Usage¶
Refer to api for information on the HTTP API. Refer to the client documentation for information on how to use CLI and Python library.
Using from Ironic API¶
Ironic Kilo introduced support for hardware introspection under name of “inspection”. ironic-inspector introspection is supported for some generic drivers, please refer to Ironic inspection documentation for details.
Node States¶
The nodes should be moved to
MANAGEABLEprovision state before introspection (requires python-ironicclient of version 0.5.0 or newer):openstack baremetal node manage <node>
After successful introspection and before deploying nodes should be made available to Nova, by moving them to
AVAILABLEstate:openstack baremetal node provide <node>
Note
Due to how Nova interacts with Ironic driver, you should wait 1 minute before Nova becomes aware of available nodes after issuing this command. Use
nova hypervisor-statscommand output to check it.
Introspection Rules¶
Inspector supports a simple JSON-based DSL to define rules to run during introspection. Inspector provides an API to manage such rules, and will run them automatically after running all processing hooks.
A rule consists of conditions to check, and actions to run. If conditions evaluate to true on the introspection data, then actions are run on a node.
Available conditions and actions are defined by plugins, and can be extended, see How To Contribute for details. See api for specific calls to define introspection rules.
Conditions¶
A condition is represented by an object with fields:
op the type of comparison operation, default available operators include:
eq,le,ge,ne,lt,gt- basic comparison operators;in-net- checks that an IP address is in a given network;matches- requires a full match against a given regular expression;contains- requires a value to contain a given regular expression;is-empty- checks that field is an empty string, list, dict or None value.
field a JSON path to the field
in the introspection data to use in comparison.
Starting with the Mitaka release, you can also apply conditions to ironic node
field. Prefix field with schema (data:// or node://) to distinguish
between values from introspection data and node. Both schemes use JSON path:
{"field": "node://property.path", "op": "eq", "value": "val"}
{"field": "data://introspection.path", "op": "eq", "value": "val"}
if scheme (node or data) is missing, condition compares data with introspection data.
invert boolean value, whether to invert the result of the comparison.
multiple how to treat situations where the field query returns multiple
results (e.g. the field contains a list), available options are:
any(the default) require any to match,allrequire all to match,firstrequrie the first to match.
All other fields are passed to the condition plugin, e.g. numeric comparison
operations require a value field to compare against.
Actions¶
An action is represented by an object with fields:
action type of action. Possible values are defined by plugins.
All other fields are passed to the action plugin.
Default available actions include:
failfail introspection. Requires amessageparameter for the failure message.set-attributesets an attribute on an Ironic node. Requires apathfield, which is the path to the attribute as used by ironic (e.g./properties/something), and avalueto set.set-capabilitysets a capability on an Ironic node. Requiresnameandvaluefields, which are the name and the value for a new capability accordingly. Existing value for this same capability is replaced.extend-attributethe same asset-attribute, but treats existing value as a list and appends value to it. If optionaluniqueparameter is set toTrue, nothing will be added if given value is already in a list.add-traitadds a trait to an Ironic node. Requires anamefield with the name of the trait to add.remove-traitremoves a trait from an Ironic node. Requires anamefield with the name of the trait to remove.
Starting from Mitaka release, value field in actions supports fetching data
from introspection, using python string formatting notation:
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "/driver_info/ipmi_address",
"value": "{data[inventory][bmc_address]}"}
Note that any value referenced in this way will be converted to a string.
If value is a dict or list, strings nested at any level within the
structure will be formatted as well:
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "/properties/root_device",
"value": {"serial": "{data[root_device][serial]}"}}
Plugins¶
ironic-inspector heavily relies on plugins for data processing. Even the
standard functionality is largely based on plugins. Set processing_hooks
option in the configuration file to change the set of plugins to be run on
introspection data. Note that order does matter in this option, especially
for hooks that have dependencies on other hooks.
These are plugins that are enabled by default and should not be disabled, unless you understand what you’re doing:
schedulervalidates and updates basic hardware scheduling properties: CPU number and architecture, memory and disk size.
