Mistral Project
Project description
Workflow Service for OpenStack cloud.
Prerequisites
It is necessary to install some specific system libs for installing Mistral. They can be installed on most popular operating system 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 works with OpenStack. In case of OpenStack, it works only on Keystone v3, make sure Keystone v3 is installed.
Installation
First of all, clone the repo and go to the repo directory:
git clone https://github.com/openstack/mistral.git cd mistral
Devstack installation
Information about how to install Mistral with devstack can be found here: https://github.com/openstack/mistral/tree/master/devstack
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:
python setup.py install
Configuring Mistral
Mistral configuration is needed for getting it work correctly either with real OpenStack environment or without OpenStack environment.
Generate mistral.conf:
oslo-config-generator --config-file tools/config/config-generator.mistral.conf --output-file etc/mistral.conf
Edit file etc/mistral.conf
If you are not using OpenStack, skip this item. 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>
If you don’t use OpenStack, provide auth_enable = False in config file:
[pecan] auth_enable = False
If you are not using OpenStack, skip this item. Register Mistral service and Mistral endpoints on Keystone:
$ MISTRAL_URL="http://[host]:[port]/v2" $ keystone service-create --name mistral --type workflowv2 $ keystone endpoint-create --service_id mistral --publicurl $MISTRAL_URL \ --adminurl $MISTRAL_URL --internalurl $MISTRAL_URL
Also, configure rabbit properties: rabbit_userid, rabbit_password, rabbit_host in section oslo_messaging_rabbit.
Configure database. SQLite can’t be used in production. Use MySQL or PostgreSQL instead. Here are the steps how to connect MySQL DB to Mistral:
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
Create the database and grant privileges:
mysql -u root -p CREATE DATABASE mistral; USE mistral GRANT ALL ON mistral.* TO 'root'@'localhost';
Configure connection in Mistral config:
[database] connection = mysql://<user>:<password>@localhost:3306/mistral
NOTE: If PostgreSQL is used, configure connection item as below:
connection = postgresql://<user>:<password>@localhost:5432/mistral
8. If you are not using OpenStack, skip this item. Update mistral/actions/openstack/mapping.json file which contains all allowed OpenStack actions, according to the specific client versions of OpenStack projects in your deployment. Please find more detailed information in tools/get_action_list.py script.
Before the first run
After local installation you will see mistral-server and mistral-db-manage commands in your environment.
mistral-db-manage command can be used for migrations. 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.
For updating the database to the latest revision type:
mistral-db-manage --config-file <path-to-mistral.conf> upgrade head
For more detailed information about mistral-db-manage script please see migration readme here.
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 use 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 perform the following command in a shell:
tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py --server api --config-file path_to_config*
Running Mistral Engines
To run Mistral Engine perform the following command in a shell:
tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py --server engine --config-file path_to_config*
Running Mistral Task Executors
To run Mistral Task Executor instance perform the following command in a shell:
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 so that workflow tasks are processed by Mistral.
If it is needed to run some tasks on specific executor then task affinity feature can be used to send these tasks directly to specific executor. In configuration file edit section “executor” host property:
[executor] host = my_favorite_executor
Then start (restart) executor. Use target task property to specify this 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, perform the following command in a shell:
tox -evenv -- python mistral/cmd/launch.py --server api,engine --config-file path_to_config
The –server command line option can be a comma delimited list. The valid options are “all” (by 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 config file should only be used if “all” the Mistral servers are launched on the same process. Otherwise, messages do not get delivered if the Mistral servers are launched on different processes because the “fake” transport is using an in process queue.
Mistral client
Python-mistralclient is available here.
Debugging
To debug using a local engine and executor without dependencies such as RabbitMQ, create etc/mistral.conf with the following settings:
[DEFAULT] rpc_backend = fake [pecan] auth_enable = False
and run in pdb, PyDev or PyCharm:
mistral/cmd/launch.py --server all --config-file etc/mistral.conf --use-debugger
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
There is an ability to run part of functional tests in non-openstack mode locally. To do this:
set auth_enable = False in the mistral.conf and restart Mistral
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 here: https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Mistral/Testing
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distributions
Built Distribution
File details
Details for the file mistral-2.0.0.0b1-py2-none-any.whl
.
File metadata
- Download URL: mistral-2.0.0.0b1-py2-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 361.4 kB
- Tags: Python 2
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | c212127abf44733c2212da7ff444c282b47c7b59ebc1844d633ace6a994073ba |
|
MD5 | c02971cd14dc9b0c5b73f609bb09192e |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 818c400f6aec58ad201fcbd9a6535dc2ec8af4afc8d064c0c575aad16aa7d30c |