mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
synced 2024-12-25 04:43:17 +00:00
5a2b7c25b6
Until now daemon health metrics were stored without being used. One of the most helpful metrics there is SLOW_OPS with respect to OSDs and MONs which this commit tries to expose to bring fine grained metrics to find troublesome OSDs instead of having a lone healthcheck of slow ops in the whole cluster. Signed-off-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pdiazbou@redhat.com>
736 lines
29 KiB
ReStructuredText
736 lines
29 KiB
ReStructuredText
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.. _mgr-module-dev:
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ceph-mgr module developer's guide
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=================================
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.. warning::
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This is developer documentation, describing Ceph internals that
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are only relevant to people writing ceph-mgr modules.
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Creating a module
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-----------------
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In pybind/mgr/, create a python module. Within your module, create a class
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that inherits from ``MgrModule``. For ceph-mgr to detect your module, your
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directory must contain a file called `module.py`.
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The most important methods to override are:
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* a ``serve`` member function for server-type modules. This
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function should block forever.
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* a ``notify`` member function if your module needs to
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take action when new cluster data is available.
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* a ``handle_command`` member function if your module
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exposes CLI commands. But this approach for exposing commands
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is deprecated. For more details, see :ref:`mgr-module-exposing-commands`.
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Some modules interface with external orchestrators to deploy
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Ceph services. These also inherit from ``Orchestrator``, which adds
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additional methods to the base ``MgrModule`` class. See
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:ref:`Orchestrator modules <orchestrator-modules>` for more on
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creating these modules.
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Installing a module
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-------------------
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Once your module is present in the location set by the
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``mgr module path`` configuration setting, you can enable it
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via the ``ceph mgr module enable`` command::
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ceph mgr module enable mymodule
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Note that the MgrModule interface is not stable, so any modules maintained
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outside of the Ceph tree are liable to break when run against any newer
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or older versions of Ceph.
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.. _mgr module dev logging:
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Logging
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-------
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Logging in Ceph manager modules is done as in any other Python program. Just
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import the ``logging`` package and get a logger instance with the
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``logging.getLogger`` function.
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Each module has a ``log_level`` option that specifies the current Python
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logging level of the module.
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To change or query the logging level of the module use the following Ceph
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commands::
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ceph config get mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_level
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ceph config set mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_level <info|debug|critical|error|warning|>
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The logging level used upon the module's start is determined by the current
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logging level of the mgr daemon, unless if the ``log_level`` option was
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previously set with the ``config set ...`` command. The mgr daemon logging
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level is mapped to the module python logging level as follows:
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* <= 0 is CRITICAL
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* <= 1 is WARNING
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* <= 4 is INFO
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* <= +inf is DEBUG
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We can unset the module log level and fallback to the mgr daemon logging level
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by running the following command::
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ceph config set mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_level ''
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By default, modules' logging messages are processed by the Ceph logging layer
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where they will be recorded in the mgr daemon's log file.
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But it's also possible to send a module's logging message to it's own file.
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The module's log file will be located in the same directory as the mgr daemon's
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log file with the following name pattern::
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<mgr_daemon_log_file_name>.<module_name>.log
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To enable the file logging on a module use the following command::
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ceph config set mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_to_file true
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When the module's file logging is enabled, module's logging messages stop
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being written to the mgr daemon's log file and are only written to the
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module's log file.
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It's also possible to check the status and disable the file logging with the
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following commands::
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ceph config get mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_to_file
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ceph config set mgr mgr/<module_name>/log_to_file false
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.. _mgr-module-exposing-commands:
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Exposing commands
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-----------------
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There are two approaches for exposing a command. The first method involves using
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the ``@CLICommand`` decorator to decorate the methods needed to handle a command.
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The second method uses a ``COMMANDS`` attribute defined for the module class.
