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Overriding default configuration¶
Variable precedence¶
Role defaults¶
Every role has a file, defaults/main.yml
which holds the
usual variables overridable by a deployer, like a regular Ansible
role. This defaults are the closest possible to OpenStack standards.
They can be overridden at multiple levels.
Group vars and host vars¶
OpenStack-Ansible provides safe defaults for deployers in its group_vars folder. They take care of the wiring between different roles, like for example storing information on how to reach RabbitMQ from nova role.
You can override the existing group vars (and host vars) by creating your own folder in /etc/openstack_deploy/group_vars (and /etc/openstack_deploy/host_vars respectively).
If you want to change the location of the override folder, you
can adapt your openstack-ansible.rc file, or export
GROUP_VARS_PATH
and HOST_VARS_PATH
during your shell session.
Role vars¶
Every role makes use of additional variables in vars/
which take
precedence over group vars.
These variables are typically internal to the role and are not designed to be overridden. However, deployers may choose to override them using extra-vars by placing the overrides into the user variables file.
User variables¶
If you want to globally override variable, you can define
the variable you want to override in a
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_*.yml
file. It will apply on all hosts.
user_*.yml files in more details¶
Files in /etc/openstack_deploy
beginning with user_
will be
automatically sourced in any openstack-ansible
command. Alternatively,
the files can be sourced with the -e
parameter of the ansible-playbook
command.
user_variables.yml
and user_secrets.yml
are used directly by
OpenStack-Ansible. Adding custom variables used by your own roles and
playbooks to these files is not recommended. Doing so will complicate your
upgrade path by making comparison of your existing files with later versions
of these files more arduous. Rather, recommended practice is to place your own
variables in files named following the user_*.yml
pattern so they will be
sourced alongside those used exclusively by OpenStack-Ansible.
user_*.yml
files contain YAML variables which are applied as extra-vars
when executing openstack-ansible
to run playbooks. They will be sourced
in alphanumeric order by openstack-ansible
. If duplicate variables occur
in the user_*.yml
files, the variable in the last file read will take
precedence.
Setting overrides in configuration files with config_template¶
All of the services that use YAML, JSON, or INI for configuration can receive
overrides through the use of a Ansible action plugin named config_template
.
The configuration template engine allows a deployer to use a simple dictionary
to modify or add items into configuration files at run time that may not have a
preset template option. All OpenStack-Ansible roles allow for this
functionality where applicable. Files available to receive overrides can be
seen in the defaults/main.yml
file as standard empty dictionaries (hashes).
This module was not accepted into Ansible Core (see PR1 and PR2), and will never be.
config_template documentation¶
These are the options available as found within the virtual module documentation section.
module: config_template
version_added: 1.9.2
short_description: >
Renders template files providing a create/update override interface
description:
- The module contains the template functionality with the ability to
override items in config, in transit, through the use of a simple
dictionary without having to write out various temp files on target
machines. The module renders all of the potential jinja a user could
provide in both the template file and in the override dictionary which
is ideal for deployers who may have lots of different configs using a
similar code base.
- The module is an extension of the **copy** module and all of attributes
that can be set there are available to be set here.
options:
src:
description:
- Path of a Jinja2 formatted template on the local server. This can
be a relative or absolute path.
required: true
default: null
dest:
description:
- Location to render the template to on the remote machine.
required: true
default: null
config_overrides:
description:
- A dictionary used to update or override items within a configuration
template. The dictionary data structure may be nested. If the target
config file is an ini file the nested keys in the ``config_overrides``
will be used as section headers.
config_type:
description:
- A string value describing the target config type.
choices:
- ini
- json
- yaml
Example task using the config_template module¶
In this task the test.ini.j2
file is a template which will be rendered and
written to disk at /tmp/test.ini
. The config_overrides entry is a
dictionary (hash) which allows a deployer to set arbitrary data as overrides to
be written into the configuration file at run time. The config_type entry
specifies the type of configuration file the module will be interacting with;
available options are “yaml”, “json”, and “ini”.
- name: Run config template ini
config_template:
src: test.ini.j2
dest: /tmp/test.ini
config_overrides: "{{ test_overrides }}"
config_type: ini
Here is an example override dictionary (hash)
test_overrides:
DEFAULT:
new_item: 12345
And here is the template file:
[DEFAULT]
value1 = abc
value2 = 123
The rendered file on disk, namely /tmp/test.ini
looks like
this:
[DEFAULT]
value1 = abc
value2 = 123
new_item = 12345
Discovering available overrides¶
All of these options can be specified in any way that suits your deployment.
In terms of ease of use and flexibility it’s recommended that you define your
overrides in a user variable file such as
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
.
The list of overrides available may be found by executing:
ls /etc/ansible/roles/*/defaults/main.yml -1 \
| xargs -I {} grep '_.*_overrides:' {} \
| egrep -v "^#|^\s" \
| sort -u
Note
Possible additional overrides can be found in the “Tunable Section”
of each role’s main.yml
file, such as
/etc/ansible/roles/role_name/defaults/main.yml
.
