
There was a typo in here about the map_cell0 command creating a db connection with a _nova suffix when it's actually a _cell0 suffix like in the example, nova_cell0. This also adds a reminder to sync the API database schema before running the commands and also gives a warning about being specific when using map_cell0 and having the databases on different hosts. Depends-On: I541b072638b5d50985145391e76f610417fdcaa6 Change-Id: Ibf3355217bbd0139a020de352bb62ff7d973d27b
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Cells
Before reading further, there is a nice overview presentation that Andrew Laski gave at the Austin (Newton) summit which is worth watching.
Cells V1
Historically, Nova has depended on a single logical database and message queue that all nodes depend on for communication and data persistence. This becomes an issue for deployers as scaling and providing fault tolerance for these systems is difficult.
We have an experimental feature in Nova called "cells", hereafter referred to as "cells v1", which is used by some large deployments to partition compute nodes into smaller groups, coupled with a database and queue. This seems to be a well-liked and easy-to-understand arrangement of resources, but the implementation of it has issues for maintenance and correctness. See Comparison with Cells V1 for more detail.
Status
Cells v1 is considered experimental and receives much less testing than the rest of Nova. For example, there is no job for testing cells v1 with Neutron.
The priority for the core team is implementation of and migration to cells v2. Because of this, there are a few restrictions placed on cells v1:
- Cells v1 is in feature freeze. This means no new feature proposals for cells v1 will be accepted by the core team, which includes but is not limited to API parity, e.g. supporting virtual interface attach/detach with Neutron.
- Latent bugs caused by the cells v1 design will not be fixed, e.g. bug 1489581. So if new tests are added to Tempest which trigger a latent bug in cells v1 it may not be fixed. However, regressions in working function should be tracked with bugs and fixed.
Suffice it to say, new deployments of cells v1 are not encouraged.
The restrictions above are basically meant to prioritize effort and focus on getting cells v2 completed, and feature requests and hard to fix latent bugs detract from that effort. Further discussion on this can be found in the 2015/11/12 Nova meeting minutes.
There are no plans to remove Cells V1 until V2 is usable by existing deployments and there is a migration path.
Cells V2
Manifesto
Proposal
Right now, when a request hits the Nova API for a particular instance, the instance information is fetched from the database, which contains the hostname of the compute node on which the instance currently lives. If the request needs to take action on the instance (which is most of them), the hostname is used to calculate the name of a queue, and a message is written there which finds its way to the proper compute node.
The meat of this proposal is changing the above hostname lookup into two parts that yield three pieces of information instead of one. Basically, instead of merely looking up the name of the compute node on which an instance lives, we will also obtain database and queue connection information. Thus, when asked to take action on instance $foo, we will:
- Lookup the three-tuple of (database, queue, hostname) for that instance
- Connect to that database and fetch the instance record
- Connect to the queue and send the message to the proper hostname queue
The above differs from the current organization in two ways. First, we need to do two database lookups before we know where the instance lives. Second, we need to demand-connect to the appropriate database and queue. Both of these have performance implications, but we believe we can mitigate the impacts through the use of things like a memcache of instance mapping information and pooling of connections to database and queue systems. The number of cells will always be much smaller than the number of instances.
There are availability implications with this change since something like a 'nova list' which might query multiple cells could end up with a partial result if there is a database failure in a cell. A database failure within a cell would cause larger issues than a partial list result so the expectation is that it would be addressed quickly and cellsv2 will handle it by indicating in the response that the data may not be complete.
Since this is very similar to what we have with current cells, in terms of organization of resources, we have decided to call this "cellsv2" for disambiguation.
After this work is complete there will no longer be a "no cells" deployment. The default installation of Nova will be a single cell setup.
Benefits
The benefits of this new organization are:
- Native sharding of the database and queue as a first-class-feature in nova. All of the code paths will go through the lookup procedure and thus we won't have the same feature parity issues as we do with current cells.
- No high-level replication of all the cell databases at the top. The API will need a database of its own for things like the instance index, but it will not need to replicate all the data at the top level.
- It draws a clear line between global and local data elements. Things like flavors and keypairs are clearly global concepts that need only live at the top level. Providing this separation allows compute nodes to become even more stateless and insulated from things like deleted/changed global data.
- Existing non-cells users will suddenly gain the ability to spawn a new "cell" from their existing deployment without changing their architecture. Simply adding information about the new database and queue systems to the new index will allow them to consume those resources.
- Existing cells users will need to fill out the cells mapping index, shutdown their existing cells synchronization service, and ultimately clean up their top level database. However, since the high-level organization is not substantially different, they will not have to re-architect their systems to move to cellsv2.
- Adding new sets of hosts as a new "cell" allows them to be plugged into a deployment and tested before allowing builds to be scheduled to them.
