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1
=================
2
Ganeti 2.1 design
3
=================
4

    
5
This document describes the major changes in Ganeti 2.1 compared to
6
the 2.0 version.
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The 2.1 version will be a relatively small release. Its main aim is to
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avoid changing too much of the core code, while addressing issues and
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adding new features and improvements over 2.0, in a timely fashion.
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.. contents:: :depth: 4
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Objective
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=========
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Ganeti 2.1 will add features to help further automatization of cluster
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operations, further improbe scalability to even bigger clusters, and
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make it easier to debug the Ganeti core.
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Background
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==========
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Overview
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========
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Detailed design
28
===============
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As for 2.0 we divide the 2.1 design into three areas:
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- core changes, which affect the master daemon/job queue/locking or
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  all/most logical units
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- logical unit/feature changes
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- external interface changes (eg. command line, os api, hooks, ...)
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Core changes
38
------------
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Storage units modelling
41
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Currently, Ganeti has a good model of the block devices for instances
44
(e.g. LVM logical volumes, files, DRBD devices, etc.) but none of the
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storage pools that are providing the space for these front-end
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devices. For example, there are hardcoded inter-node RPC calls for
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volume group listing, file storage creation/deletion, etc.
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The storage units framework will implement a generic handling for all
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kinds of storage backends:
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- LVM physical volumes
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- LVM volume groups
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- File-based storage directories
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- any other future storage method
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There will be a generic list of methods that each storage unit type
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will provide, like:
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- list of storage units of this type
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- check status of the storage unit
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Additionally, there will be specific methods for each method, for
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example:
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- enable/disable allocations on a specific PV
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- file storage directory creation/deletion
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- VG consistency fixing
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This will allow a much better modeling and unification of the various
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RPC calls related to backend storage pool in the future. Ganeti 2.1 is
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intended to add the basics of the framework, and not necessarilly move
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all the curent VG/FileBased operations to it.
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Note that while we model both LVM PVs and LVM VGs, the framework will
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**not** model any relationship between the different types. In other
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words, we don't model neither inheritances nor stacking, since this is
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too complex for our needs. While a ``vgreduce`` operation on a LVM VG
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could actually remove a PV from it, this will not be handled at the
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framework level, but at individual operation level. The goal is that
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this is a lightweight framework, for abstracting the different storage
82
operation, and not for modelling the storage hierarchy.
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Locking improvements
86
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Current State and shortcomings
89
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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The class ``LockSet`` (see ``lib/locking.py``) is a container for one or
92
many ``SharedLock`` instances. It provides an interface to add/remove
93
locks and to acquire and subsequently release any number of those locks
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contained in it.
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Locks in a ``LockSet`` are always acquired in alphabetic order. Due to
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the way we're using locks for nodes and instances (the single cluster
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lock isn't affected by this issue) this can lead to long delays when
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acquiring locks if another operation tries to acquire multiple locks but
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has to wait for yet another operation.
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In the following demonstration we assume to have the instance locks
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``inst1``, ``inst2``, ``inst3`` and ``inst4``.
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#. Operation A grabs lock for instance ``inst4``.
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#. Operation B wants to acquire all instance locks in alphabetic order,
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   but it has to wait for ``inst4``.
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#. Operation C tries to lock ``inst1``, but it has to wait until
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   Operation B (which is trying to acquire all locks) releases the lock
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   again.
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#. Operation A finishes and releases lock on ``inst4``. Operation B can
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   continue and eventually releases all locks.
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#. Operation C can get ``inst1`` lock and finishes.
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Technically there's no need for Operation C to wait for Operation A, and
116
subsequently Operation B, to finish. Operation B can't continue until
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Operation A is done (it has to wait for ``inst4``), anyway.
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Proposed changes
120
++++++++++++++++
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Non-blocking lock acquiring
123
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
124

