[openstack-dev] [ironic] ironic and traits

Sylvain Bauza sbauza at redhat.com
Mon Oct 23 13:15:28 UTC 2017


On Mon, Oct 23, 2017 at 2:54 PM, Eric Fried <openstack at fried.cc> wrote:

> I agree with Sean.  In general terms:
>
> * A resource provider should be marked with a trait if that feature
>   * Can be turned on or off (whether it's currently on or not); or
>   * Is always on and can't ever be turned off.
>

No, traits are not boolean. If a resource provider stops providing a
capability, then the existing related trait should just be removed, that's
it.
If you see a trait, that's just means that the related capability for the
Resource Provider is supported, that's it too.

MHO.

-Sylvain



> * A consumer wanting that feature present (doesn't matter whether it's
> on or off) should specify it as a required *trait*.
> * A consumer wanting that feature present and turned on should
>   * Specify it as a required trait; AND
>   * Indicate that it be turned on via some other mechanism (e.g. a
> separate extra_spec).
>
> I believe this satisfies Dmitry's (Ironic's) needs, but also Jay's drive
> for placement purity.
>
> Please invite me to the hangout or whatever.
>
> Thanks,
> Eric
>
> On 10/23/2017 07:22 AM, Mooney, Sean K wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > *From:*Jay Pipes [mailto:jaypipes at gmail.com]
> > *Sent:* Monday, October 23, 2017 12:20 PM
> > *To:* OpenStack Development Mailing List <openstack-dev at lists.
> openstack.org>
> > *Subject:* Re: [openstack-dev] [ironic] ironic and traits
> >
> >
> >
> > Writing from my phone... May I ask that before you proceed with any plan
> > that uses traits for state information that we have a hangout or
> > videoconference to discuss this? Unfortunately today and tomorrow I'm
> > not able to do a hangout but I can do one on Wednesday any time of the
> day.
> >
> >
> >
> > */[Mooney, Sean K] on the uefi boot topic I did bring up at the ptg that
> > we wanted to standardizes tratis for “verified boot” /*
> >
> > */that included a trait for uefi secure boot enabled and to indicated a
> > hardware root of trust, e.g. intel boot guard or similar/*
> >
> > */we distinctly wanted to be able to tag nova compute hosts with those
> > new traits so we could require that vms that request/*
> >
> > */a host with uefi secure boot enabled and a hardware root of trust are
> > scheduled only to those nodes. /*
> >
> > */ /*
> >
> > */There are many other examples that effect both vms and bare metal such
> > as, ecc/interleaved memory, cluster on die, /*
> >
> > */l3 cache code and data prioritization, vt-d/vt-c, HPET, Hyper
> > threading, power states … all of these feature may be present on the
> > platform/*
> >
> > */but I also need to know if they are turned on. Ruling out state in
> > traits means all of this logic will eventually get pushed to scheduler
> > filters/*
> >
> > */which will be suboptimal long term as more state is tracked. Software
> > defined infrastructure may be the future but hardware defined software/*
> >
> > */is sadly the present…/*
> >
> > */ /*
> >
> > */I do however think there should be a sperateion between asking for a
> > host that provides x with a trait and  asking for x to be configure via/*
> >
> > */A trait. The trait secure_boot_enabled should never result in the
> > feature being enabled It should just find a host with it on. If you
> want/*
> >
> > */To request it to be turned on you would request a host with
> > secure_boot_capable as a trait and have a flavor extra spec or image
> > property to request/*
> >
> > */Ironic to enabled it.  these are two very different request and should
> > not be treated the same. /*
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Lemme know!
> >
> > -jay
> >
> >
> >
> > On Oct 23, 2017 5:01 AM, "Dmitry Tantsur" <dtantsur at redhat.com
> > <mailto:dtantsur at redhat.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     Hi Jay!
> >
> >     I appreciate your comments, but I think you're approaching the
> >     problem from purely VM point of view. Things simply don't work the
> >     same way in bare metal, at least not if we want to provide the same
> >     user experience.
> >
> >
> >
> >     On Sun, Oct 22, 2017 at 2:25 PM, Jay Pipes <jaypipes at gmail.com
> >     <mailto:jaypipes at gmail.com>> wrote:
> >
> >         Sorry for delay, took a week off before starting a new job.
> >         Comments inline.
> >
> >         On 10/16/2017 12:24 PM, Dmitry Tantsur wrote:
> >
> >             Hi all,
> >
> >             I promised John to dump my thoughts on traits to the ML, so
> >             here we go :)
> >
> >             I see two roles of traits (or kinds of traits) for bare
> metal:
> >             1. traits that say what the node can do already (e.g. "the
> >             node is
> >             doing UEFI boot")
> >             2. traits that say what the node can be *configured* to do
> >             (e.g. "the node can
> >             boot in UEFI mode")
> >
> >
> >         There's only one role for traits. #2 above. #1 is state
> >         information. Traits are not for state information. Traits are
> >         only for communicating capabilities of a resource provider
> >         (baremetal node).
> >
> >
> >
> >     These are not different, that's what I'm talking about here. No
> >     users care about the difference between "this node was put in UEFI
> >     mode by an operator in advance", "this node was put in UEFI mode by
> >     an ironic driver on demand" and "this node is always in UEFI mode,
> >     because it's AARCH64 and it does not have BIOS". These situation
> >     produce the same result (the node is booted in UEFI mode), and thus
> >     it's up to ironic to hide this difference.
> >
> >
> >
> >     My suggestion with traits is one way to do it, I'm not sure what you
> >     suggest though.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >         For example, let's say we add the following to the os-traits
> >         library [1]
> >
> >         * STORAGE_RAID_0
> >         * STORAGE_RAID_1
> >         * STORAGE_RAID_5
> >         * STORAGE_RAID_6
> >         * STORAGE_RAID_10
> >
> >         The Ironic administrator would add all RAID-related traits to
> >         the baremetal nodes that had the *capability* of supporting that
> >         particular RAID setup [2]
> >
