Accessing Introspection Data¶
Every introspection run (as described in
Basic Deployment (CLI)) collects a lot of facts about
the hardware and puts them as JSON in Swift. Starting with
python-ironic-inspector-client
version 1.4.0 there is a command to retrieve
this data:
baremetal introspection data save <UUID>
You can provide a --file
argument to save the data in a file instead of
displaying it.
If you don’t have a new enough version of python-ironic-inspector-client
,
you can use cURL to access the API:
token=$(openstack token issue -f value -c id)
curl -H "X-Auth-Token: $token" http://127.0.0.1:5050/v1/introspection/<UUID>/data
Accessing raw additional data¶
Extra hardware data can be collected using the python-hardware library. If
you have enabled this, by setting inspection_extras
to True
in your
undercloud.conf
(enabled by default starting with the Mitaka release),
then even more data is available.
The command above will display it in a structured format under the extra
key in the resulting JSON object. This format is suitable for using in
the ironic-inspector introspection rules (see e.g.
Automated profile tagging). However, if you want to access it in its
original format (list of lists instead of nested objects), you can query
Swift for it directly.
The Swift container name is ironic-inspector
, which can be modified in
/etc/ironic-inspector/inspector.conf. The Swift object is called
extra_hardware-<UUID>
where <UUID>
is a node UUID. In the default
configuration you have to use the service
tenant to access this object.
As an example, to download the Swift data for all nodes to a local directory and use that to collect a list of node mac addresses:
# You will need the ironic-inspector user password
# from the [swift] section of /etc/ironic-inspector/inspector.conf:
export IRONIC_INSPECTOR_PASSWORD=xxxxxx
# Download the extra introspection data from swift:
for node in $(baremetal node list -f value -c UUID);
do swift -U service:ironic -K $IRONIC_INSPECTOR_PASSWORD download ironic-inspector extra_hardware-$node;
done
# Use jq to access the local data - for example gather macs:
for f in extra_hardware-*;
do cat $f | jq -r 'map(select(.[0]=="network" and .[2]=="serial"))';
done
Running benchmarks¶
Benchmarks for CPU, memory and hard drive can be run during the introspection
process. However, they are time consuming, and thus are disabled by default.
To enable benchmarks set inspection_runbench
to true
in the
undercloud.conf
(also requires inspection_extras
set to true
),
then (re)run openstack undercloud install
.
Extra data examples¶
Here is an example of CPU extra data, including benchmark results:
$ baremetal introspection data save <UUID> | jq '.extra.cpu'
{
"physical": {
"number": 1
},
"logical": {
"number": 1,
"loops_per_sec": 636
},
"logical_0": {
"bandwidth_4K": 3657,
"bandwidth_1G": 6775,
"bandwidth_128M": 8353,
"bandwidth_2G": 7221,
"loops_per_sec": 612,
"bogomips": "6983.57",
"bandwidth_1M": 10781,
"bandwidth_16M": 9808,
"bandwidth_1K": 1204,
"cache_size": "4096KB"
},
"physical_0":
{
"physid": 400,
"product": "QEMU Virtual CPU version 2.3.0",
"enabled_cores": 1,
"vendor": "Intel Corp.",
"threads": 1,
"flags": "fpu fpu_exception wp de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pse36 clflush mmx fxsr sse sse2 syscall nx x86-64 rep_good nopl pni cx16 x2apic hypervisor lahf_lm abm",
"version": "RHEL 7.2.0 PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996)",
"frequency": 2e+09,
"cores": 1
}
}
Here is an example of disk extra data, including benchmark results:
$ baremetal introspection data save <UUID> | jq '.extra.disk'
{
"logical": {
"count": 1
},
"sda": {
"SMART/Raw_Read_Error_Rate(1)/value": 100,
"SMART/Spin_Up_Time(3)/thresh": 0,
"model": "QEMU HARDDISK",
"SMART/Power_Cycle_Count(12)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/Reallocated_Sector_Ct(5)/worst": 100,
"SMART/Power_Cycle_Count(12)/raw": 0,
"standalone_read_1M_KBps": 1222758,
"SMART/Power_On_Hours(9)/worst": 100,
"Read Cache Disable": 0,
"SMART/Power_On_Hours(9)/raw": 1,
"rotational": 1,
"SMART/Start_Stop_Count(4)/thresh": 20,
"SMART/Start_Stop_Count(4)/raw": 100,
"SMART/Power_Cycle_Count(12)/thresh": 0,
"standalone_randread_4k_KBps": 52491,
"physical_block_size": 512,
"SMART/Reallocated_Sector_Ct(5)/value": 100,
"SMART/Reallocated_Sector_Ct(5)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/Power_Cycle_Count(12)/value": 100,
"SMART/Spin_Up_Time(3)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"size": 44,
"SMART/Power_On_Hours(9)/thresh": 0,
"id": "ata-QEMU_HARDDISK_QM00005",
"SMART/Reallocated_Sector_Ct(5)/raw": 0,
"SMART/Raw_Read_Error_Rate(1)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/Airflow_Temperature_Cel(190)/worst": 69,
"SMART/Airflow_Temperature_Cel(190)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/Spin_Up_Time(3)/value": 100,
"standalone_read_1M_IOps": 1191,
"SMART/Airflow_Temperature_Cel(190)/thresh": 50,
"SMART/Power_On_Hours(9)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/firmware_version": "2.3.0",
"optimal_io_size": 0,
"SMART/Raw_Read_Error_Rate(1)/thresh": 6,
"SMART/Raw_Read_Error_Rate(1)/raw": 0,
"SMART/Raw_Read_Error_Rate(1)/worst": 100,
"SMART/Power_Cycle_Count(12)/worst": 100,
"standalone_randread_4k_IOps": 13119,
"rev": 0,
"SMART/Start_Stop_Count(4)/worst": 100,
"SMART/Start_Stop_Count(4)/when_failed": "NEVER",
"SMART/Spin_Up_Time(3)/worst": 100,
"SMART/Reallocated_Sector_Ct(5)/thresh": 36,
"SMART/device_model": "QEMU HARDDISK",
"SMART/Airflow_Temperature_Cel(190)/raw": " 31 (Min/Max 31/31)",
"SMART/Start_Stop_Count(4)/value": 100,
"SMART/Spin_Up_Time(3)/raw": 16,
"Write Cache Enable": 1,
"vendor": "ATA",
"SMART/serial_number": "QM00005",
"SMART/Power_On_Hours(9)/value": 100,
"SMART/Airflow_Temperature_Cel(190)/value": 69
}
}