    
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Acquiring locks for OpCode execution is always done in blocking mode.
126
They won't return until the lock has successfully been acquired (or an
127
error occurred, although we won't cover that case here).
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``SharedLock`` and ``LockSet`` must be able to be acquired in a
130
non-blocking way. They must support a timeout and abort trying to
131
acquire the lock(s) after the specified amount of time.
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133
Retry acquiring locks
134
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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136
To prevent other operations from waiting for a long time, such as
137
described in the demonstration before, ``LockSet`` must not keep locks
138
for a prolonged period of time when trying to acquire two or more locks.
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Instead it should, with an increasing timeout for acquiring all locks,
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release all locks again and sleep some time if it fails to acquire all
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requested locks.
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A good timeout value needs to be determined. In any case should
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``LockSet`` proceed to acquire locks in blocking mode after a few
145
(unsuccessful) attempts to acquire all requested locks.
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One proposal for the timeout is to use ``2**tries`` seconds, where
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``tries`` is the number of unsuccessful tries.
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In the demonstration before this would allow Operation C to continue
151
after Operation B unsuccessfully tried to acquire all locks and released
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all acquired locks (``inst1``, ``inst2`` and ``inst3``) again.
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Other solutions discussed
155
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
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There was also some discussion on going one step further and extend the
158
job queue (see ``lib/jqueue.py``) to select the next task for a worker
159
depending on whether it can acquire the necessary locks. While this may
160
reduce the number of necessary worker threads and/or increase throughput
161
on large clusters with many jobs, it also brings many potential
162
problems, such as contention and increased memory usage, with it. As
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this would be an extension of the changes proposed before it could be
164
implemented at a later point in time, but we decided to stay with the
165
simpler solution for now.
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167
Implementation details
168
++++++++++++++++++++++
169

    
170
``SharedLock`` redesign
171
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
172

    
173
The current design of ``SharedLock`` is not good for supporting timeouts
174
when acquiring a lock and there are also minor fairness issues in it. We
175
plan to address both with a redesign. A proof of concept implementation
176
was written and resulted in significantly simpler code.
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Currently ``SharedLock`` uses two separate queues for shared and
179
exclusive acquires and waiters get to run in turns. This means if an
180
exclusive acquire is released, the lock will allow shared waiters to run
181
and vice versa.  Although it's still fair in the end there is a slight
182
bias towards shared waiters in the current implementation. The same
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implementation with two shared queues can not support timeouts without
184
adding a lot of complexity.
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Our proposed redesign changes ``SharedLock`` to have only one single
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queue.  There will be one condition (see Condition_ for a note about
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performance) in the queue per exclusive acquire and two for all shared
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acquires (see below for an explanation). The maximum queue length will
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always be ``2 + (number of exclusive acquires waiting)``. The number of
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queue entries for shared acquires can vary from 0 to 2.
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The two conditions for shared acquires are a bit special. They will be
194
used in turn. When the lock is instantiated, no conditions are in the
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queue. As soon as the first shared acquire arrives (and there are
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holder(s) or waiting acquires; see Acquire_), the active condition is
197
added to the queue. Until it becomes the topmost condition in the queue
198
and has been notified, any shared acquire is added to this active
199
condition. When the active condition is notified, the conditions are
200
swapped and further shared acquires are added to the previously inactive
201
condition (which has now become the active condition). After all waiters
202
on the previously active (now inactive) and now notified condition
203
received the notification, it is removed from the queue of pending
204
acquires.
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206
This means shared acquires will skip any exclusive acquire in the queue.
207
We believe it's better to improve parallelization on operations only
208
asking for shared (or read-only) locks. Exclusive operations holding the
209
same lock can not be parallelized.
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Acquire
213
*******
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215
For exclusive acquires a new condition is created and appended to the
216
queue.  Shared acquires are added to the active condition for shared
217
acquires and if the condition is not yet on the queue, it's appended.
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The next step is to wait for our condition to be on the top of the queue
220
(to guarantee fairness). If the timeout expired, we return to the caller
221
without acquiring the lock. On every notification we check whether the
222
lock has been deleted, in which case an error is returned to the caller.
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The lock can be acquired if we're on top of the queue (there is no one
225
else ahead of us). For an exclusive acquire, there must not be other
226
exclusive or shared holders. For a shared acquire, there must not be an
227
exclusive holder.  If these conditions are all true, the lock is
228
acquired and we return to the caller. In any other case we wait again on
229
the condition.
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231
If it was the last waiter on a condition, the condition is removed from
232
the queue.
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Optimization: There's no need to touch the queue if there are no pending
235
acquires and no current holders. The caller can have the lock
236
immediately.
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.. image:: design-2.1-lock-acquire.png
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241
Release
242
*******
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244
First the lock removes the caller from the internal owner list. If there
245
are pending acquires in the queue, the first (the oldest) condition is
246
notified.
247