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The CLICommand approach
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.. code:: python
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@CLICommand('antigravity send to blackhole',
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perm='rw')
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def send_to_blackhole(self, oid: str, blackhole: Optional[str] = None, inbuf: Optional[str] = None):
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'''
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Send the specified object to black hole
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'''
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obj = self.find_object(oid)
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if obj is None:
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return HandleCommandResult(-errno.ENOENT, stderr=f"object '{oid}' not found")
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if blackhole is not None and inbuf is not None:
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try:
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location = self.decrypt(blackhole, passphrase=inbuf)
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except ValueError:
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return HandleCommandResult(-errno.EINVAL, stderr='unable to decrypt location')
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else:
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location = blackhole
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self.send_object_to(obj, location)
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return HandleCommandResult(stdout=f"the black hole swallowed '{oid}'")
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The first parameter passed to ``CLICommand`` is the "name" of the command.
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Since there are lots of commands in Ceph, we tend to group related commands
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with a common prefix. In this case, "antigravity" is used for this purpose.
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As the author is probably designing a module which is also able to launch
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rockets into the deep space.
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The `type annotations <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/>`_ for the
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method parameters are mandatory here, so the usage of the command can be
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properly reported to the ``ceph`` CLI, and the manager daemon can convert
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the serialized command parameters sent by the clients to the expected type
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before passing them to the handler method. With properly implemented types,
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one can also perform some sanity checks against the parameters!
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The names of the parameters are part of the command interface, so please
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try to take the backward compatibility into consideration when changing
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them. But you **cannot** change name of ``inbuf`` parameter, it is used
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to pass the content of the file specified by ``ceph --in-file`` option.
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The docstring of the method is used for the description of the command.
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The manager daemon cooks the usage of the command from these ingredients,
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like::
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antigravity send to blackhole <oid> [<blackhole>] Send the specified object to black hole
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as part of the output of ``ceph --help``.
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In addition to ``@CLICommand``, you could also use ``@CLIReadCommand`` or
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``@CLIWriteCommand`` if your command only requires read permissions or
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write permissions respectively.
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The COMMANDS Approach
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This method uses the ``COMMANDS`` class attribute of your module to define
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a list of dicts like this::
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COMMANDS = [
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{
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"cmd": "foobar name=myarg,type=CephString",
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"desc": "Do something awesome",
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"perm": "rw",
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# optional:
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"poll": "true"
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}
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]
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The ``cmd`` part of each entry is parsed in the same way as internal
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Ceph mon and admin socket commands (see mon/MonCommands.h in
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the Ceph source for examples). Note that the "poll" field is optional,
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and is set to False by default; this indicates to the ``ceph`` CLI
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that it should call this command repeatedly and output results (see
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``ceph -h`` and its ``--period`` option).
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Each command is expected to return a tuple ``(retval, stdout, stderr)``.
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``retval`` is an integer representing a libc error code (e.g. EINVAL,
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EPERM, or 0 for no error), ``stdout`` is a string containing any
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non-error output, and ``stderr`` is a string containing any progress or
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error explanation output. Either or both of the two strings may be empty.
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Implement the ``handle_command`` function to respond to the commands
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when they are sent:
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.. py:currentmodule:: mgr_module
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.handle_command
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Responses and Formatting
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Functions that handle manager commands are expected to return a three element
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tuple with the type signature ``Tuple[int, str, str]``. The first element is a
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return value/error code, where zero indicates no error and a negative `errno`_
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is typically used for error conditions. The second element corresponds to the
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command's "output". The third element corresponds to the command's "error
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output" (akin to stderr) and is frequently used to report textual error details
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when the return code is non-zero. The ``mgr_module.HandleCommandResult`` type
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can also be used in lieu of a response tuple.
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.. _`errno`: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/errno.3.html
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When the implementation of a command raises an exception one of two possible
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approaches to handling the exception exist. First, the command function can do
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nothing and let the exception bubble up to the manager. When this happens the
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manager will automatically set a return code to -EINVAL and record a trace-back
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in the error output. This trace-back can be very long in some cases. The second
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approach is to handle an exception within a try-except block and convert the
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exception to an error code that better fits the exception (converting a
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KeyError to -ENOENT, for example). In this case the error output may also be
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set to something more specific and actionable by the one calling the command.
