Including tasks has a performance penalty when compared with importing
tasks. If the include has a condition associated with it, then the
overhead of the include may be lower than the overhead of skipping all
imported tasks. For unconditionally included tasks, switching to
import_tasks provides a clear benefit.
Benchmarking of include vs. import is available at [1].
This change switches from include_tasks to import_tasks where there is
no condition applied to the include.
[1] https://github.com/stackhpc/ansible-scaling/blob/master/doc/include-and-import.md#task-include-and-import
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: Ia45af4a198e422773d9f009c7f7b2e32ce9e3b97
Including tasks has a performance penalty when compared with importing
tasks. If the include has a condition associated with it, then the
overhead of the include may be lower than the overhead of skipping all
imported tasks. In the case of the check-containers.yml include, the
included file only has a single task, so the overhead of skipping this
task will not be greater than the overhead of the task import. It
therefore makes sense to switch to use import_tasks there.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I65d911670649960708b9f6a4c110d1a7df1ad8f7
The common role was previously added as a dependency to all other roles.
It would set a fact after running on a host to avoid running twice. This
had the nice effect that deploying any service would automatically pull
in the common services for that host. When using tags, any services with
matching tags would also run the common role. This could be both
surprising and sometimes useful.
When using Ansible at large scale, there is a penalty associated with
executing a task against a large number of hosts, even if it is skipped.
The common role introduces some overhead, just in determining that it
has already run.
This change extracts the common role into a separate play, and removes
the dependency on it from all other roles. New groups have been added
for cron, fluentd, and kolla-toolbox, similar to other services. This
changes the behaviour in the following ways:
* The common role is now run for all hosts at the beginning, rather than
prior to their first enabled service
* Hosts must be in the necessary group for each of the common services
in order to have that service deployed. This is mostly to avoid
deploying on localhost or the deployment host
* If tags are specified for another service e.g. nova, the common role
will *not* automatically run for matching hosts. The common tag must
be specified explicitly
The last of these is probably the largest behaviour change. While it
would be possible to determine which hosts should automatically run the
common role, it would be quite complex, and would introduce some
overhead that would probably negate the benefit of splitting out the
common role.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I6a4676bf6efeebc61383ec7a406db07c7a868b2a
Fixes:
- SB/NB DB address format (single host) for SB/NB DB daemon
- SB/NB DB address format (all hosts) for Neutron / northd /
ovn-ovs bootstrap
- OVN tests
Change-Id: I539773c48f89b731d068280c228ce11782bf5788
Closes-Bug: #1875222