    
248
If the first condition was the active condition for shared acquires, the
249
inactive condition will be made active. This ensures fairness with
250
exclusive locks by forcing consecutive shared acquires to wait in the
251
queue.
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.. image:: design-2.1-lock-release.png
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Delete
257
******
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259
The caller must either hold the lock in exclusive mode already or the
260
lock must be acquired in exclusive mode. Trying to delete a lock while
261
it's held in shared mode must fail.
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263
After ensuring the lock is held in exclusive mode, the lock will mark
264
itself as deleted and continue to notify all pending acquires. They will
265
wake up, notice the deleted lock and return an error to the caller.
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267

    
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Condition
269
^^^^^^^^^
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Note: This is not necessary for the locking changes above, but it may be
272
a good optimization (pending performance tests).
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The existing locking code in Ganeti 2.0 uses Python's built-in
275
``threading.Condition`` class. Unfortunately ``Condition`` implements
276
timeouts by sleeping 1ms to 20ms between tries to acquire the condition
277
lock in non-blocking mode. This requires unnecessary context switches
278
and contention on the CPython GIL (Global Interpreter Lock).
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280
By using POSIX pipes (see ``pipe(2)``) we can use the operating system's
281
support for timeouts on file descriptors (see ``select(2)``). A custom
282
condition class will have to be written for this.
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On instantiation the class creates a pipe. After each notification the
285
previous pipe is abandoned and re-created (technically the old pipe
286
needs to stay around until all notifications have been delivered).
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288
All waiting clients of the condition use ``select(2)`` or ``poll(2)`` to
289
wait for notifications, optionally with a timeout. A notification will
290
be signalled to the waiting clients by closing the pipe. If the pipe
291
wasn't closed during the timeout, the waiting function returns to its
292
caller nonetheless.
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294

