changes) as the previous hand-written code. Change-Id: Ifed4a457275d9451cc412dc80f3c09df72f50492 Story: #2009203 Task: #43522
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System Architecture
High Level description
An Ironic deployment will be composed of the following components:
An admin-only RESTful API service, by which privileged users, such as cloud operators and other services within the cloud control plane, may interact with the managed bare metal servers.
A Conductor service, which does the bulk of the work. Functionality is exposed via the API service. The Conductor and API services communicate via RPC.
A Database and DB API for storing the state of the Conductor and Drivers.
A Deployment Ramdisk or Deployment Agent, which provide control over the hardware which is not available remotely to the Conductor. A ramdisk should be built which contains one of these agents, eg. with diskimage-builder. This ramdisk can be booted on-demand.
Note
The agent is never run inside a tenant instance.
Drivers
The internal driver API provides a consistent interface between the
Conductor service and the driver implementations. A driver is defined by
a hardware type deriving from the AbstractHardwareType
class, defining supported hardware interfaces. See /install/enabling-drivers
for
a more detailed explanation. See drivers
for an explanation on how to write new
hardware types and interfaces.
Driver-Specific Periodic Tasks
Drivers may run their own periodic tasks, i.e. actions run repeatedly after a certain amount of time. Such a task is created by using the periodic decorator on an interface method. For example
from futurist import periodics
class FakePower(base.PowerInterface):
@periodics.periodic(spacing=42)
def task(self, manager, context):
pass # do something
Here the spacing
argument is a period in seconds for a
given periodic task. For example 'spacing=5' means every 5 seconds.
Starting with the Yoga cycle, there is also a new decorator :pyironic.conductor.periodics.node_periodic
to create
periodic tasks that handle nodes. See deploy steps documentation <deploy-steps-polling>
for an example.
Driver-Specific Steps
Drivers may have specific steps that may need to be executed or offered to a user to execute in order to perform specific configuration tasks.
These steps should ideally be located on the management interface to enable consistent user experience of the hardware type. What should be avoided is duplication of existing interfaces such as the deploy interface to enable vendor specific cleaning or deployment steps.
Message Routing
Each Conductor registers itself in the database upon start-up, and periodically updates the timestamp of its record. Contained within this registration is a list of the drivers which this Conductor instance supports. This allows all services to maintain a consistent view of which Conductors and which drivers are available at all times.
Based on their respective driver, all nodes are mapped across the set of available Conductors using a consistent hashing algorithm. Node-specific tasks are dispatched from the API tier to the appropriate conductor using conductor-specific RPC channels. As Conductor instances join or leave the cluster, nodes may be remapped to different Conductors, thus triggering various driver actions such as take-over or clean-up.