Note
Diskless nodes have the disk size property
local_gb == 0. Always use node driverroot_devicehints to prevent unexpected HW failures passing silently.validate_interfacesvalidates network interfaces information. Creates new ports, optionally deletes ports that were not present in the introspection data. Also sets the
pxe_enabledflag for the PXE-booting port and unsets it for all the other ports to avoid nova picking a random port to boot the node.
The following plugins are enabled by default, but can be disabled if not needed:
ramdisk_errorreports error, if
errorfield is set by the ramdisk, also optionally stores logs fromlogsfield, see api for details.capabilitiesdetect node capabilities: CPU, boot mode, etc. See Capabilities Detection for more details.
pci_devicesgathers the list of all PCI devices returned by the ramdisk and compares to those defined in
aliasfield(s) frompci_devicessection of configuration file. The recognized PCI devices and their count are then stored in node properties. This information can be later used in nova flavors for node scheduling.
Here are some plugins that can be additionally enabled:
exampleexample plugin logging it’s input and output.
raid_devicegathers block devices from ramdisk and exposes root device in multiple runs.
extra_hardwarestores the value of the ‘data’ key returned by the ramdisk as a JSON encoded string in a Swift object. The plugin will also attempt to convert the data into a format usable by introspection rules. If this is successful then the new format will be stored in the ‘extra’ key. The ‘data’ key is then deleted from the introspection data, as unless converted it’s assumed unusable by introspection rules.
local_link_connectionProcesses LLDP data returned from inspection specifically looking for the port ID and chassis ID, if found it configures the local link connection information on the nodes Ironic ports with that data. To enable LLDP in the inventory from IPA
ipa-collect-lldp=1should be passed as a kernel parameter to the IPA ramdisk. In order to avoid processing the raw LLDP data twice, thelldp_basicplugin should also be installed and run prior to this plugin.lldp_basicProcesses LLDP data returned from inspection and parses TLVs from the Basic Management (802.1AB), 802.1Q, and 802.3 sets and stores the processed data back to the Ironic inspector data in Swift.
Refer to How To Contribute for information on how to write your own plugin.
Discovery¶
Starting from Mitaka, ironic-inspector is able to register new nodes in Ironic.
The existing node-not-found-hook handles what happens if
ironic-inspector receives inspection data from a node it can not identify.
This can happen if a node is manually booted without registering it with
Ironic first.
For discovery, the configuration file option node_not_found_hook should be
set to load the hook called enroll. This hook will enroll the unidentified
node into Ironic using the fake-hardware hardware type. (This is
a configurable option; set enroll_node_driver, in the ironic-inspector
configuration file, to the Ironic hardware type or classic driver you want.)
The enroll hook will also set the ipmi_address property on the new
node, if its available in the introspection data we received,
see ramdisk_callback.
Once the enroll hook is finished, ironic-inspector will process the
introspection data in the same way it would for an identified node. It runs
the processing plugins, and after that it runs
introspection rules, which would allow for more customisable node
configuration, see rules.