Overriding OpenStack configuration defaults¶
OpenStack has many configuration options available in .conf
files
(in a standard INI
file format),
policy files (in a standard JSON
format) and YAML
files, and
can therefore use the config_template
module described above.
OpenStack-Ansible enables you to reference any options in the
OpenStack Configuration Reference through the use of a simple set of
configuration entries in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
.
Overriding .conf files¶
Most often, overrides are implemented for the <service>.conf
files
(for example, nova.conf
). These files use a standard INI file format.
For example, you might want to add the following parameters to the
nova.conf
file:
[DEFAULT]
remove_unused_original_minimum_age_seconds = 43200
[libvirt]
cpu_mode = host-model
disk_cachemodes = file=directsync,block=none
[database]
idle_timeout = 300
max_pool_size = 10
To do this, you use the following configuration entry in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
file:
nova_nova_conf_overrides:
DEFAULT:
remove_unused_original_minimum_age_seconds: 43200
libvirt:
cpu_mode: host-model
disk_cachemodes: file=directsync,block=none
database:
idle_timeout: 300
max_pool_size: 10
Note
The general format for the variable names used for overrides is
<service>_<filename>_<file extension>_overrides
. For example, the variable
name used in these examples to add parameters to the nova.conf
file is
nova_nova_conf_overrides
.
The same way you can apply overrides to the uwsgi services. For example:
nova_api_os_compute_uwsgi_ini_overrides:
uwsgi:
limit: 1024
Note
Some roles, like uwsgi, are used for lot of roles, and have “special” overrides, (like uwsgi_ini_overrides) which can be defined to impact all services which are using uwsgi. These variables are “special” as they will have precedence over role defined *_uwsgi_ini_overrides.
You can also apply overrides on a per-host basis with the following
configuration in the /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml
file:
compute_hosts:
900089-compute001:
ip: 192.0.2.10
host_vars:
nova_nova_conf_overrides:
DEFAULT:
remove_unused_original_minimum_age_seconds: 43200
libvirt:
cpu_mode: host-model
disk_cachemodes: file=directsync,block=none
database:
idle_timeout: 300
max_pool_size: 10
Use this method for any files with the INI
format for in OpenStack projects
deployed in OpenStack-Ansible.
Overriding .json files¶
To implement access controls that are different from the ones in a standard
OpenStack environment, you can adjust the default policies applied by services.
Policy files are in a JSON
format.
For example, you might want to add the following policy in the policy.json
file for the Identity service (keystone):
{
"identity:foo": "rule:admin_required",
"identity:bar": "rule:admin_required"
}
To do this, you use the following configuration entry in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
file:
keystone_policy_overrides:
identity:foo: "rule:admin_required"
identity:bar: "rule:admin_required"
Note
The general format for the variable names used for overrides is
<service>_policy_overrides
. For example, the variable name used in this
example to add a policy to the Identity service (keystone) policy.json
file
is keystone_policy_overrides
.
Use this method for any files with the JSON
format in OpenStack projects
deployed in OpenStack-Ansible.
To assist you in finding the appropriate variable name to use for
overrides, the general format for the variable name is
<service>_policy_overrides
.
Overriding .yml files¶
You can override .yml
file values by supplying replacement YAML content.
Note
All default YAML file content is completely overwritten by the overrides, so the entire YAML source (both the existing content and your changes) must be provided.
For example, you might want to define a meter exclusion for all hardware
items in the default content of the pipeline.yml
file for the
Telemetry service (ceilometer):
sources:
- name: meter_source
interval: 600
meters:
- "!hardware.*"
sinks:
- meter_sink
- name: foo_source
value: foo
To do this, you use the following configuration entry in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
file:
ceilometer_pipeline_yaml_overrides:
sources:
- name: meter_source
interval: 600
meters:
- "!hardware.*"
sinks:
- meter_sink
- name: source_foo
value: foo
Note
The general format for the variable names used for overrides is
<service>_<filename>_<file extension>_overrides
. For example, the variable
name used in this example to define a meter exclusion in the pipeline.yml
file
for the Telemetry service (ceilometer) is ceilometer_pipeline_yaml_overrides
.
Overriding OpenStack upper constraints¶
Each OpenStack release uses an upper-constraints.txt
file to define the
maximum permitted version of each Python package. In some cases it may be
necessary to override this file, for example when your local deployment needs
to take advantage of a bug fix. Care should be taken when modifying this file
as OpenStack services may not have been tested against more recent package
versions.
To override the upper constraints for a deployment, clone the OpenStack requirements git repository, either storing it as a fork at a URL of your choice, or within the local filesystem of the host you are using to deploy OpenStack Ansible from. Once cloned, switch to the branch which matches the name of your deployed OpenStack version, and modify the upper constraints as required.
Next, edit your /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
file to indicate
the path to the requirements git repository, and the git hash of the commit
containing your changes using the requirements_git_repo
and
requirements_git_install_branch
variables. When using the local
filesystem, the requirements_git_repo
should start with file://
.
Finally, run the repo-install.yml
playbook to upload these modified
constraints to your repo host(s).