.. Copyright 2016 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development Company LP Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. .. _pools: ===== Pools ===== Contents: .. toctree:: :maxdepth: 2 :glob: pools/scheduler Overview ======== In designate we support the concept of multiple "pools" of DNS Servers. This allows operators to scale out their DNS Service by adding more pools, avoiding the scalling problems that some DNS servers have for number of zones, and the total number of records hosted by a single server. This also allows providers to have tiers of service (i.e. the difference between GOLD vs SILVER tiers may be the number of DNS Servers, and how they are distributed around the world.) In a private cloud situation, it allows operators to separate internal and external facing zones. To help users create zones on the correct pool we have a "scheduler" that is responsible for examining the zone being created and the pools that are available for use, and matching the zone to a pool. The filters are pluggable (i.e. operator replaceable) and all follow a simple interface. The zones are matched using "zone attributes" and "pool attributes". These are key: value pairs that are attached to the zone when it is being created, and the pool. The pool attributes can be updated by the operator in the future, but it will **not** trigger zones to be moved from one pool to another. .. note:: Currently the only zone attribute that is accepted is the `pool_id` attribute. As more filters are merged there will be support for dynamic filters. Managing Pools ============== In mitaka we moved the method of updating pools to a CLI in `designate-manage` There is a YAML file that defines the pool, and is used to load this information into the database. .. literalinclude:: ../../etc/designate/pools.yaml.sample :language: yaml Designate Manage Pools Command Reference ---------------------------------------- Update Pools Information ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console designate-manage pool update [options] Options: """""""" --file Input file (Default: ``/etc/designate/pools.yaml``) --dry_run Simulate an update. (Default: False) --delete Delete Pools that are not in the input file (Defaults: False) .. warning:: | Running with ``--delete True`` can be **extremely** dangerous. | It will delete any pools that are not in the supplied YAML file, and any | zones that are in that Pool. | Before running with ``--delete True`` we recommend operators run with | ``--delete True --dry_run True`` to view the outcome. Generate YAML File ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console designate-manage pool generate_file [options] Options: """""""" --file YAML file output too (Default: ``/etc/designate/pools.yaml``) Generate YAML File from Liberty Config ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console designate-manage pool export_from_config [options] Options: """""""" --file YAML file output too (Default: ``/etc/designate/pools.yaml``)