    
295
Feature changes
296
---------------
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298
Ganeti Confd
299
~~~~~~~~~~~~
300

    
301
Current State and shortcomings
302
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
303

    
304
In Ganeti 2.0 all nodes are equal, but some are more equal than others.
305
In particular they are divided between "master", "master candidates" and
306
"normal".  (Moreover they can be offline or drained, but this is not
307
important for the current discussion). In general the whole
308
configuration is only replicated to master candidates, and some partial
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information is spread to all nodes via ssconf.
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This change was done so that the most frequent Ganeti operations didn't
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need to contact all nodes, and so clusters could become bigger. If we
313
want more information to be available on all nodes, we need to add more
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ssconf values, which is counter-balancing the change, or to talk with
315
the master node, which is not designed to happen now, and requires its
316
availability.
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318
Information such as the instance->primary_node mapping will be needed on
319
all nodes, and we also want to make sure services external to the
320
cluster can query this information as well. This information must be
321
available at all times, so we can't query it through RAPI, which would
322
be a single point of failure, as it's only available on the master.
323

    
324

    
325
Proposed changes
326
++++++++++++++++
327

    
328
In order to allow fast and highly available access read-only to some
329
configuration values, we'll create a new ganeti-confd daemon, which will
330
run on master candidates. This daemon will talk via UDP, and
331
authenticate messages using HMAC with a cluster-wide shared key. This
332
key will be generated at cluster init time, and stored on the clusters
333
alongside the ganeti SSL keys, and readable only by root.
334

    
335
An interested client can query a value by making a request to a subset
336
of the cluster master candidates. It will then wait to get a few
337
responses, and use the one with the highest configuration serial number.
338
Since the configuration serial number is increased each time the ganeti
339
config is updated, and the serial number is included in all answers,
340
this can be used to make sure to use the most recent answer, in case
341
some master candidates are stale or in the middle of a configuration
342
update.
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344
In order to prevent replay attacks queries will contain the current unix
345
timestamp according to the client, and the server will verify that its
346
timestamp is in the same 5 minutes range (this requires synchronized
347
clocks, which is a good idea anyway). Queries will also contain a "salt"
348
which they expect the answers to be sent with, and clients are supposed
349
to accept only answers which contain salt generated by them.
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351
The configuration daemon will be able to answer simple queries such as:
352

    
353
- master candidates list
354
- master node
355
- offline nodes
356
- instance list
357
- instance primary nodes
358

    
359
Wire protocol
360
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
361

    
362
A confd query will look like this, on the wire::
363

    
364
  {
365
    "msg": "{\"type\": 1,
366
             \"rsalt\": \"9aa6ce92-8336-11de-af38-001d093e835f\",
367
             \"protocol\": 1,
368
             \"query\": \"node1.example.com\"}\n",
369
    "salt": "1249637704",
370
    "hmac": "4a4139b2c3c5921f7e439469a0a45ad200aead0f"
371
  }
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373
Detailed explanation of the various fields:
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375
- 'msg' contains a JSON-encoded query, its fields are:
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377
  - 'protocol', integer, is the confd protocol version (initially just
378
    constants.CONFD_PROTOCOL_VERSION, with a value of 1)
379
  - 'type', integer, is the query type. For example "node role by name"
380
    or "node primary ip by instance ip". Constants will be provided for
381
    the actual available query types.
382
  - 'query', string, is the search key. For example an ip, or a node
383
    name.
384
  - 'rsalt', string, is the required response salt. The client must use
385
    it to recognize which answer it's getting.
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- 'salt' must be the current unix timestamp, according to the client.
388
  Servers can refuse messages which have a wrong timing, according to
389
  their configuration and clock.
390
- 'hmac' is an hmac signature of salt+msg, with the cluster hmac key
391

    
392
If an answer comes back (which is optional, since confd works over UDP)
393
it will be in this format::
394

    
395
  {
396
    "msg": "{\"status\": 0,
397
             \"answer\": 0,
398
             \"serial\": 42,
399
             \"protocol\": 1}\n",
400
    "salt": "9aa6ce92-8336-11de-af38-001d093e835f",
401
    "hmac": "aaeccc0dff9328fdf7967cb600b6a80a6a9332af"
402
  }
403

    
404
Where:
405

    
406
- 'msg' contains a JSON-encoded answer, its fields are:
407

    
408
  - 'protocol', integer, is the confd protocol version (initially just
409
    constants.CONFD_PROTOCOL_VERSION, with a value of 1)
410
  - 'status', integer, is the error code. Initially just 0 for 'ok' or
411
    '1' for 'error' (in which case answer contains an error detail,
412
    rather than an answer), but in the future it may be expanded to have
413
    more meanings (eg: 2, the answer is compressed)
414
  - 'answer', is the actual answer. Its type and meaning is query
415
    specific. For example for "node primary ip by instance ip" queries
416
    it will be a string containing an IP address, for "node role by
417
    name" queries it will be an integer which encodes the role (master,
418
    candidate, drained, offline) according to constants.
419

    
420
- 'salt' is the requested salt from the query. A client can use it to
421
  recognize what query the answer is answering.
422
- 'hmac' is an hmac signature of salt+msg, with the cluster hmac key
423

    
424

    
425
Redistribute Config
426
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
427

    
428
Current State and shortcomings
429
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
