HOT is a new template format meant to replace the Heat CloudFormation-compatible format (CFN) as the native format supported by the Heat over time. This guide is targeted towards template authors and explains how to write HOT templates based on examples. A detailed specification of HOT can be found at Heat Orchestration Template (HOT) specification.
HOT support is still under development and needs more work to provide access to all functionality currently available via the CFN compatible template interface. This guide will be updated periodically whenever new features get implemented for HOT.
This section gives an introduction on how to write HOT templates, starting from very basic steps and then going into more and more detail by means of examples.
The most basic template you can think of may contain only a single resource definition using only predefined properties (along with the mandatory Heat template version tag). For example, the template below could be used to simply deploy a single compute instance.
heat_template_version: 2015-04-30
description: Simple template to deploy a single compute instance
resources:
my_instance:
type: OS::Nova::Server
properties:
key_name: my_key
image: F18-x86_64-cfntools
flavor: m1.small
Each HOT template has to include the heat_template_version key with a valid version of HOT, e.g. 2015-10-15 (see Heat template version for a list of all versions). While the description is optional, it is good practice to include some useful text that describes what users can do with the template. In case you want to provide a longer description that does not fit on a single line, you can provide multi-line text in YAML, for example:
description: >
This is how you can provide a longer description
of your template that goes over several lines.
The resources section is required and must contain at least one resource definition. In the example above, a compute instance is defined with fixed values for the ‘key_name’, ‘image’ and ‘flavor’ parameters.
Note that all those elements, i.e. a key-pair with the given name, the image and the flavor have to exist in the OpenStack environment where the template is used. Typically a template is made more easily reusable, though, by defining a set of input parameters instead of hard-coding such values.
Input parameters defined in the parameters section of a HOT template (see also Parameters section) allow users to customize a template during deployment. For example, this allows for providing custom key-pair names or image IDs to be used for a deployment. From a template author’s perspective, this helps to make a template more easily reusable by avoiding hardcoded assumptions.
Sticking to the example used above, it makes sense to allow users to provide their custom key-pairs, provide their own image, and to select a flavor for the compute instance. This can be achieved by extending the initial template as follows:
heat_template_version: 2015-04-30
description: Simple template to deploy a single compute instance
parameters:
key_name:
type: string
label: Key Name
description: Name of key-pair to be used for compute instance
image_id:
type: string
label: Image ID
description: Image to be used for compute instance
instance_type:
type: string
label: Instance Type
description: Type of instance (flavor) to be used
resources:
my_instance:
type: OS::Nova::Server
properties:
key_name: { get_param: key_name }
image: { get_param: image_id }
flavor: { get_param: instance_type }
In the example above, three input parameters have been defined that have to be provided by the user upon deployment. The fixed values for the respective resource properties have been replaced by references to the corresponding input parameters by means of the get_param function (see also Intrinsic functions).
You can also define default values for input parameters which will be used in case the user does not provide the respective parameter during deployment. For example, the following definition for the instance_type parameter would select the ‘m1.small’ flavor unless specified otherwise by the user.
parameters:
instance_type:
type: string
label: Instance Type
description: Type of instance (flavor) to be used
default: m1.small
Another option that can be specified for a parameter is to hide its value when users request information about a stack deployed from a template. This is achieved by the hidden attribute and useful, for example when requesting passwords as user input:
parameters:
database_password:
type: string
label: Database Password
description: Password to be used for database
hidden: true
In some cases you might want to restrict the values of input parameters that users can supply. For example, you might know that the software running in a compute instance needs a certain amount of resources so you might want to restrict the instance_type parameter introduced above. Parameters in HOT templates can be restricted by adding a constraints section (see also Parameter Constraints). For example, the following would allow only three values to be provided as input for the instance_type parameter:
parameters:
instance_type:
type: string
label: Instance Type
description: Type of instance (flavor) to be used
constraints:
- allowed_values: [ m1.medium, m1.large, m1.xlarge ]
description: Value must be one of m1.medium, m1.large or m1.xlarge.
The constraints section allows for defining a list of constraints that must all be fulfilled by user input. For example, the following list of constraints could be used to clearly specify format requirements on a password to be provided by users:
parameters:
database_password:
type: string
label: Database Password
description: Password to be used for database
hidden: true
constraints:
- length: { min: 6, max: 8 }
description: Password length must be between 6 and 8 characters.
- allowed_pattern: "[a-zA-Z0-9]+"
description: Password must consist of characters and numbers only.
- allowed_pattern: "[A-Z]+[a-zA-Z0-9]*"
description: Password must start with an uppercase character.
Note that you can define multiple constraints of the same type. Especially in the case of allowed patterns this not only allows for keeping regular expressions simple and maintainable, but also for keeping error messages to be presented to users precise.
In addition to template customization through input parameters, you will typically want to provide outputs to users, which can be done in the outputs section of a template (see also Outputs section). For example, the IP address by which the instance defined in the example above can be accessed should be provided to users. Otherwise, users would have to look it up themselves. The definition for providing the IP address of the compute instance as an output is shown in the following snippet:
outputs:
instance_ip:
description: The IP address of the deployed instance
value: { get_attr: [my_instance, first_address] }
Output values are typically resolved using intrinsic function such as the get_attr function in the example above (see also Intrinsic functions).