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In many cases, especially in more recent versions of Ceph, manager commands are
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designed to return structured output to the caller. Structured output includes
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machine-parsable data such as JSON, YAML, XML, etc. JSON is the most common
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structured output format returned by manager commands. As of Ceph Reef, there
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are a number of new decorators available from the ``object_format`` module that
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help manage formatting output and handling exceptions automatically. The
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intent is that most of the implementation of a manager command can be written in
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an idiomatic (aka "Pythonic") style and the decorators will take care of most of
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the work needed to format the output and return manager response tuples.
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In most cases, net new code should use the ``Responder`` decorator. Example:
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.. code:: python
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@CLICommand('antigravity list wormholes', perm='r')
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@Responder()
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def list_wormholes(self, oid: str, details: bool = False) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:
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'''List wormholes associated with the supplied oid.
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'''
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with self.open_wormhole_db() as db:
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wormholes = db.query(oid=oid)
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if not details:
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return [{'name': wh.name} for wh in wormholes]
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return [{'name': wh.name, 'age': wh.get_age(), 'destination': wh.dest}
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for wh in wormholes]
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Formatting
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++++++++++
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The ``Responder`` decorator automatically takes care of converting Python
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objects into a response tuple with formatted output. By default, this decorator
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can automatically return JSON and YAML. When invoked from the command line the
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``--format`` flag can be used to select the response format. If left
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unspecified, JSON will be returned. The automatic formatting can be applied to
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any basic Python type: lists, dicts, str, int, etc. Other objects can be
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formatted automatically if they meet the ``SimpleDataProvider`` protocol - they
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provide a ``to_simplified`` method. The ``to_simplified`` function must return
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a simplified representation of the object made out of basic types.
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.. code:: python
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class MyCleverObject:
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def to_simplified(self) -> Dict[str, int]:
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# returns a python object(s) made up from basic types
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return {"gravitons": 999, "tachyons": 404}
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@CLICommand('antigravity list wormholes', perm='r')
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@Responder()
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def list_wormholes(self, oid: str, details: bool = False) -> MyCleverObject:
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'''List wormholes associated with the supplied oid.
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'''
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...
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The behavior of the automatic output formatting can be customized and extednted
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to other types of formatting (XML, Plain Text, etc). As this is a complex
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topic, please refer to the module documentation for the ``object_format``
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module.
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Error Handling
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++++++++++++++
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Additionally, the ``Responder`` decorator can automatically handle converting
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some exceptions into response tuples. Any raised exception inheriting from
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``ErrorResponseBase`` will be automatically converted into a response tuple.
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The common approach will be to use ``ErrorResponse``, an exception type that
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can be used directly and has arguments for the error output and return value or
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it can be constructed from an existing exception using the ``wrap``
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classmethod. The wrap classmethod will automatically use the exception text and
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if available the ``errno`` property of other exceptions.
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Converting our previous example to use this exception handling approach:
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.. code:: python
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@CLICommand('antigravity list wormholes', perm='r')
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@Responder()
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def list_wormholes(self, oid: str, details: bool = False) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:
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'''List wormholes associated with the supplied oid.
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'''
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try:
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with self.open_wormhole_db() as db:
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wormholes = db.query(oid=oid)
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except UnknownOIDError:
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raise ErrorResponse(f"Unknown oid: {oid}", return_value=-errno.ENOENT)
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except WormholeDBError as err:
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raise ErrorResponse.wrap(err)
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if not details:
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return [{'name': wh.name} for wh in wormholes]
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return [{'name': wh.name, 'age': wh.get_age(), 'destination': wh.dest}
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for wh in wormholes]
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.. note:: Because the decorator can not determine the difference between a
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programming mistake and an expected error condition it does not try to
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catch all exceptions.