430

    
431
Currently LURedistributeConfig triggers a copy of the updated
432
configuration file to all master candidates and of the ssconf files to
433
all nodes. There are other files which are maintained manually but which
434
are important to keep in sync. These are:
435

    
436
- rapi SSL key certificate file (rapi.pem) (on master candidates)
437
- rapi user/password file rapi_users (on master candidates)
438

    
439
Furthermore there are some files which are hypervisor specific but we
440
may want to keep in sync:
441

    
442
- the xen-hvm hypervisor uses one shared file for all vnc passwords, and
443
  copies the file once, during node add. This design is subject to
444
  revision to be able to have different passwords for different groups
445
  of instances via the use of hypervisor parameters, and to allow
446
  xen-hvm and kvm to use an equal system to provide password-protected
447
  vnc sessions. In general, though, it would be useful if the vnc
448
  password files were copied as well, to avoid unwanted vnc password
449
  changes on instance failover/migrate.
450

    
451
Optionally the admin may want to also ship files such as the global
452
xend.conf file, and the network scripts to all nodes.
453

    
454
Proposed changes
455
++++++++++++++++
456

    
457
RedistributeConfig will be changed to copy also the rapi files, and to
458
call every enabled hypervisor asking for a list of additional files to
459
copy. Users will have the possibility to populate a file containing a
460
list of files to be distributed; this file will be propagated as well.
461
Such solution is really simple to implement and it's easily usable by
462
scripts.
463

    
464
This code will be also shared (via tasklets or by other means, if
465
tasklets are not ready for 2.1) with the AddNode and SetNodeParams LUs
466
(so that the relevant files will be automatically shipped to new master
467
candidates as they are set).
468

    
469
VNC Console Password
470
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
471

    
472
Current State and shortcomings
473
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
474

    
475
Currently just the xen-hvm hypervisor supports setting a password to
476
connect the the instances' VNC console, and has one common password
477
stored in a file.
478

    
479
This doesn't allow different passwords for different instances/groups of
480
instances, and makes it necessary to remember to copy the file around
481
the cluster when the password changes.
482

    
483
Proposed changes
484
++++++++++++++++
485

    
486
We'll change the VNC password file to a vnc_password_file hypervisor
487
parameter.  This way it can have a cluster default, but also a different
488
value for each instance. The VNC enabled hypervisors (xen and kvm) will
489
publish all the password files in use through the cluster so that a
490
redistribute-config will ship them to all nodes (see the Redistribute
491
Config proposed changes above).
492

    
493
The current VNC_PASSWORD_FILE constant will be removed, but its value
494
will be used as the default HV_VNC_PASSWORD_FILE value, thus retaining
495
backwards compatibility with 2.0.
496

    
497
The code to export the list of VNC password files from the hypervisors
498
to RedistributeConfig will be shared between the KVM and xen-hvm
499
hypervisors.
500

    
501
Disk/Net parameters
502
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
503

    
504
Current State and shortcomings
505
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
506

    
507
Currently disks and network interfaces have a few tweakable options and
508
all the rest is left to a default we chose. We're finding that we need
509
more and more to tweak some of these parameters, for example to disable
510
barriers for DRBD devices, or allow striping for the LVM volumes.
511

    
512
Moreover for many of these parameters it will be nice to have
513
cluster-wide defaults, and then be able to change them per
514
disk/interface.
515

    
516
Proposed changes
517
++++++++++++++++
518

    
519
We will add new cluster level diskparams and netparams, which will
520
contain all the tweakable parameters. All values which have a sensible
521
cluster-wide default will go into this new structure while parameters
522
which have unique values will not.
523

    
524
Example of network parameters:
525
  - mode: bridge/route
526
  - link: for mode "bridge" the bridge to connect to, for mode route it
527
    can contain the routing table, or the destination interface
528

    
529
Example of disk parameters:
530
  - stripe: lvm stripes
531
  - stripe_size: lvm stripe size
532
  - meta_flushes: drbd, enable/disable metadata "barriers"
533
  - data_flushes: drbd, enable/disable data "barriers"
534

    
535
Some parameters are bound to be disk-type specific (drbd, vs lvm, vs
536
files) or hypervisor specific (nic models for example), but for now they
537
will all live in the same structure. Each component is supposed to
538
validate only the parameters it knows about, and ganeti itself will make
539
sure that no "globally unknown" parameters are added, and that no
540
parameters have overridden meanings for different components.
541

    
542
The parameters will be kept, as for the BEPARAMS into a "default"
543
category, which will allow us to expand on by creating instance
544
"classes" in the future.  Instance classes is not a feature we plan
545
implementing in 2.1, though.
546

    
547

    
548
Global hypervisor parameters
549
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
550

    
551
Current State and shortcomings
552
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
553

    
554
Currently all hypervisor parameters are modifiable both globally
555
(cluster level) and at instance level. However, there is no other
556
framework to held hypervisor-specific parameters, so if we want to add
557
a new class of hypervisor parameters that only makes sense on a global
558
level, we have to change the hvparams framework.
559

    
560
Proposed changes
561
++++++++++++++++
562

    
563
We add a new (global, not per-hypervisor) list of parameters which are
564
not changeable on a per-instance level. The create, modify and query
565
instance operations are changed to not allow/show these parameters.
566

    
567
Furthermore, to allow transition of parameters to the global list, and
568
to allow cleanup of inadverdently-customised parameters, the
569
``UpgradeConfig()`` method of instances will drop any such parameters
570
from their list of hvparams, such that a restart of the master daemon
571
is all that is needed for cleaning these up.
572

    
573
