[openstack-dev] [Neutron][IPAM] Arbitrary JSON blobs in ipam db tables

Shraddha Pandhe spandhe.openstack at gmail.com
Thu Nov 5 20:24:53 UTC 2015


Hi,

I agree with all of you about the REST Apis.

As I said before, I had to bring up the idea of JSON blob because based on
previous discussions, it looked like neutron community was not willing to
enhance the schemas for different ipam dbs. Entire rationale behind
pluggable IPAM is to provide flexibility. So, community should be open to
ideas for enhancing the schema to incorporate more information in the db
tables. I would be extremely happy if use cases for different companies are
considered and schema is enhanced to include specific columns in db
 schemas instead of a column with random JSON blob.

Lets pick up subnets db table for example. We have some use cases where it
would be great if following information is associated with the subnet db
table

1. Rack switch info
2. Backplane info
3. DHCP ip helpers
4. Option to tag allocation pools inside subnets
5. Multiple gateway addresses

We also want to store some information about the backplanes locally, so a
different table might be useful.

In a way, this information is not specific to our company. Its generic
information which ought to go with the subnets. Different companies can use
this information differently in their IPAM drivers. But, the information
needs to be made available to justify the flexibility of ipam

In Yahoo! OpenStack is still not the source of truth for this kind of
information and database limitation is one of the reasons. I would prefer
to avoid having our own database to make sure that our use-cases are always
shared with the community.








On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 9:37 AM, Kyle Mestery <mestery at mestery.com> wrote:

> On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 10:55 AM, Jay Pipes <jaypipes at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On 11/04/2015 04:21 PM, Shraddha Pandhe wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Salvatore,
>>>
>>> Thanks for the feedback. I agree with you that arbitrary JSON blobs will
>>> make IPAM much more powerful. Some other projects already do things like
>>> this.
>>>
>>
>> :( Actually, though "powerful" it also leads to implementation details
>> leaking directly out of the public REST API. I'm very negative on this and
>> would prefer an actual codified REST API that can be relied on regardless
>> of backend driver or implementation.
>>
>
> I agree with Jay here. We've had people propose similar things in Neutron
> before, and I've been against them. The entire point of the Neutron REST
> API is to not leak these details out. It dampens the strength of the
> logical model, and it tends to have users become reliant on backend
> implementations.
>
>
>>
>> e.g. In Ironic, node has driver_info, which is JSON. it also has an
>>> 'extras' arbitrary JSON field. This allows us to put any information in
>>> there that we think is important for us.
>>>
>>
>> Yeah, and this is a bad thing, IMHO. Public REST APIs should be
>> structured, not a Wild West free-for-all. The biggest problem with using
>> free-form JSON blobs in RESTful APIs like this is that you throw away the
>> ability to evolve the API in a structured, versioned way. Instead of
>> evolving the API using microversions, instead every vendor just jams
>> whatever they feel like into the JSON blob over time. There's no way for
>> clients to know what the server will return at any given time.
>>
>> Achieving consensus on a REST API that meets the needs of a variety of
>> backend implementations is *hard work*, yes, but it's what we need to do if
>> we are to have APIs that are viewed in the industry as stable,
>> discoverable, and reliably useful.
>>
>
> ++, this is the correct way forward.
>
> Thanks,
> Kyle
>
>
>>
>> Best,
>> -jay
>>
>> Best,
>> -jay
>>
>> Hoping to get some positive feedback from API and DB lieutenants too.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 1:06 PM, Salvatore Orlando
>>> <salv.orlando at gmail.com <mailto:salv.orlando at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>>     Arbitrary blobs are a powerful tools to circumvent limitations of an
>>>     API, as well as other constraints which might be imposed for
>>>     versioning or portability purposes.
>>>     The parameters that should end up in such blob are typically
>>>     specific for the target IPAM driver (to an extent they might even
>>>     identify a specific driver to use), and therefore an API consumer
>>>     who knows what backend is performing IPAM can surely leverage it.
>>>
>>>     Therefore this would make a lot of sense, assuming API portability
>>>     and not leaking backend details are not a concern.
>>>     The Neutron team API & DB lieutenants will be able to provide more
>>>     input on this regard.
>>>
>>>     In this case other approaches such as a vendor specific extension
>>>     are not a solution - assuming your granularity level is the
>>>     allocation pool; indeed allocation pools are not first-class neutron
>>>     resources, and it is not therefore possible to have APIs which
>>>     associate vendor specific properties to allocation pools.
>>>
>>>     Salvatore
>>>
>>>     On 4 November 2015 at 21:46, Shraddha Pandhe
>>>     <spandhe.openstack at gmail.com <mailto:spandhe.openstack at gmail.com>>
>>>     wrote:
>>>
>>>         Hi folks,
>>>
>>>         I have a small question/suggestion about IPAM.
>>>
>>>         With IPAM, we are allowing users to have their own IPAM drivers
>>>         so that they can manage IP allocation. The problem is, the new
>>>         ipam tables in the database have the same columns as the old
>>>         tables. So, as a user, if I want to have my own logic for ip
>>>         allocation, I can't actually get any help from the database.
>>>         Whereas, if we had an arbitrary json blob in the ipam tables, I
>>>         could put any useful information/tags there, that can help me
>>>         for allocation.
>>>
>>>         Does this make sense?
>>>
>>>         e.g. If I want to create multiple allocation pools in a subnet
>>>         and use them for different purposes, I would need some sort of
>>>         tag for each allocation pool for identification. Right now,
>>>         there is no scope for doing something like that.
>>>
>>>         Any thoughts? If there are any other way to solve the problem,
>>>         please let me know
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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