> >         When provisioned, the baremetal node would either have RAID
> >         configured in a certain level or not configured at all.
> >
> >
> >         A very important note: the Placement API and Nova scheduler (or
> >         future Ironic scheduler) doesn't care about this. At all. I know
> >         it sounds like I'm being callous, but I'm not. Placement and
> >         scheduling doesn't care about the state of things. It only cares
> >         about the capabilities of target destinations. That's it.
> >
> >
> >
> >     Yes, because VMs always start with a clean state, and hypervisor is
> >     there to ensure that. We don't have this luxury in ironic :) E.g.
> >     our SNMP driver is not even aware of boot modes (or RAID, or BIOS
> >     configuration), which does not mean that a node using it cannot be
> >     in UEFI mode (have a RAID or BIOS pre-configured, etc, etc).
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >             This seems confusing, but it's actually very useful. Say, I
> >             have a flavor that
> >             requests UEFI boot via a trait. It will match both the nodes
> >             that are already in
> >             UEFI mode, as well as nodes that can be put in UEFI mode.
> >
> >
> >         No :) It will only match nodes that have the UEFI capability.
> >         The set of providers that have the ability to be booted via UEFI
> >         is *always* a superset of the set of providers that *have been
> >         booted via UEFI*. Placement and scheduling decisions only care
> >         about that superset -- the providers with a particular
> capability.
> >
> >
> >
> >     Well, no, it will. Again, you're purely basing on the VM idea, where
> >     a VM is always *put* in UEFI mode, no matter how the hypervisor
> >     looks like. It is simply not the case for us. You have to care what
> >     state the node is, because many drivers cannot change this state.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >             This idea goes further with deploy templates (new concept
> >             we've been thinking
> >             about). A flavor can request something like CUSTOM_RAID_5,
> >             and it will match the
> >             nodes that already have RAID 5, or, more interestingly, the
> >             nodes on which we
> >             can build RAID 5 before deployment. The UEFI example above
> >             can be treated in a
> >             similar way.
> >
> >             This ends up with two sources of knowledge about traits in
> >             ironic:
> >             1. Operators setting something they know about hardware
> >             ("this node is in UEFI
> >             mode"),
> >             2. Ironic drivers reporting something they
> >                2.1. know about hardware ("this node is in UEFI mode" -
> >             again)
> >                2.2. can do about hardware ("I can put this node in UEFI
> >             mode")
> >
> >
> >         You're correct that both pieces of information are important.
> >         However, only the "can do about hardware" part is relevant to
> >         Placement and Nova.
> >
> >             For case #1 we are planning on a new CRUD API to set/unset
> >             traits for a node.
> >
> >
> >         I would *strongly* advise against this. Traits are not for state
> >         information.
> >
> >         Instead, consider having a DB (or JSON) schema that lists state
> >         information in fields that are explicitly for that state
> >         information.
> >
> >         For example, a schema that looks like this:
> >
> >         {
> >           "boot": {
> >             "mode": <one of 'bios' or 'uefi'>,
> >             "params": <dict>
> >           },
> >           "disk": {
> >             "raid": {
> >               "level": <int>,
> >               "controller": <one of 'sw' or 'hw'>,
> >               "driver": <string>,
> >               "params": <dict>
> >             },  ...
> >           },
> >           "network": {
> >             ...
> >           }
> >         }
> >
> >         etc, etc.
> >
> >         Don't use trait strings to represent state information.
> >
> >
> >
> >     I don't see an alternative proposal that will satisfy what we have
> >     to solve.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >         Best,
> >         -jay
> >
> >             Case #2 is more interesting. We have two options, I think:
> >
> >             a) Operators still set traits on nodes, drivers are simply
> >             validating them. E.g.
> >             an operators sets CUSTOM_RAID_5, and the node's RAID
> >             interface checks if it is
> >             possible to do. The downside is obvious - with a lot of
> >             deploy templates
> >             available it can be a lot of manual work.
> >
> >             b) Drivers report the traits, and they get somehow added to
> >             the traits provided
> >             by an operator. Technically, there are sub-cases again:
> >                b.1) The new traits API returns a union of
> >             operator-provided and
> >             driver-provided traits
> >                b.2) The new traits API returns only operator-provided
> >             traits; driver-provided
> >             traits are returned e.g. via a new field
> >             (node.driver_traits). Then nova will
> >             have to merge the lists itself.
> >
> >             My personal favorite is the last option: I'd like a clear
> >             distinction between
> >             different "sources" of traits, but I'd also like to reduce
> >             manual work for
> >             operators.
> >
> >             A valid counter-argument is: what if an operator wants to
> >             override a
> >             driver-provided trait? E.g. a node can do RAID 5, but I
> >             don't want this
> >             particular node to do it for any reason. I'm not sure if
> >             it's a valid case, and
> >             what to do about it.
> >
> >             Let me know what you think.
> >
> >             Dmitry
> >
> >
> >         [1] http://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/os-traits/tree/
> >         [2] Based on how many attached disks the node had, the presence
> >         and abilities of a hardware RAID controller, etc
> >
> >
> >
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