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Additional Decorators
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+++++++++++++++++++++
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The ``object_format`` module provides additional decorators to complement
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``Responder`` but for cases where ``Responder`` is insufficient or too "heavy
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weight".
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The ``ErrorResponseHandler`` decorator exists for cases where you *must* still
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return a manager response tuple but want to handle errors as exceptions (as in
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typical Python code). In short, it works like ``Responder`` but only with
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regards to exceptions. Just like ``Responder`` it handles exceptions that
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inherit from ``ErrorResponseBase``. This can be useful in cases where you need
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to return raw data in the output. Example:
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.. code:: python
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@CLICommand('antigravity dump config', perm='r')
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@ErrorResponseHandler()
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def dump_config(self, oid: str) -> Tuple[int, str, str]:
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'''Dump configuration
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'''
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# we have no control over what data is inside the blob!
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try:
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blob = self.fetch_raw_config_blob(oid)
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return 0, blob, ''
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except KeyError:
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raise ErrorResponse("Blob does not exist", return_value=-errno.ENOENT)
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The ``EmptyResponder`` decorator exists for cases where, on a success
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condition, no output should be generated at all. If you used ``Responder`` and
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default JSON formatting you may always see outputs like ``{}`` or ``[]`` if the
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command completes without error. Instead, ``EmptyResponder`` helps you create
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manager commands that obey the `Rule of Silence`_ when the command has no
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interesting output to emit on success. The functions that ``EmptyResponder``
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decorate should always return ``None``. Like both ``Responder`` and
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``ErrorResponseHandler`` exceptions that inhert from ``ErrorResponseBase`` will
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be automatically processed. Example:
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.. code:: python
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@CLICommand('antigravity create wormhole', perm='rw')
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@EmptyResponder()
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def create_wormhole(self, oid: str, name: str) -> None:
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'''Create a new wormhole.
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'''
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try:
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with self.open_wormhole_db() as db:
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wh = Wormhole(name)
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db.insert(oid=oid, wormhole=wh)
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except UnknownOIDError:
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raise ErrorResponse(f"Unknown oid: {oid}", return_value=-errno.ENOENT)
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except InvalidWormholeError as err:
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raise ErrorResponse.wrap(err)
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except WormholeDBError as err:
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raise ErrorResponse.wrap(err)
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.. _`Rule of Silence`: http://www.linfo.org/rule_of_silence.html
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Configuration options
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---------------------
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Modules can load and store configuration options using the
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``set_module_option`` and ``get_module_option`` methods.
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.. note:: Use ``set_module_option`` and ``get_module_option`` to
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manage user-visible configuration options that are not blobs (like
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certificates). If you want to persist module-internal data or
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binary configuration data consider using the `KV store`_.
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You must declare your available configuration options in the
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``MODULE_OPTIONS`` class attribute, like this:
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.. code-block:: python
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MODULE_OPTIONS = [
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Option(name="my_option")
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]
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If you try to use set_module_option or get_module_option on options not declared
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in ``MODULE_OPTIONS``, an exception will be raised.
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You may choose to provide setter commands in your module to perform
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high level validation. Users can also modify configuration using
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the normal `ceph config set` command, where the configuration options
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for a mgr module are named like `mgr/<module name>/<option>`.
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If a configuration option is different depending on which node the mgr
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is running on, then use *localized* configuration (
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``get_localized_module_option``, ``set_localized_module_option``).
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This may be necessary for options such as what address to listen on.
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Localized options may also be set externally with ``ceph config set``,
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where they key name is like ``mgr/<module name>/<mgr id>/<option>``
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If you need to load and store data (e.g. something larger, binary, or multiline),
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use the KV store instead of configuration options (see next section).
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Hints for using config options:
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* Reads are fast: ceph-mgr keeps a local in-memory copy, so in many cases
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you can just do a get_module_option every time you use a option, rather than
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copying it out into a variable.
