Workflow Service for OpenStack.
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Dougal Matthews ba67b3aff8 Allow "version" to be within workflow names in workbooks
There were two bugs in the schema validation for Mistral workflow names
within Workbooks. The goal in this part of the validation is to detect the
version property and assign it the enum type and then assin all other
single word properties to use the workflow/action schemas.

1. Detecting version properties. The code before this patch has the
following line.

    "version": {"enum": ["2.0", 2.0]},

This looked safe, but "version" is actually a regular expression.
Meaning that it will match any string containging "version". Adding ^ at the
start and $ at the end means that it matches a string from the start to the
end and is exactly "version".

2. Detecting workflows/actions. The current regular expression was

    "^(?!version)\w+$": _action_schema

This worked in most cases. It basically means "Any word that doesn't
start with version". So this worked, but was incorrect for workflows
called "versionworkflow" - it didn't match this when it should have.
Using ?: to create a non-capturing portion of the regular expression
solved this issue.

Any workflows that have a name that doesn't match this regular
expression. Such as those with a space (like "my worflow") were silently
ignored before this patch. The addition of additionalProperties: False
in the schema shows users an error if they use an invalid workflow name.

Closes-Bug: #1645354
Change-Id: Ib2b406a05cf15b41be075f886de77509a9da8535
2016-12-01 16:30:13 +00:00
devstack Fix devstack plugin compatibility 2016-11-23 13:12:10 +00:00
doc Add timestamp at the bottom of every page 2016-11-26 02:40:07 +00:00
etc Delete unnecessary comma 2016-09-14 12:14:16 +02:00
functionaltests Some minor code optimization in post_test_hook.sh 2016-08-25 08:25:08 +00:00
mistral Allow "version" to be within workflow names in workbooks 2016-12-01 16:30:13 +00:00
mistral_tempest_tests Merge "Replace uuid4() with generate_uuid() from oslo_utils" 2016-11-09 13:20:26 +00:00
rally-jobs Add more tests to mistral rally 2016-11-08 10:11:09 +00:00
releasenotes Bump Ironic API version to 1.22 when creating the Ironic client 2016-11-30 15:23:27 +01:00
tools Revert "Remove unused scripts in tools" 2016-11-22 06:24:39 +00:00
.coveragerc Update .coveragerc after the removal of openstack directory 2016-10-17 15:29:46 +05:30
.gitignore Remove unused pylintrc 2016-11-15 01:09:20 -08:00
.gitreview Update .gitreview file for project rename 2015-06-12 23:12:30 +00:00
.testr.conf Move gate tests under mistral/tests 2014-08-15 11:14:59 +04:00
CONTRIBUTING.rst Fixed http links in CONRIBUTING.rst 2016-09-08 17:17:55 +05:30
docker_image_build.sh Fixes the Mistral Docker image 2016-05-27 13:26:05 +02:00
LICENSE Adding license and authors file 2013-12-30 13:11:49 +07:00
README.rst Merge "Show team and repo badges on README" 2016-11-29 09:15:50 +00:00
requirements.txt Updated from global requirements 2016-11-30 23:07:39 +00:00
run_functional_tests.sh Removed mistral/tests/functional 2016-01-29 11:04:03 +09:00
run_tests.sh Removal of unneccessary directory in run_tests.sh 2016-10-20 16:03:39 +05:30
setup.cfg Add Jinja evaluator 2016-10-05 11:27:29 +00:00
setup.py Updated from global requirements 2015-09-17 16:39:24 +00:00
test-requirements.txt Add timestamp at the bottom of every page 2016-11-26 02:40:07 +00:00
tox.ini Initial commit for mistral-i18n support 2016-11-28 17:09:19 +05:30

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Mistral

Workflow Service for OpenStack cloud.

Installation

Prerequisites

It is necessary to install some specific system libs for installing Mistral. They can be installed on most popular operating systems using their package manager (for Ubuntu - apt, for Fedora, CentOS - yum, for Mac OS - brew or macports).

The list of needed packages is shown below:

  • python-dev
  • python-setuptools
  • python-pip
  • libffi-dev
  • libxslt1-dev (or libxslt-dev)
  • libxml2-dev
  • libyaml-dev
  • libssl-dev

In case of ubuntu, just run:

apt-get install python-dev python-setuptools libffi-dev \
  libxslt1-dev libxml2-dev libyaml-dev libssl-dev

Mistral can be used without authentication at all or it can work with OpenStack.

In case of OpenStack, it works only with Keystone v3, make sure Keystone v3 is installed.

Install Mistral

First of all, clone the repo and go to the repo directory:

$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/mistral.git
$ cd mistral

Devstack installation

Information about how to install Mistral with devstack can be found here.

Virtualenv installation:

$ tox

This will install necessary virtual environments and run all the project tests. Installing virtual environments may take significant time (~10-15 mins).

Local installation:

$ pip install -e .

or:

$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ python setup.py install

Configuring Mistral

Mistral configuration is needed for getting it work correctly with and without an OpenStack environment.

  1. Install and configure a database which can be MySQL or PostgreSQL (SQLite can't be used in production.). Here are the steps to connect Mistral to a MySQL database.

    • Make sure you have installed mysql-server package on your Mistral machine.

    • Install MySQL driver for python:

      $ pip install mysql-python

      or, if you work in virtualenv, run:

      $ tox -evenv -- pip install mysql-python

      NOTE: If you're using Python 3 then you need to install mysqlclient instead of mysql-python.

