deb-mistral/doc/source/quickstart.rst
Sharat Sharma c07cf48a60 Changes made to comply with OpenStack writing style
The writing styles at few places were not in compliance with
the OpenStack writing style as mentioned in
http://docs.openstack.org/contributor-guide/writing-style
/general-writing-guidelines.html. This patch changes the heading
styles and adds a few other minor changes in the documents.

Change-Id: I0d90ba32ddcef0427b1dc4358206210f166e798a
Partial-Implements: blueprint mistral-doc
2016-10-04 20:06:15 +05:30

6.3 KiB

Quick Start

Prerequisites

Before you start following this guide, make sure you have completed these three prerequisites.

Install and run Mistral

Go through the installation manual: Mistral Installation Guide </guides/installation_guide>

Install Mistral client

To install mistralclient, please refer to Mistral Client / CLI Guide </guides/mistralclient_guide>

Export Keystone credentials

To use the OpenStack command line tools you should specify environment variables with the configuration details for your OpenStack installation. The following example assumes that the Identity service is at 127.0.0.1:5000, with a user admin in the admin tenant whose password is password:

$ export OS_AUTH_URL=http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2.0/
$ export OS_TENANT_NAME=admin
$ export OS_USERNAME=admin
$ export OS_PASSWORD=password

Write a workflow

For example, we have the following workflow.

---
version: "2.0"

my_workflow:
  type: direct

  input:
    - names

  tasks:
    task1:
      with-items: name in <% $.names %>
      action: std.echo output=<% $.name %>
      on-success: task2

    task2:
      action: std.echo output="Done"

This simple workflow iterates through a list of names in task1 (using with-items), stores them as a task result (using the std.echo action) and then stores the word "Done" as a result of the second task (task2).

To learn more about the Mistral Workflows and what you can do, read the Mistral DSL specification </dsl/dsl_v2>

Upload the workflow

Use the Mistral CLI to create the workflow:

$ mistral workflow-create <workflow.yaml>

The output should look similar to this:

+-------------+--------+---------+---------------------+------------+
| Name        | Tags   | Input   | Created at          | Updated at |
+-------------+--------+---------+---------------------+------------+
| my_workflow | <none> | names   | 2015-08-13 08:44:49 | None       |
+-------------+--------+---------+---------------------+------------+

Run the workflow and check the result

Use the Mistral CLI to start the new workflow, passing in a list of names as JSON:

$ mistral execution-create my_workflow '{"names": ["John", "Mistral", "Ivan", "Crystal"]}'

Make sure the output is like the following:

+-------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field       | Value                                |
+-------------+--------------------------------------+
| ID          | 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784 |
| Workflow    | my_workflow                          |
| Description |                                      |
| State       | RUNNING                              |
| State info  | None                                 |
| Created at  | 2015-08-28 09:05:00.065917           |
| Updated at  | 2015-08-28 09:05:00.844990           |
+-------------+--------------------------------------+

After a moment, check the status of the workflow execution (replace the example execution id with the ID output above):

$ mistral execution-get 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784

+-------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field       | Value                                |
+-------------+--------------------------------------+
| ID          | 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784 |
| Workflow    | my_workflow                          |
| Description |                                      |
| State       | SUCCESS                              |
| State info  | None                                 |
| Created at  | 2015-08-28 09:05:00                  |
| Updated at  | 2015-08-28 09:05:03                  |
+-------------+--------------------------------------+

The status of each task also can be checked:

$ mistral task-list 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784

+--------------------------------------+-------+---------------+--------------------------------------+---------+
| ID                                   | Name  | Workflow name | Execution ID                         | State   |
+--------------------------------------+-------+---------------+--------------------------------------+---------+
| 91874635-dcd4-4718-a864-ac90408c1085 | task1 | my_workflow   | 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784 | SUCCESS |
| 3bf82863-28cb-4148-bfb8-1a6c3c115022 | task2 | my_workflow   | 056c2ed1-695f-4ccd-92af-e31bc6153784 | SUCCESS |
+--------------------------------------+-------+---------------+--------------------------------------+---------+

Check the result of task 'task1':

$ mistral task-get-result 91874635-dcd4-4718-a864-ac90408c1085

[
    "John",
    "Mistral",
    "Ivan",
    "Crystal"
]

If needed, we can go deeper and look at a list of the results of the action_executions of a single task:

$ mistral action-execution-list 91874635-dcd4-4718-a864-ac90408c1085

+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+-----------+---------+------------+-------------+
| ID                                   | Name     | Workflow name | Task name | State   | State info | Is accepted |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+-----------+---------+------------+-------------+
| 20c2b65d-b899-437f-8e1b-50fe477fbf4b | std.echo | my_workflow   | task1     | SUCCESS | None       | True        |
| 6773c887-6eff-46e6-bed9-d6b67d77813b | std.echo | my_workflow   | task1     | SUCCESS | None       | True        |
| 753a9e39-d93e-4751-a3c1-569d1b4eac64 | std.echo | my_workflow   | task1     | SUCCESS | None       | True        |
| 9872ddbc-61c5-4511-aa7e-dc4016607822 | std.echo | my_workflow   | task1     | SUCCESS | None       | True        |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+-----------+---------+------------+-------------+

Check the result of the first action_execution:

$ mistral action-execution-get-output 20c2b65d-b899-437f-8e1b-50fe477fbf4b

{
    "result": "John"
}

Congratulations! Now you are ready to use OpenStack Workflow Service!