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* Writes block until the value is persisted (i.e. round trip to the monitor),
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but reads from another thread will see the new value immediately.
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* If a user has used `config set` from the command line, then the new
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value will become visible to `get_module_option` immediately, although the
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mon->mgr update is asynchronous, so `config set` will return a fraction
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of a second before the new value is visible on the mgr.
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* To delete a config value (i.e. revert to default), just pass ``None`` to
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set_module_option.
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_module_option
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.set_module_option
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_localized_module_option
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.set_localized_module_option
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KV store
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--------
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Modules have access to a private (per-module) key value store, which
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is implemented using the monitor's "config-key" commands. Use
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the ``set_store`` and ``get_store`` methods to access the KV store from
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your module.
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The KV store commands work in a similar way to the configuration
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commands. Reads are fast, operating from a local cache. Writes block
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on persistence and do a round trip to the monitor.
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This data can be access from outside of ceph-mgr using the
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``ceph config-key [get|set]`` commands. Key names follow the same
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conventions as configuration options. Note that any values updated
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from outside of ceph-mgr will not be seen by running modules until
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the next restart. Users should be discouraged from accessing module KV
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data externally -- if it is necessary for users to populate data, modules
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should provide special commands to set the data via the module.
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Use the ``get_store_prefix`` function to enumerate keys within
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a particular prefix (i.e. all keys starting with a particular substring).
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_store
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.set_store
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_localized_store
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.. automethod:: MgrModule.set_localized_store
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|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_store_prefix
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accessing cluster data
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
Modules have access to the in-memory copies of the Ceph cluster's
|
|
state that the mgr maintains. Accessor functions as exposed
|
|
as members of MgrModule.
|
|
|
|
Calls that access the cluster or daemon state are generally going
|
|
from Python into native C++ routines. There is some overhead to this,
|
|
but much less than for example calling into a REST API or calling into
|
|
an SQL database.
|
|
|
|
There are no consistency rules about access to cluster structures or
|
|
daemon metadata. For example, an OSD might exist in OSDMap but
|
|
have no metadata, or vice versa. On a healthy cluster these
|
|
will be very rare transient states, but modules should be written
|
|
to cope with the possibility.
|
|
|
|
Note that these accessors must not be called in the modules ``__init__``
|
|
function. This will result in a circular locking exception.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_server
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.list_servers
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_metadata
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_daemon_status
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_perf_schema
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_counter
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_mgr_id
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.get_daemon_health_metrics
|
|
|
|
Exposing health checks
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
Modules can raise first class Ceph health checks, which will be reported
|
|
in the output of ``ceph status`` and in other places that report on the
|
|
cluster's health.
|
|
|
|
If you use ``set_health_checks`` to report a problem, be sure to call
|
|
it again with an empty dict to clear your health check when the problem
|
|
goes away.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.set_health_checks
|
|
|
|
What if the mons are down?
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
|
|
The manager daemon gets much of its state (such as the cluster maps)
|
|
from the monitor. If the monitor cluster is inaccessible, whichever
|
|
manager was active will continue to run, with the latest state it saw
|
|
still in memory.
|
|
|
|
However, if you are creating a module that shows the cluster state
|
|
to the user then you may well not want to mislead them by showing
|
|
them that out of date state.
|
|
|
|
To check if the manager daemon currently has a connection to
|
|
the monitor cluster, use this function:
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.have_mon_connection
|
|
|
|
Reporting if your module cannot run
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
If your module cannot be run for any reason (such as a missing dependency),
|
|
then you can report that by implementing the ``can_run`` function.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.can_run
|
|
|
|
Note that this will only work properly if your module can always be imported:
|
|
if you are importing a dependency that may be absent, then do it in a
|
|
try/except block so that your module can be loaded far enough to use
|
|
``can_run`` even if the dependency is absent.
