An Ironic deployment will be composed of the following components:
An admin-only RESTful API service, by which privileged users, such as cloud operators and other services within the cloud control plane, may interact with the managed bare metal servers.
A Conductor service, which does the bulk of the work. Functionality is exposed via the API service. The Conductor and API services communicate via RPC.
A Database and DB API for storing the state of the Conductor and Drivers.
A Deployment Ramdisk or Deployment Agent, which provide control over the hardware which is not available remotely to the Conductor. A ramdisk should be built which contains one of these agents, eg. with diskimage-builder. This ramdisk can be booted on-demand.
- NOTE: The agent is never run inside a tenant instance.
The internal driver API provides a consistent interface between the Conductor service and the driver implementations. A driver is defined by a class inheriting from the BaseDriver class, defining certain interfaces; each interface is an instance of the relevant driver module.
For example, a fake driver class might look like this:
class FakePower(base.PowerInterface):
def get_properties(self):
return {}
def validate(self, task):
pass
def get_power_state(self, task):
return states.NOSTATE
def set_power_state(self, task, power_state):
pass
def reboot(self, task):
pass
class FakeDriver(base.BaseDriver):
def __init__(self):
self.power = FakePower()
There are three categories of driver interfaces:
Drivers may run their own periodic tasks, i.e. actions run repeatedly after a certain amount of time. Such task is created by decorating a method on an interface with periodic decorator, e.g.
from futurist import periodics
class FakePower(base.PowerInterface):
@periodics.periodic(spacing=42)
def task(self, manager, context):
pass # do something
Here the spacing argument is a period in seconds for a given periodic task. For example ‘spacing=5’ means every 5 seconds.
Note
In releases prior to and including the Newton release, it’s possible to bind periodic tasks to a driver object instead of an interface. This is deprecated and support for it will be removed in the Ocata release.
Each Conductor registers itself in the database upon start-up, and periodically updates the timestamp of its record. Contained within this registration is a list of the drivers which this Conductor instance supports. This allows all services to maintain a consistent view of which Conductors and which drivers are available at all times.
Based on their respective driver, all nodes are mapped across the set of available Conductors using a consistent hashing algorithm. Node-specific tasks are dispatched from the API tier to the appropriate conductor using conductor-specific RPC channels. As Conductor instances join or leave the cluster, nodes may be remapped to different Conductors, thus triggering various driver actions such as take-over or clean-up.