A rule to set a node’s Ironic driver to ipmi and populate the required
driver_info for that driver would look like:
[{
"description": "Set IPMI driver_info if no credentials",
"actions": [
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver", "value": "ipmi"},
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver_info/ipmi_username",
"value": "username"},
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver_info/ipmi_password",
"value": "password"}
],
"conditions": [
{"op": "is-empty", "field": "node://driver_info.ipmi_password"},
{"op": "is-empty", "field": "node://driver_info.ipmi_username"}
]
},{
"description": "Set deploy info if not already set on node",
"actions": [
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver_info/deploy_kernel",
"value": "<glance uuid>"},
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver_info/deploy_ramdisk",
"value": "<glance uuid>"}
],
"conditions": [
{"op": "is-empty", "field": "node://driver_info.deploy_ramdisk"},
{"op": "is-empty", "field": "node://driver_info.deploy_kernel"}
]
}]
All nodes discovered and enrolled via the enroll hook, will contain an
auto_discovered flag in the introspection data, this flag makes it
possible to distinguish between manually enrolled nodes and auto-discovered
nodes in the introspection rules using the rule condition eq:
{
"description": "Enroll auto-discovered nodes with ipmi hardware type",
"actions": [
{"action": "set-attribute", "path": "driver", "value": "ipmi"}
],
"conditions": [
{"op": "eq", "field": "data://auto_discovered", "value": true}
]
}
Reapplying introspection on stored data¶
To allow correcting mistakes in introspection rules the API provides an entry point that triggers the introspection over stored data. The data to use for processing is kept in Swift separately from the data already processed. Reapplying introspection overwrites processed data in the store. Updating the introspection data through the endpoint isn’t supported yet. Following preconditions are checked before reapplying introspection:
no data is being sent along with the request
Swift store is configured and enabled
introspection data is stored in Swift for the node UUID
node record is kept in database for the UUID
introspection is not ongoing for the node UUID
Should the preconditions fail an immediate response is given to the user:
400if the request contained data or in case Swift store is not enabled in configuration404in case Ironic doesn’t keep track of the node UUID409if an introspection is already ongoing for the node
If the preconditions are met a background task is executed to carry
out the processing and a 202 Accepted response is returned to the
endpoint user. As requested, these steps are performed in the
background task:
preprocessing hooks
post processing hooks, storing result in Swift
introspection rules
These steps are avoided, based on the feature requirements:
node_not_found_hookis skippedpower operations
roll-back actions done by hooks
Limitations:
there’s no way to update the unprocessed data atm.
the unprocessed data is never cleaned from the store
check for stored data presence is performed in background; missing data situation still results in a
202response
Capabilities Detection¶
Starting with the Newton release, Ironic Inspector can optionally discover several node capabilities. A recent (Newton or newer) IPA image is required for it to work.
Boot mode¶
The current boot mode (BIOS or UEFI) can be detected and recorded as
boot_mode capability in Ironic. It will make some drivers to change their
behaviour to account for this capability. Set the [capabilities]boot_mode
configuration option to True to enable.
CPU capabilities¶
Several CPU flags are detected by default and recorded as following capabilities:
cpu_aesAES instructions.cpu_vtvirtualization support.cpu_txtTXT support.cpu_hugepageshuge pages (2 MiB) support.cpu_hugepages_1ghuge pages (1 GiB) support.
It is possible to define your own rules for detecting CPU capabilities.
Set the [capabilities]cpu_flags configuration option to a mapping between
a CPU flag and a capability, for example:
cpu_flags = aes:cpu_aes,svm:cpu_vt,vmx:cpu_vt
See the default value of this option for a more detail example.
InfiniBand support¶
Starting with the Ocata release, Ironic Inspector supports detection of
InfiniBand network interfaces. A recent (Ocata or newer) IPA image is required
for that to work. When an InfiniBand network interface is discovered, the
Ironic Inspector adds a client-id attribute to the extra attribute
in the ironic port. The Ironic Inspector should be configured with
iptables.ethoib_interfaces to indicate the Ethernet Over InfiniBand (EoIB)
which are used for physical access to the DHCP network.
For example if Ironic Inspector DHCP server is using br-inspector and
the br-inspector has EoIB port e.g. eth0,
the iptables.ethoib_interfaces should be set to eth0.
The iptables.ethoib_interfaces allows to map the baremetal GUID to it’s
EoIB MAC based on the neighs files. This is needed for blocking DHCP traffic
of the nodes (MACs) which are not part of the introspection.
The format of the /sys/class/net/<ethoib>/eth/neighs file:
# EMAC=<ethernet mac of the ethoib> IMAC=<qp number:lid:GUID>
# For example:
IMAC=97:fe:80:00:00:00:00:00:00:7c:fe:90:03:00:29:26:52
qp number=97:fe
lid=80:00:00:00:00:00:00
GUID=7c:fe:90:03:00:29:26:52
Example of content:
EMAC=02:00:02:97:00:01 IMAC=97:fe:80:00:00:00:00:00:00:7c:fe:90:03:00:29:26:52
EMAC=02:00:00:61:00:02 IMAC=61:fe:80:00:00:00:00:00:00:7c:fe:90:03:00:29:24:4f