Apply configuration from cloud metadata.
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Steve Baker 94f9819c67 Ignore top-level merge items which evaluate False
There has been recent tripleo regressions caused by heat
setting empty config as '' rather than {} which cause os-apply-config
to error on merge_configs.

This change ignores any top-level config which evaluates to False,
ignoring possible empty data including '', {}, None, []

An os-apply-config release with this fix would likely allow the current
heat pin to be removed Id134664a5df7232da0fb5d9ed62b82e12b3d54a8

Change-Id: Ia5bd99d1550f43760c064b769be3be46b3417331
Closes-Bug: #1426116
Related-Bug: #1425238
2015-02-27 09:45:39 +13:00
os_apply_config Ignore top-level merge items which evaluate False 2015-02-27 09:45:39 +13:00
.coveragerc Fix coverage report generation 2014-06-03 11:06:39 -07:00
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.gitreview Update stackforge references to openstack 2013-08-17 22:59:01 -04:00
.testr.conf Remove env vars we don't use. 2013-03-28 04:05:31 +01:00
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os-apply-config

Apply configuration from cloud metadata (JSON)

What does it do?

It turns metadata from one or more JSON files like this:

{"keystone": {"database": {"host": "127.0.0.1", "user": "keystone", "password": "foobar"}}}

into service config files like this:

[sql]
connection = mysql://keystone:foobar@127.0.0.1/keystone
...other settings...

Usage

Just pass it the path to a directory tree of templates:

sudo os-apply-config -t /home/me/my_templates

By default it will read config files according to the contents of the file /var/lib/os-collect-config/os_config_files.json. In order to remain backward compatible it will also fall back to /var/run/os-collect-config/os_config_files.json, but the fallback path is deprecated and will be removed in a later release. The main path can be changed with the command line switch --os-config-files, or the environment variable OS_CONFIG_FILES_PATH. The list can also be overridden with the environment variable OS_CONFIG_FILES. If overriding with OS_CONFIG_FILES, the paths are expected to be colon, ":", separated. Each json file referred to must have a mapping as their root structure. Keys in files mentioned later in the list will override keys in earlier files from this list. For example:

OS_CONFIG_FILES=/tmp/ec2.json:/tmp/cfn.json os-apply-config

This will read ec2.json and cfn.json, and if they have any overlapping keys, the value from cfn.json will be used. That will populate the tree for any templates found in the template path. See https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/os-collect-config for a program that will automatically collect data and populate this list.

You can also override OS_CONFIG_FILES with the --metadata command line option, specifying it multiple times instead of colon separating the list.

os-apply-config will also always try to read metadata in the old legacy paths first to populate the tree. These paths can be changed with --fallback-metadata.

Templates

The template directory structure should mimic a root filesystem, and contain templates for only those files you want configured. For example:

~/my_templates$ tree
.
+-- etc
    +-- keystone
    |    +-- keystone.conf
    +-- mysql
          +-- mysql.conf

An example tree can be found here.

If a template is executable it will be treated as an executable template. Otherwise, it will be treated as a mustache template.

Mustache Templates

If you don't need any logic, just some string substitution, use a mustache template.

Metadata settings are accessed with dot ('.') notation:

[sql]
connection = mysql://{{keystone.database.user}}:{{keystone.database.password}}@{{keystone.database.host}}/keystone

Executable Templates

Configuration requiring logic is expressed in executable templates.

An executable template is a script which accepts configuration as a JSON string on standard in, and writes a config file to standard out.

The script should exit non-zero if it encounters a problem, so that os-apply-config knows what's up.

The output of the script will be written to the path corresponding to the executable template's path in the template tree:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'json'
params = JSON.parse STDIN.read
puts "connection = mysql://#{c['keystone']['database']['user']}:#{c['keystone']['database']['password']}@#{c['keystone']['database']['host']}/keystone"

You could even embed mustache in a heredoc, and use that:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'json'
require 'mustache'
params = JSON.parse STDIN.read

template = <<-eos
[sql]
connection = mysql://{{keystone.database.user}}:{{keystone.database.password}}@{{keystone.database.host}}/keystone

[log]
...
eos

# tweak params here...

puts Mustache.render(template, params)

Quick Start

# install it
sudo pip install -U git+git://git.openstack.org/openstack/os-apply-config.git

# grab example templates
git clone git://git.openstack.org/openstack/tripleo-image-elements /tmp/config

# run it
os-apply-config -t /tmp/config/elements/nova/os-apply-config/ -m /tmp/config/elements/seed-stack-config/config.json -o /tmp/config_output