|
|
|
|
Sending commands
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
A non-blocking facility is provided for sending monitor commands
|
|
to the cluster.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.send_command
|
|
|
|
Receiving notifications
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
The manager daemon calls the ``notify`` function on all active modules
|
|
when certain important pieces of cluster state are updated, such as the
|
|
cluster maps.
|
|
|
|
The actual data is not passed into this function, rather it is a cue for
|
|
the module to go and read the relevant structure if it is interested. Most
|
|
modules ignore most types of notification: to ignore a notification
|
|
simply return from this function without doing anything.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.notify
|
|
|
|
Accessing RADOS or CephFS
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
If you want to use the librados python API to access data stored in
|
|
the Ceph cluster, you can access the ``rados`` attribute of your
|
|
``MgrModule`` instance. This is an instance of ``rados.Rados`` which
|
|
has been constructed for you using the existing Ceph context (an internal
|
|
detail of the C++ Ceph code) of the mgr daemon.
|
|
|
|
Always use this specially constructed librados instance instead of
|
|
constructing one by hand.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, if you are using libcephfs to access the file system, then
|
|
use the libcephfs ``create_with_rados`` to construct it from the
|
|
``MgrModule.rados`` librados instance, and thereby inherit the correct context.
|
|
|
|
Remember that your module may be running while other parts of the cluster
|
|
are down: do not assume that librados or libcephfs calls will return
|
|
promptly -- consider whether to use timeouts or to block if the rest of
|
|
the cluster is not fully available.
|
|
|
|
Implementing standby mode
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
For some modules, it is useful to run on standby manager daemons as well
|
|
as on the active daemon. For example, an HTTP server can usefully
|
|
serve HTTP redirect responses from the standby managers so that
|
|
the user can point his browser at any of the manager daemons without
|
|
having to worry about which one is active.
|
|
|
|
Standby manager daemons look for a subclass of ``StandbyModule``
|
|
in each module. If the class is not found then the module is not
|
|
used at all on standby daemons. If the class is found, then
|
|
its ``serve`` method is called. Implementations of ``StandbyModule``
|
|
must inherit from ``mgr_module.MgrStandbyModule``.
|
|
|
|
The interface of ``MgrStandbyModule`` is much restricted compared to
|
|
``MgrModule`` -- none of the Ceph cluster state is available to
|
|
the module. ``serve`` and ``shutdown`` methods are used in the same
|
|
way as a normal module class. The ``get_active_uri`` method enables
|
|
the standby module to discover the address of its active peer in
|
|
order to make redirects. See the ``MgrStandbyModule`` definition
|
|
in the Ceph source code for the full list of methods.
|
|
|
|
For an example of how to use this interface, look at the source code
|
|
of the ``dashboard`` module.
|
|
|
|
Communicating between modules
|
|
-----------------------------
|
|
|
|
Modules can invoke member functions of other modules.
|
|
|
|
.. automethod:: MgrModule.remote
|
|
|
|
Be sure to handle ``ImportError`` to deal with the case that the desired
|
|
module is not enabled.
|
|
|
|
If the remote method raises a python exception, this will be converted
|
|
to a RuntimeError on the calling side, where the message string describes
|
|
the exception that was originally thrown. If your logic intends
|
|
to handle certain errors cleanly, it is better to modify the remote method
|
|
to return an error value instead of raising an exception.
|
|
|
|
At time of writing, inter-module calls are implemented without
|
|
copies or serialization, so when you return a python object, you're
|
|
returning a reference to that object to the calling module. It
|
|
is recommend *not* to rely on this reference passing, as in future the
|
|
implementation may change to serialize arguments and return
|
|
values.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shutting down cleanly
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
If a module implements the ``serve()`` method, it should also implement
|
|
the ``shutdown()`` method to shutdown cleanly: misbehaving modules
|
|
may otherwise prevent clean shutdown of ceph-mgr.