    • Create the database and grant privileges:

      $ mysql -u root -p

      CREATE DATABASE mistral; USE mistral GRANT ALL ON mistral.* TO 'root'@'localhost';

  2. Generate mistral.conf file:

    $ oslo-config-generator \
      --config-file tools/config/config-generator.mistral.conf \
      --output-file /etc/mistral/mistral.conf
  3. Edit file /etc/mistral/mistral.conf according to your setup. Pay attention to the following sections and options:

    [oslo_messaging_rabbit]
    rabbit_host = <RABBIT_HOST>
    rabbit_userid = <RABBIT_USERID>
    rabbit_password = <RABBIT_PASSWORD>
    
    [database]
    # Use the following line if *PostgreSQL* is used
    # connection = postgresql://<DB_USER>:<DB_PASSWORD>@localhost:5432/mistral
    connection = mysql://<DB_USER>:<DB_PASSWORD>@localhost:3306/mistral
  4. If you are not using OpenStack, add the following entry to the /etc/mistral/mistral.conf file and skip the following steps:

    [pecan]
    auth_enable = False
  5. Provide valid keystone auth properties:

    [keystone_authtoken]
    auth_uri = http://<Keystone-host>:5000/v3
    identity_uri = http://<Keystone-host:35357/
    auth_version = v3
    admin_user = <user>
    admin_password = <password>
    admin_tenant_name = <tenant>
  6. Register Mistral service and Mistral endpoints on Keystone:

    $ MISTRAL_URL="http://[host]:[port]/v2"
    $ openstack service create --name mistral workflowv2
    $ openstack endpoint create \
        --publicurl $MISTRAL_URL \
        --adminurl $MISTRAL_URL \
        --internalurl $MISTRAL_URL \
        mistral
  7. Update the mistral/actions/openstack/mapping.json file which contains all available OpenStack actions, according to the specific client versions of OpenStack projects in your deployment. Please find more detailed information in the tools/get_action_list.py script.

Before the First Run

After local installation you will find the commands mistral-server and mistral-db-manage available in your environment. The mistral-db-manage command can be used for migrating database schema versions. If Mistral is not installed in system then this script can be found at mistral/db/sqlalchemy/migration/cli.py, it can be executed using Python command line.

To update the database schema to the latest revision, type:

$ mistral-db-manage --config-file <path_to_config> upgrade head

For more detailed information about mistral-db-manage script please check file mistral/db/sqlalchemy/migration/alembic_migrations/README.md.

** NOTE: For users want a dry run with SQLite backend(not used in production), mistral-db-manage is not recommended for database initialization due to SQLite limitations. Please use sync_db script described below instead for database initialization.

Before starting Mistral server, run sync_db script. It prepares the DB, creates in it with all standard actions and standard workflows which Mistral provides for all mistral users.

If you are using virtualenv:

$ tools/sync_db.sh --config-file <path_to_config>

Or run sync_db directly:

$ python tools/sync_db.py --config-file <path_to_config>

Running Mistral API server

To run Mistral API server:

$ tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py \
    --server api --config-file <path_to_config>

Running Mistral Engines

To run Mistral Engine:

$ tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py \
    --server engine --config-file <path_to_config>

Running Mistral Task Executors

To run Mistral Task Executor instance:

$ tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py \
    --server executor --config-file <path_to_config>

Note that at least one Engine instance and one Executor instance should be running in order for workflow tasks to be processed by Mistral.

If you want to run some tasks on specific executor, the task affinity feature can be used to send these tasks directly to a specific executor. You can edit the following property in your mistral configuration file for this purpose:

[executor]
host = my_favorite_executor

After changing this option, you will need to start (restart) the executor. Use the target property of a task to specify the executor:

... Workflow YAML ...
task1:
  ...
  target: my_favorite_executor
... Workflow YAML ...

Running Multiple Mistral Servers Under the Same Process

To run more than one server (API, Engine, or Task Executor) on the same process:

$ tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py \
    --server api,engine --config-file <path_to_config>

The value for the --server option can be a comma-delimited list. The valid options are all (which is the default if not specified) or any combination of api, engine, and executor.

It's important to note that the fake transport for the rpc_backend defined in the configuration file should only be used if all Mistral servers are launched on the same process. Otherwise, messages do not get delivered because the fake transport is using an in-process queue.

Mistral Client

The Mistral command line tool is provided by the python-mistralclient package which is available here.

Debugging

To debug using a local engine and executor without dependencies such as RabbitMQ, make sure your /etc/mistral/mistral.conf has the following settings:

[DEFAULT]
rpc_backend = fake

[pecan]
auth_enable = False

and run the following command in pdb, PyDev or PyCharm:

mistral/cmd/launch.py --server all --config-file /etc/mistral/mistral.conf --use-debugger

Note

In PyCharm, you also need to enable the Gevent compatibility flag in Settings -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Python Debugger -> Gevent compatible. Without this setting, PyCharm will not show variable values and become unstable during debugging.

Running unit tests in PyCharm

In order to be able to conveniently run unit tests, you need to:

  1. Set unit tests as the default runner:

Settings -> Tools -> Python Integrated Tools -> Default test runner: Unittests

  1. Enable test detection for all classes:

Run/Debug Configurations -> Defaults -> Python tests -> Unittests -> uncheck Inspect only subclasses of unittest.TestCase

Running examples

To run the examples find them in mistral-extra repository (https://github.com/openstack/mistral-extra) and follow the instructions on each example.

Tests

You can run some of the functional tests in non-openstack mode locally. To do this:

  1. set auth_enable = False in the mistral.conf and restart Mistral

  2. execute:

    $ ./run_functional_tests.sh

To run tests for only one version need to specify it:

$ bash run_functional_tests.sh v1

More information about automated tests for Mistral can be found on Mistral Wiki.