Also, the framework is simple enough that if we need to replicate it
574
at beparams level we can do so easily.
575

    
576

    
577
Non bridged instances support
578
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
579

    
580
Current State and shortcomings
581
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
582

    
583
Currently each instance NIC must be connected to a bridge, and if the
584
bridge is not specified the default cluster one is used. This makes it
585
impossible to use the vif-route xen network scripts, or other
586
alternative mechanisms that don't need a bridge to work.
587

    
588
Proposed changes
589
++++++++++++++++
590

    
591
The new "mode" network parameter will distinguish between bridged
592
interfaces and routed ones.
593

    
594
When mode is "bridge" the "link" parameter will contain the bridge the
595
instance should be connected to, effectively making things as today. The
596
value has been migrated from a nic field to a parameter to allow for an
597
easier manipulation of the cluster default.
598

    
599
When mode is "route" the ip field of the interface will become
600
mandatory, to allow for a route to be set. In the future we may want
601
also to accept multiple IPs or IP/mask values for this purpose. We will
602
evaluate possible meanings of the link parameter to signify a routing
603
table to be used, which would allow for insulation between instance
604
groups (as today happens for different bridges).
605

    
606
For now we won't add a parameter to specify which network script gets
607
called for which instance, so in a mixed cluster the network script must
608
be able to handle both cases. The default kvm vif script will be changed
609
to do so. (Xen doesn't have a ganeti provided script, so nothing will be
610
done for that hypervisor)
611

    
612
Introducing persistent UUIDs
613
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
614

    
615
Current state and shortcomings
616
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
617

    
618
Some objects in the Ganeti configurations are tracked by their name
619
while also supporting renames. This creates an extra difficulty,
620
because neither Ganeti nor external management tools can then track
621
the actual entity, and due to the name change it behaves like a new
622
one.
623

    
624
Proposed changes part 1
625
+++++++++++++++++++++++
626

    
627
We will change Ganeti to use UUIDs for entity tracking, but in a
628
staggered way. In 2.1, we will simply add an “uuid” attribute to each
629
of the instances, nodes and cluster itself. This will be reported on
630
instance creation for nodes, and on node adds for the nodes. It will
631
be of course avaiblable for querying via the OpQueryNodes/Instance and
632
cluster information, and via RAPI as well.
633

    
634
Note that Ganeti will not provide any way to change this attribute.
635

    
636
Upgrading from Ganeti 2.0 will automatically add an ‘uuid’ attribute
637
to all entities missing it.
638

    
639

    
640
Proposed changes part 2
641
+++++++++++++++++++++++
642

    
643
In the next release (e.g. 2.2), the tracking of objects will change
644
from the name to the UUID internally, and externally Ganeti will
645
accept both forms of identification; e.g. an RAPI call would be made
646
either against ``/2/instances/foo.bar`` or against
647
``/2/instances/bb3b2e42…``. Since an FQDN must have at least a dot,
648
and dots are not valid characters in UUIDs, we will not have namespace
649
issues.
650

    
651
Another change here is that node identification (during cluster
652
operations/queries like master startup, “am I the master?” and
653
similar) could be done via UUIDs which is more stable than the current
654
hostname-based scheme.
655

    
656
Internal tracking refers to the way the configuration is stored; a
657
DRBD disk of an instance refers to the node name (so that IPs can be
658
changed easily), but this is still a problem for name changes; thus
659
these will be changed to point to the node UUID to ease renames.
660

    
661
The advantages of this change (after the second round of changes), is
662
that node rename becomes trivial, whereas today node rename would
663
require a complete lock of all instances.
664

    
665

    
666
Automated disk repairs infrastructure
667
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
668

    
669
Replacing defective disks in an automated fashion is quite difficult
670
with the current version of Ganeti. These changes will introduce
671
additional functionality and interfaces to simplify automating disk
672
replacements on a Ganeti node.
673

    
674
Fix node volume group
675
+++++++++++++++++++++
676

    
677
This is the most difficult addition, as it can lead to dataloss if it's
678
not properly safeguarded.
679

    
680
The operation must be done only when all the other nodes that have
681
instances in common with the target node are fine, i.e. this is the only
682
node with problems, and also we have to double-check that all instances
683
on this node have at least a good copy of the data.
684

    
685
This might mean that we have to enhance the GetMirrorStatus calls, and
686
introduce and a smarter version that can tell us more about the status
687
of an instance.
688

    
689
Stop allocation on a given PV
690
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
691

    
692
This is somewhat simple. First we need a "list PVs" opcode (and its
693
associated logical unit) and then a set PV status opcode/LU. These in
694
combination should allow both checking and changing the disk/PV status.
695

    
696
Instance disk status
697
++++++++++++++++++++
698

    
699
This new opcode or opcode change must list the instance-disk-index and
700
node combinations of the instance together with their status. This will
701
allow determining what part of the instance is broken (if any).
702

    
703
Repair instance
704
+++++++++++++++
705

    
706
This new opcode/LU/RAPI call will run ``replace-disks -p`` as needed, in
707
order to fix the instance status. It only affects primary instances;
708
secondaries can just be moved away.
709

    
710
Migrate node
711
++++++++++++
712

    
713
This new opcode/LU/RAPI call will take over the current ``gnt-node
714
migrate`` code and run migrate for all instances on the node.
715

    
716
Evacuate node
717
++++++++++++++
718

    
719
This new opcode/LU/RAPI call will take over the current ``gnt-node
720
evacuate`` code and run replace-secondary with an iallocator script for
721
all instances on the node.
722

    
723

    
724
External interface changes
725
--------------------------
726

    
727
OS API
728
~~~~~~
729