|
|
|
|
Limitations
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
It is not possible to call back into C++ code from a module's
|
|
``__init__()`` method. For example calling ``self.get_module_option()`` at
|
|
this point will result in an assertion failure in ceph-mgr. For modules
|
|
that implement the ``serve()`` method, it usually makes sense to do most
|
|
initialization inside that method instead.
|
|
|
|
Debugging
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Apparently, we can always use the :ref:`mgr module dev logging` facility
|
|
for debugging a ceph-mgr module. But some of us might miss `PDB`_ and the
|
|
interactive Python interpreter. Yes, we can have them as well when developing
|
|
ceph-mgr modules! ``ceph_mgr_repl.py`` can drop you into an interactive shell
|
|
talking to ``selftest`` module. With this tool, one can peek and poke the
|
|
ceph-mgr module, and use all the exposed facilities in quite the same way
|
|
how we use the Python command line interpreter. For using ``ceph_mgr_repl.py``,
|
|
we need to
|
|
|
|
#. ready a Ceph cluster
|
|
#. enable the ``selftest`` module
|
|
#. setup the necessary environment variables
|
|
#. launch the tool
|
|
|
|
.. _PDB: https://docs.python.org/3/library/pdb.html
|
|
|
|
Following is a sample session, in which the Ceph version is queried by
|
|
inputting ``print(mgr.version)`` at the prompt. And later
|
|
``timeit`` module is imported to measure the execution time of
|
|
`mgr.get_mgr_id()`.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: console
|
|
|
|
$ cd build
|
|
$ MDS=0 MGR=1 OSD=3 MON=1 ../src/vstart.sh -n -x
|
|
$ bin/ceph mgr module enable selftest
|
|
$ ../src/pybind/ceph_mgr_repl.py --show-env
|
|
$ export PYTHONPATH=/home/me/ceph/src/pybind:/home/me/ceph/build/lib/cython_modules/lib.3:/home/me/ceph/src/python-common:$PYTHONPATH
|
|
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/me/ceph/build/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
|
|
$ export PYTHONPATH=/home/me/ceph/src/pybind:/home/me/ceph/build/lib/cython_modules/lib.3:/home/me/ceph/src/python-common:$PYTHONPATH
|
|
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/me/ceph/build/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
|
|
$ ../src/pybind/ceph_mgr_repl.py
|
|
$ ../src/pybind/ceph_mgr_repl.py
|
|
Python 3.9.2 (default, Feb 28 2021, 17:03:44)
|
|
[GCC 10.2.1 20210110] on linux
|
|
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
|
|
(MgrModuleInteractiveConsole)
|
|
[mgr self-test eval] >>> print(mgr.version)
|
|
ceph version Development (no_version) quincy (dev)
|
|
[mgr self-test eval] >>> from timeit import timeit
|
|
[mgr self-test eval] >>> timeit(mgr.get_mgr_id)
|
|
0.16303414600042743
|
|
[mgr self-test eval] >>>
|
|
|
|
If you want to "talk" to a ceph-mgr module other than ``selftest`` using
|
|
this tool, you can either add a command to the module you want to debug
|
|
exactly like how ``mgr self-test eval`` command was added to ``selftest``. Or
|
|
we can make this simpler by promoting the ``eval()`` method to a dedicated
|
|
`Mixin`_ class and inherit your ``MgrModule`` subclass from it. And define
|
|
a command with it. Assuming the prefix of the command is ``mgr my-module eval``,
|
|
one can just put
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash $
|
|
|
|
../src/pybind/ceph_mgr_repl.py --prefix "mgr my-module eval"
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _Mixin: _https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixin
|
|
|
|
Is something missing?
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
The ceph-mgr python interface is not set in stone. If you have a need
|
|
that is not satisfied by the current interface, please bring it up
|
|
on the ceph-devel mailing list. While it is desired to avoid bloating
|
|
the interface, it is not generally very hard to expose existing data
|
|
to the Python code when there is a good reason.
|
|
|