Skip to main content

Juju plugin to verify if it is safe to perform an operation on one or more units

Project description

Juju verify

This CLI tool is a Juju plugin that allows user to check whether it's safe to perform some disruptive maintenance operations on Juju units, like shutdown or reboot.

Requirements

Juju-verify requires Juju 2.8.10 or higher.

Supported charms

  • nova-compute
  • ceph-osd
  • ceph-mon
  • neutron-gateway
  • ovn-central

Supported checks

  • reboot
  • shutdown

Contribution and lifecycle

For more information on how to contribute and the lifecycle of juju-verify tools, visit CONTRIBUTING page.

Usage example

To verify that it is safe to stop/shutdown units nova-compute/0 and nova-compute/1 without affecting the rest of the OpenStack cloud environment, run the following.

$ juju-verify shutdown --units nova-compute/0 nova-compute/1
$ juju verify shutdown -u nova-compute/ nova-compute/1

To verify that it is safe to reboot all principal units from a Juju machine, run the following.

$ juju-verify reboot --machines 6
$ juju verify reboot -M 6

For more information, visit the juju-verify-getting-started page.

Known limitations

  1. argparse limitation with nargs="+" type of arguments. The core Juju client allows commands after options (e.g. juju --run unit/0 ls). juju-verify needs to pass the type of check (reboot, shutdown) at the beginning of the command, otherwise it will be parsed as a unit (or machine). juju-verify -u unit/0 reboot will fail. juju-verify reboot -u unit/0 will succeed.

  2. If you run a check on a unit which contains a subordinate unit, you will only get a warning message about the existence of the subordinate unit. In order to check if it is safe to reboot/shutdown this unit, juju-verify needs to be explicitly run against this subordinate unit, or the unit needs to be manually checked (if juju-verify does not support this charm yet)

    Example:

    $ juju-verify shutdown --units ceph-osd/0
    ===[ceph-osd/0]===
    Checks:
    [WARN] ceph-osd/0 has units running on child machines: ceph-mon/0*
    [OK] ceph-mon/0: Ceph cluster is healthy
    [OK] Minimum replica number check passed.
    [OK] Availability zone check passed.
    
    Result: OK (Checks passed with warnings)
    

How to contribute

Is your favorite charm missing from the list of supported charm? Don't hesitate to add it. This plugin is easily extensible.

All you need to do is create new class in juju_verify.verifiers package that inherits from juju_verify.verifiers.BaseVerifier (see the class documentation for more details) and implement the necessary logic.

Then, the charm name needs to be added to SUPPORTED_CHARMS dictionary in juju_verify/verifiers/__init__.py et voilà, the charm is now supported.

Testing

Don't forget to add unit and functional tests.

Unittests

Unit tests can be executed in these ways:

make unittest
# or
tox -e unit

However, it is recommended to run unit tests at the same time as lint tests as follows:

make tests
# or
tox

Functional tests

Functional tests can be run using:

make functional
# or
tox -e func

Functional tests require some applications to use a VIP. Please ensure the OS_VIP00 environment variable is set to a suitable VIP address before running functional tests.

During development, different variations of all the functional tests may be run. Find some examples below:

  1. tox -e func runs all bundles and does not keep any Juju model
  2. tox -e func -- --keep-faulty-model runs all bundles and keeps the Juju models that failed
  3. tox -e func -- --keep-all-models --log DEBUG runs all bundles w/ logging in debug mode and keeping all the Juju models
  4. tox -e func-target -- ceph runs only the Ceph bundle and not keep the Juju model
  5. tox -e func-target -- ceph --keep-model --log DEBUG runs only the Ceph bundle w/ logging in debug mode and keep the Juju model

Code decisions

The main idea of juju-verify is to be used as a CLI tool with an entry point defined in juju verify/juju verify.py. We use the argparse library to parse CLI arguments and to provide help information, which can be accessed using juju-verify --help command.

Despite the main purpose, it is possible to use juju-verify as python package. It can be installed directly from pypi.org.

Verifiers

The basic structure of the verifier is defined in the /juju_verify/verifiers/base.py file as the BaseVerifier class. Every other verifier must inherit from this class, with the following variable and functions having to be overrided.

  • NAME - name of verifier
  • verify_<action-with-unit> - function to run all necessary checks when trying to perform "action" with the unit

Each verifier will contain these two variables:

  • units - list of units we want to verify
  • model - corresponding model containing units

The verifier should run a verification using the verify function, which will check if the verification is supported and adds these pre-checks:

  • check_affected_machines - Check if affected machines run other principal units.
  • check_has_sub_machines - Check if the machine hosts containers or VMs.

For more information about the verifier, see juju-verify-verifiers page.

NOTE: There is a list of supported verifiers that corresponded to the list of supported charms.

Checks

The recommended way is to divide a unit check into several smaller checks with self-explanatory names and a good docstring. Than all sub-checks should be run with checks_executor, which aggregates the results from each check or provide default result. It also catches any of the following errors JujuActionFailed, CharmException, KeyError or JSONDecodeError, giving a FAIL result with a message in the form "{check.name} check failed with error: {error}".

Results

A Result is a class object that represents the output of any check that can be aggregated together with other results. Each result consists of one or more sub-results represented as a Partial class, the partial result consists of severity and meesage.

There are currently 4 severity tips:

  • OK - representing a successful check
  • WARN - the result ended successfully, but there was a possibility that may have an unexpected impact on the result
  • UNSUPPORTED - result of check is not supported
  • FAIL - check failed

The final result is successful if no partial result ends other than with the OK or WARN severity. The string representation of results is an aggregation of partial results, which are represented as severiny name and message.

In the following example, we can see four checks, one ending with a severity WARN and three ending with a severity OK, but the overall result is OK.

$ juju-verify shutdown --unit ceph-osd/0
===[ceph-osd/0]===
Checks:
[WARN] ceph-osd/0 has units running on child machines: ceph-mon/0*
[OK] ceph-mon/0: Ceph cluster is healthy
[OK] Minimum replica number check passed.
[OK] Availability zone check passed.

Result: OK (Checks passed with warnings)

Submit a bug

If you prefer, file a bug or feature request at:


Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

juju-verify-1.1.tar.gz (47.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page