Mesos CLI Tools
Project description
mesos-cli
CLI tools to work with mesos.
What problem does this solve?
I am comfortable debugging programs from the command line. I have a set of tools that I use from coreutils that end up being used every day. A day doesn’t go by when I’ve not used grep, find, or cat.
While mesos allows you to treat all the nodes in your data center as anonymous resources, debugging still needs to be done on specific hosts. Currently, it requires multiple tools and context switches to gather the pieces that you need to look at what a specific task is doing. Most of these existing tools don’t work well with the command line and I’m unable to use the workflow that I’ve become comfortable with.
How is the problem solved?
To solve the problem, some of the coreutil commands have been re-implemented to work across the entire data center instead of a single host.
commands and options have been copied as closely as it makes sense. They should have the same options that you’re used to.
pipe works the way you’d expect it to. You should be able to replace most host specific debug scripts easily.
mesos itself isn’t required locally. Developers want to debug their tasks without having a local copy of mesos installed.
everything is task centric. There’s no need to worry about specifying a framework if you don’t want to, just put in the task id.
lazy matching. Task IDs are long and normally require cut/paste to get exact matches. Instead, all task parameters are partial matches, no need to type that long thing in.
auto-complete. Most parameters tab-complete (see the section on auto-completion to configure), just type a couple characters in and get what you’re looking for.
extensibility. Write your own subcommands. Most of the required information can be accessed via. existing subcommands (leading master resolution via. mesos-resolve), so you only need to implement what you want and not re-invent the wheel.
Installation
pip install mesos.cli
Note that if you’ve already installed mesos locally, you can either install this to a location other than /usr/local/bin via. pip options or remove /usr/local/bin/mesos. There should be no downsides to just removing it.
Command Completion
Task IDs? File names? Complete all the things! Configure command completion and you’ll be able to tab complete most everything.
BASH
Add the following to your startup scripts:
complete -C mesos-completion mesos
ZSH
Add the following to your .zshrc:
source mesos-zsh-completion.sh
Note that bashcompinit is being used. If you’re running an older version of ZSH, it won’t work. Take a look at bin/mesos-zsh-completion.sh for information.
Configuration
Place a configuration file at any of the following:
./.mesos.json
~/.mesos.json
/etc/.mesos.json
/usr/etc/.mesos.json
/usr/local/etc/.mesos.json
You can override the location of this config via. MESOS_CLI_CONFIG.
If you’re using a non-local master, you’ll need to configure where the master should be found like so:
{
"profile": "default"
"default": {
"master": "zk://localhost:2181/mesos",
"log_level": "warning",
"log_file": "/tmp/mesos-cli.log"
}
}
Note that master accepts all values that mesos normally does, eg:
localhost:5050
zk://localhost:2181/mesos
file:///path/to/config/above
Profiles
Want to access multiple mesos clusters without changing config? You’re in luck!
To change your profile, you can run:
mesos config profile new-profile
The old config will be maintained and can be switched back to at any point.
Commands
All commands have their own options and parameters. Make sure you run mesos [command] –help to get the potential options.
Most commands take a task-id as parameter. This does not need to be an exact match and for commands where it makes sense, can match multiple tasks. Suppose your cluster is running the following tasks:
hadoop.myjob.12345-1928731
rails.48271236-1231234
app-10.89934ht-2398hriwuher
app-20.9845uih-9823hriu-2938u422
A task-id of app will match both app-10 and app-20.
A task-id of myjob will only match the hadoop task.
A task-id of 1231234 will only match the rails task.
cat
mesos cat task-id file [file]
events
mesos events
observe events from the cluster. You will see the events occurring on the master and all slaves in the cluster (including new slaves as they arrive) as they occur.
find
mesos find task-id [path]
When multiple tasks match task-id, headers will be printed between their results.
head
mesos head -n 10 task-id file [file]
ls
mesos ls task-id [path]
The default view is ls -la. When multiple tasks match task-id, headers will be printed between their results.
ps
mesos ps
Output time, memory, cpu, command, user and slave/task_id information for currently running tasks.
scp
mesos scp file [file ...] remote_path
Upload local file(s) to the remote_path on every slave. Note that you will need to have SSH access to every slave you’d like to upload to.
ssh
mesos ssh task-id
This will SSH into the sandbox of the specified task on the slave that it is running on. Note that you need to have SSH access to this slave/sandbox.
tail
mesos tail -n 10 task-id file [file]
This also implements follow. Unlike normal tail, it will look for tasks/files being created on your mesos cluster and begin to follow those files as they are written to. You can start tail in –follow mode and then launch your tasks to watch everything has it happens.
Adding Commands
Commands are all separate scripts. The mesos script inspects your path and looks for everything that starts with mesos-. To add a new command, just name the script mesos-new-name and you’ll have a new command. This makes it possible to write new sub-commands in whatever language you’d like.
There are some utils that are nice to have when you’re doing a new command. While all of them are available in python via. this package, a subset is available via. existing commands. This allows you to focus on the new functionality you’d like in your command (in the language you’re comfortable with).
config
mesos config [key] [value]
Output a json object containing all the mesos-cli config or you can get/set specific values in the configuration.
resolve
mesos resolve [master-config]
Take either the existing configured master or the one passed on the command line and discover where the leading master is. You’ll be able to use the following format:
localhost:5050
zk://localhost:2181/mesos
file:///path/to/config/above
state
mesos state [slave-id]
Return the full JSON state of either the master or slave (partial matches are valid).
Testing
There are two ways to do testing. If you’d like to just test with your local setup:
python setup.py nosetests
For a full virtualenv + specific python versions (py26, py27), you can use tox:
tox
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