    
730
The OS API of Ganeti 2.0 has been built with extensibility in mind.
731
Since we pass everything as environment variables it's a lot easier to
732
send new information to the OSes without breaking retrocompatibility.
733
This section of the design outlines the proposed extensions to the API
734
and their implementation.
735

    
736
API Version Compatibility Handling
737
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
738

    
739
In 2.1 there will be a new OS API version (eg. 15), which should be
740
mostly compatible with api 10, except for some new added variables.
741
Since it's easy not to pass some variables we'll be able to handle
742
Ganeti 2.0 OSes by just filtering out the newly added piece of
743
information. We will still encourage OSes to declare support for the new
744
API after checking that the new variables don't provide any conflict for
745
them, and we will drop api 10 support after ganeti 2.1 has released.
746

    
747
New Environment variables
748
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
749

    
750
Some variables have never been added to the OS api but would definitely
751
be useful for the OSes. We plan to add an INSTANCE_HYPERVISOR variable
752
to allow the OS to make changes relevant to the virtualization the
753
instance is going to use. Since this field is immutable for each
754
instance, the os can tight the install without caring of making sure the
755
instance can run under any virtualization technology.
756

    
757
We also want the OS to know the particular hypervisor parameters, to be
758
able to customize the install even more.  Since the parameters can
759
change, though, we will pass them only as an "FYI": if an OS ties some
760
instance functionality to the value of a particular hypervisor parameter
761
manual changes or a reinstall may be needed to adapt the instance to the
762
new environment. This is not a regression as of today, because even if
763
the OSes are left blind about this information, sometimes they still
764
need to make compromises and cannot satisfy all possible parameter
765
values.
766

    
767
OS Variants
768
+++++++++++
769

    
770
Currently we are assisting to some degree of "os proliferation" just to
771
change a simple installation behavior. This means that the same OS gets
772
installed on the cluster multiple times, with different names, to
773
customize just one installation behavior. Usually such OSes try to share
774
as much as possible through symlinks, but this still causes
775
complications on the user side, especially when multiple parameters must
776
be cross-matched.
777