Comparison with Cells V1
In reality, the proposed organization is nearly the same as what we currently have in cells today. A cell mostly consists of a database, queue, and set of compute nodes. The primary difference is that current cells require a nova-cells service that synchronizes information up and down from the top level to the child cell. Additionally, there are alternate code paths in compute/api.py which handle routing messages to cells instead of directly down to a compute host. Both of these differences are relevant to why we have a hard time achieving feature and test parity with regular nova (because many things take an alternate path with cells) and why it's hard to understand what is going on (all the extra synchronization of data). The new proposed cellsv2 organization avoids both of these problems by letting things live where they should, teaching nova to natively find the right db, queue, and compute node to handle a given request.
Database split
As mentioned above there is a split between global data and data that is local to a cell.
The following is a breakdown of what data can uncontroversially considered global versus local to a cell. Missing data will be filled in as consensus is reached on the data that is more difficult to cleanly place. The missing data is mostly concerned with scheduling and networking.
Global (API-level) Tables
instance_types instance_type_projects instance_type_extra_specs quotas project_user_quotas quota_classes quota_usages security_groups security_group_rules security_group_default_rules provider_fw_rules key_pairs migrations networks tags
Cell-level Tables
instances instance_info_caches instance_extra instance_metadata instance_system_metadata instance_faults instance_actions instance_actions_events instance_id_mappings pci_devices block_device_mapping virtual_interfaces
Setup of Cells V2
Overview
As more of the CellsV2 implementation is finished, all operators are required to make changes to their deployment. For all deployments (even those that only intend to have one cell), these changes are configuration-related, both in the main nova configuration file as well as some extra records in the databases.
All nova deployments must now have the following databases available and configured:
- The "API" database
- One special "cell" database called "cell0"
- One (or eventually more) "cell" databases
Thus, a small nova deployment will have an API database, a cell0, and what we will call here a "cell1" database. High-level tracking information is kept in the API database. Instances that are never scheduled are relegated to the cell0 database, which is effectively a graveyard of instances that failed to start. All successful/running instances are stored in "cell1".
First Time Setup
Since there is only one API database, the connection information for it is stored in the nova.conf file. :
[api_database]
connection = mysql+pymysql://root:secretmysql@dbserver/nova_api?charset=utf8
Since there may be multiple "cell" databases (and in fact everyone will have cell0 and cell1 at a minimum), connection info for these is stored in the API database. Thus, you must have connection information in your config file for the API database before continuing to the steps below, so that nova-manage can find your other databases.
The following examples show the full expanded command line usage of the setup commands. This is to make it easier to visualize which of the various URLs are used by each of the commands. However, you should be able to put all of that in the config file and nova-manage will use those values. If need be, you can create separate config files and pass them as nova-manage --config-file foo.conf to control the behavior without specifying things on the command lines.
The commands below use the API database so remember to run nova-manage api_db sync first.
First we will create the necessary records for the cell0 database. To do that we use nova-manage like this:
nova-manage cell_v2 map_cell0 --database_connection \
mysql+pymysql://root:secretmysql@dbserver/nova_cell0?charset=utf8
Note
If you don't specify --database_connection then nova-manage will use the [database]/connection value from your config file, and mangle the database name to have a _cell0 suffix.
Warning
If your databases are on separate hosts then you should specify --database_connection or make certain that the nova.conf being used has the [database]/connection value pointing to the same user/password/host that will work for the cell0 database. If the cell0 mapping was created incorrectly, it can be deleted using the nova-manage cell_v2 delete_cell command and then run map_cell0 again with the proper database connection value.
Since no hosts are ever in cell0, nothing further is required for its setup. Note that all deployments only ever have one cell0, as it is special, so once you have done this step you never need to do it again, even if you add more regular cells.
Now, we must create another cell which will be our first "regular" cell, which has actual compute hosts in it, and to which instances can actually be scheduled. First, we create the cell record like this:
nova-manage cell_v2 create_cell --verbose --name cell1 \
--database_connection mysql+pymysql://root:secretmysql@127.0.0.1/nova?charset=utf8
--transport-url rabbit://stackrabbit:secretrabbit@mqserver:5672/
Note
If you don't specify the database and transport urls then nova-manage will use the [database]/connection and [DEFAULT]/transport_url values from the config file.
Note
At this point, the API database can now find the cell database, and further commands will attempt to look inside. If this is a completely fresh database (such as if you're adding a cell, or if this is a new deployment), then you will need to run nova-manage db sync on it to initialize the schema.
The nova-manage cell_v2 create_cell command will print the UUID of the newly-created cell if --verbose is passed, which is useful if you need to run commands like discover_hosts targeted at a specific cell.
Now we have a cell, but no hosts are in it which means the scheduler will never actually place instances there. The next step is to scan the database for compute node records and add them into the cell we just created. For this step, you must have had a compute node started such that it registers itself as a running service. Once that has happened, you can scan and add it to the cell:
nova-manage cell_v2 discover_hosts
This command will connect to any databases for which you have created cells (as above), look for hosts that have registered themselves there, and map those hosts in the API database so that they are visible to the scheduler as available targets for instances. Any time you add more compute hosts to a cell, you need to re-run this command to map them from the top-level so they can be utilized.