Resource management and orchestration engine for distributed systems
haproxy_deployment | ||
x | ||
.gitignore | ||
ansible.cfg | ||
cli.py | ||
config.yaml | ||
docker.yml | ||
haproxy.cfg | ||
LICENSE | ||
main.yml | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.txt | ||
TODO.md | ||
Vagrantfile |
x
HAProxy deployment
cd /vagrant
python cli.py deploy haproxy_deployment/haproxy-deployment.yaml
or from Python shell:
from x import deployment
deployment.deploy('/vagrant/haproxy_deployment/haproxy-deployment.yaml')
Usage:
Creating resources:
from x import resource
node1 = resource.create('node1', 'x/resources/ro_node/', 'rs/', {'ip':'10.0.0.3', 'ssh_key' : '/vagrant/tmp/keys/ssh_private', 'ssh_user':'vagrant'})
node2 = resource.create('node2', 'x/resources/ro_node/', 'rs/', {'ip':'10.0.0.4', 'ssh_key' : '/vagrant/tmp/keys/ssh_private', 'ssh_user':'vagrant'})
keystone_db_data = resource.create('mariadb_keystone_data', 'x/resources/data_container/', 'rs/', {'image' : 'mariadb', 'export_volumes' : ['/var/lib/mysql'], 'ip': '', 'ssh_user': '', 'ssh_key': ''}, connections={'ip' : 'node2.ip', 'ssh_key':'node2.ssh_key', 'ssh_user':'node2.ssh_user'})
nova_db_data = resource.create('mariadb_nova_data', 'x/resources/data_container/', 'rs/', {'image' : 'mariadb', 'export_volumes' : ['/var/lib/mysql'], 'ip': '', 'ssh_user': '', 'ssh_key': ''}, connections={'ip' : 'node1.ip', 'ssh_key':'node1.ssh_key', 'ssh_user':'node1.ssh_user'})
to make connection after resource is created use signal.connect
To test notifications:
keystone_db_data.args # displays node2 IP
node2.update({'ip': '10.0.0.5'})
keystone_db_data.args # updated IP
If you close the Python shell you can load the resources like this:
from x import resource
node1 = resource.load('rs/node1')
node2 = resource.load('rs/node2')
keystone_db_data = resource.load('rs/mariadn_keystone_data')
nova_db_data = resource.load('rs/mariadb_nova_data')
Connections are loaded automatically.
You can also load all resources at once:
from x import resource
all_resources = resource.load_all('rs')
CLI
You can do the above from the command-line client:
cd /vagrant
python cli.py resource create node1 x/resources/ro_node/ rs/ '{"ip":"10.0.0.3", "ssh_key" : "/vagrant/tmp/keys/ssh_private", "ssh_user":"vagrant"}'
python cli.py resource create node2 x/resources/ro_node/ rs/ '{"ip":"10.0.0.4", "ssh_key" : "/vagrant/tmp/keys/ssh_private", "ssh_user":"vagrant"}'
python cli.py resource create mariadb_keystone_data x/resources/data_container/ rs/ '{"image": "mariadb", "export_volumes" : ["/var/lib/mysql"], "ip": "", "ssh_user": "", "ssh_key": ""}'
python cli.py resource create mariadb_nova_data x/resources/data_container/ rs/ '{"image" : "mariadb", "export_volumes" : ["/var/lib/mysql"], "ip": "", "ssh_user": "", "ssh_key": ""}'
# View resources
python cli.py resource show rs/mariadb_keystone_data
# Show all resources at location rs/
python cli.py resource show rs/ --all
# Show resources with specific tag
python cli.py resources show rs/ --tag test
# Connect resources
python cli.py connect rs/node2 rs/mariadb_keystone_data
python cli.py connect rs/node1 rs/mariadb_nova_data
# Test update
python cli.py update rs/node2 '{"ip": "1.1.1.1"}'
python cli.py resource show rs/mariadb_keystone_data # --> IP is 1.1.1.1
# View connections
python cli.py connections show
# Outputs graph to 'graph.png' file, please note that arrows don't have "normal" pointers, but just the line is thicker
# please see http://networkx.lanl.gov/_modules/networkx/drawing/nx_pylab.html
python cli.py connections graph
# Disconnect
python cli.py disconnect rs/mariadb_nova_data rs/node1
# Tag a resource:
python cli.py resource tag rs/node1 test-tag
# Remove tag
python cli.py resource tag rs/node1 test-tag --delete