    
778
For example today if you want to install debian etch, lenny or squeeze
779
you probably need to install the debootstrap OS multiple times, changing
780
its configuration file, and calling it debootstrap-etch,
781
debootstrap-lenny or debootstrap-squeeze. Furthermore if you have for
782
example a "server" and a "development" environment which installs
783
different packages/configuration files and must be available for all
784
installs you'll probably end  up with deboostrap-etch-server,
785
debootstrap-etch-dev, debootrap-lenny-server, debootstrap-lenny-dev,
786
etc. Crossing more than two parameters quickly becomes not manageable.
787

    
788
In order to avoid this we plan to make OSes more customizable, by
789
allowing each OS to declare a list of variants which can be used to
790
customize it. The variants list is mandatory and must be written, one
791
variant per line, in the new "variants.list" file inside the main os
792
dir. At least one supported variant must be supported. When choosing the
793
OS exactly one variant will have to be specified, and will be encoded in
794
the os name as <OS-name>+<variant>. As for today it will be possible to
795
change an instance's OS at creation or install time.
796

    
797
The 2.1 OS list will be the combination of each OS, plus its supported
798
variants. This will cause the name name proliferation to remain, but at
799
least the internal OS code will be simplified to just parsing the passed
800
variant, without the need for symlinks or code duplication.
801

    
802
Also we expect the OSes to declare only "interesting" variants, but to
803
accept some non-declared ones which a user will be able to pass in by
804
overriding the checks ganeti does. This will be useful for allowing some
805
variations to be used without polluting the OS list (per-OS
806
documentation should list all supported variants). If a variant which is
807
not internally supported is forced through, the OS scripts should abort.
808

    
809
In the future (post 2.1) we may want to move to full fledged parameters
810
all orthogonal to each other (for example "architecture" (i386, amd64),
811
"suite" (lenny, squeeze, ...), etc). (As opposed to the variant, which
812
is a single parameter, and you need a different variant for all the set
813
of combinations you want to support).  In this case we envision the
814
variants to be moved inside of Ganeti and be associated with lists
815
parameter->values associations, which will then be passed to the OS.
816

    
817

    
818
IAllocator changes
819
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
820

    
821
Current State and shortcomings
822
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
823

    
824
The iallocator interface allows creation of instances without manually
825
specifying nodes, but instead by specifying plugins which will do the
826
required computations and produce a valid node list.
827

    
828
However, the interface is quite akward to use:
829

    
830
- one cannot set a 'default' iallocator script
831
- one cannot use it to easily test if allocation would succeed
832
- some new functionality, such as rebalancing clusters and calculating
833
  capacity estimates is needed
834

    
835
Proposed changes
836
++++++++++++++++
837

    
838
There are two area of improvements proposed:
839

    
840
- improving the use of the current interface
841
- extending the IAllocator API to cover more automation
842

    
843

    
844
Default iallocator names
845
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
846

    
847
The cluster will hold, for each type of iallocator, a (possibly empty)
848
list of modules that will be used automatically.
849

    
850
If the list is empty, the behaviour will remain the same.
851

    
852
If the list has one entry, then ganeti will behave as if
853
'--iallocator' was specifyed on the command line. I.e. use this
854
allocator by default. If the user however passed nodes, those will be
855
used in preference.
856

    
857
If the list has multiple entries, they will be tried in order until
858
one gives a successful answer.
859

    
860
Dry-run allocation
861
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
862

    
863
The create instance LU will get a new 'dry-run' option that will just
864
simulate the placement, and return the chosen node-lists after running
865
all the usual checks.
866

    
867
Cluster balancing
868
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
869

    
870
Instance add/removals/moves can create a situation where load on the
871
nodes is not spread equally. For this, a new iallocator mode will be
872
implemented called ``balance`` in which the plugin, given the current
873
cluster state, and a maximum number of operations, will need to
874
compute the instance relocations needed in order to achieve a "better"
875
(for whatever the script believes it's better) cluster.
876

    
877
Cluster capacity calculation
878
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
879

    
880
In this mode, called ``capacity``, given an instance specification and
881
the current cluster state (similar to the ``allocate`` mode), the
882
plugin needs to return:
883

    
884
- how many instances can be allocated on the cluster with that
885
  specification
886
- on which nodes these will be allocated (in order)
887

    
888
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