openstack-manuals/doc/admin-guide-cloud/source/keystone_caching_layer.rst
venkatamahesh b65d8b9cfd [admin-guide] Fix the rst mark-ups for Identity service
Change-Id: If2f7664d994aee5d3a87275fd83722755c4dbcb1
2015-12-16 13:08:11 +05:30

5.0 KiB

Caching layer

OpenStack Identity supports a caching layer that is above the configurable subsystems (for example, token, assignment). OpenStack Identity uses the dogpile.cache library which allows flexible cache back ends. The majority of the caching configuration options are set in the [cache] section of the keystone.conf file. However, each section that has the capability to be cached usually has a caching boolean value that toggles caching.

So to enable only the token back end caching, set the values as follows:

[cache]
enabled=true

[assignment]
caching=false

[token]
caching=true

Note

Since the Juno release, the default setting is enabled for subsystem caching, but the global toggle is disabled. As a result, no caching in available unless the global toggle for [cache] is enabled by setting the value to true.

Caching for tokens and tokens validation

The token system has a separate cache_time configuration option, that can be set to a value above or below the global expiration_time default, allowing for different caching behavior from the other systems in OpenStack Identity. This option is set in the [token] section of the configuration file.

The token revocation list cache time is handled by the configuration option revocation_cache_time in the [token] section. The revocation list is refreshed whenever a token is revoked. It typically sees significantly more requests than specific token retrievals or token validation calls.

Here is a list of actions that are affected by the cached time: getting a new token, revoking tokens, validating tokens, checking v2 tokens, and checking v3 tokens.

The delete token API calls invalidate the cache for the tokens being acted upon, as well as invalidating the cache for the revoked token list and the validate/check token calls.

Token caching is configurable independently of the revocation_list caching. Lifted expiration checks from the token drivers to the token manager. This ensures that cached tokens will still raise a TokenNotFound flag when expired.

For cache consistency, all token IDs are transformed into the short token hash at the provider and token driver level. Some methods have access to the full ID (PKI Tokens), and some methods do not. Cache invalidation is inconsistent without token ID normalization.

Caching around assignment CRUD

The assignment system has a separate cache_time configuration option, that can be set to a value above or below the global expiration_time default, allowing for different caching behavior from the other systems in Identity service. This option is set in the [assignment] section of the configuration file.

Currently assignment has caching for project, domain, and role specific requests (primarily around the CRUD actions). Caching is currently not implemented on grants. The list methods are not subject to caching.

Here is a list of actions that are affected by the assignment: assign domain API, assign project API, and assign role API.

The create, update, and delete actions for domains, projects and roles will perform proper invalidations of the cached methods listed above.

Note

If a read-only assignment back end is in use, the cache will not immediately reflect changes on the back end. Any given change may take up to the cache_time (if set in the [assignment] section of the configuration file) or the global expiration_time (set in the [cache] section of the configuration file) before it is reflected. If this type of delay (when using a read-only assignment back end) is an issue, it is recommended that caching be disabled on assignment. To disable caching specifically on assignment, in the [assignment] section of the configuration set caching to False.

For more information about the different back ends (and configuration options), see:

Configure the Memcached back end example

The following example shows how to configure the memcached back end:

[cache]

enabled = true
backend = dogpile.cache.memcached
backend_argument = url:127.0.0.1:11211

You need to specify the URL to reach the memcached instance with the backend_argument parameter.