Zone Placement Policy V1.0

Zone Placement Policy V1.0

This policy is designed to make sure the nodes in a cluster are distributed across multiple availability zones according to a specified scheme.

Applicable Profiles

The policy is designed to handle Nova server clusters only, i.e. clusters with a profile of type os.nova.server-1.0 for example.

Actions Handled

The policy is capable of handling the following actions:

  • CLUSTER_SCALE_IN: an action that carries an optional integer value named count in its inputs.
  • CLUSTER_SCALE_OUT: an action that carries an optional integer value named count in its inputs.
  • CLUSTER_RESIZE: an action that accepts a map as its input parameters in its inputs property, such as “adjustment_type”, “number” etc.

The policy will be checked BEFORE any of the above mentioned actions is executed. Because the same policy implementation is used for covering both the cases of scaling out a cluster and the cases of scaling in, the zone placment policy need to parse the inputs in different scenarios.

The placement policy can be used independently, with and without other polices attached to the same cluster. So the policy needs to understand whether there are policy decisions from other policies (such as a scaling policy).

When the policy is checked, it will first attempt to get the proper count input value, which may be an outcome from other policies or the inputs for the action. For more details, check the scenarios described in following sections.

Scenarios

S1: CLUSTER_SCALE_IN

The placement policy first checks if there are policy decisions from other policies by looking into the deletion field of the action’s data property. If there is such a field, the policy attempts to extract the count value from the deletion field. If the count value is not found, 1 is assumed to be the default.

If, however, the policy fails to find the deletion field, it tries to find if there is a count field in the action’s inputs property. If the answer is true, the policy will use it, or else it will fall back to assume 1 as the default count.

After the policy has find out the count value (i.e. number of nodes to be deleted), it validates the list of availability zone names provided to the policy. If for some reason, none of the provided names passed the validation, the policy check fails with the following data recorded in the action’s data property:

{
  "status": "ERROR",
  "reason": "No availability zone found available.",
}

With the list of availability zones known to be good and the map of node distribution specified in the policy spec, senlin engine continues to calculate a distribution plan that best matches the desired distribution. If there are nodes that cannot be fit into the distribution plan, the policy check failes with an error recorded in the action’s data, as shown below:

{
  "status": "ERROR",
  "reason": "There is no feasible plan to handle all nodes."
}

If there is a feasible plan to remove nodes from each availability zone, the policy saves the plan into the data property of the action as exemplified below:

{
  "status": "OK",
  "deletion": {
    "count": 3,
    "zones": {
      "nova-1": 2,
      "nova-2": 1
    }
  }
}

This means in total, 3 nodes should be removed from the cluster. Among them, 2 nodes should be selected from availability zone “nova-1” and the rest one should be selected from availability zone “nova-2”.

NOTE: When there is a deletion policy attached to the same cluster. That deletion policy will be evaluated after the zone placement policy and it is expected to rebase its candidate selection on the zone distribution enforced here. For example, if the deletion policy is tasked to select the oldest nodes for deletion, it will adapt its behavior to select the oldest nodes from each availability zone. The number of nodes to be chosen from each availability zone would be based on the output from this placement policy.

S2: CLUSTER_SCALE_OUT

The placement policy first checks if there are policy decisions from other policies by looking into the creation field of the action’s data property. If there is such a field, the policy attempts to extract the count value from the creation field. If the count value is not found, 1 is assumed to be the default.

If, however, the policy fails to find the creation field, it tries to find if there is a count field in the action’s inputs property. If the answer is true, the policy will use it, or else it will fall back to assume 1 as the default node count.

After the policy has find out the count value (i.e. number of nodes to be created), it validates the list of availability zone names provided to the policy and extracts the current distribution of nodes among those availability zones.

If for some reason, none of the provided names passed the validation, the policy check fails with the following data recorded in the action’s data property:

{
  "status": "ERROR",
  "reason": "No availability zone found available.",
}

The logic of generating a distribution plan is almost identical to what have been described in scenario S1, except for the output format. When there is a feasible plan to accommodate all nodes, the plan is saved into the data property of the action as shown in the following example:

{
  "status": "OK",
  "creation": {
    "count": 3,
    "zones": {
      "nova-1": 1,
      "nova-2": 2
    }
  }
}

This means in total, 3 nodes should be created into the cluster. Among them, 2 nodes should be created at availability zone “nova-1” and the left one should be created at availability zone “nova-2”.

S3: CLUSTER_RESIZE

The placement policy first checks if there are policy decisions from other policies by looking into the creation field of the action’s data property. If there is such a field, the policy extracts the count value from the creation field. If the creation field is not found, the policy tries to find if there is a deletion field in the action’s data property. If there is such a field, the policy extracts the count value from the creation field. If neither creation nor deletion is found in the action’s data property, the policy proceeds to parse the raw inputs of the action.

The output from the parser may indicate an invalid combination of input values. If that is the case, the policy check failes with the action’s data set to something like the following example:

{
  "status": "ERROR",
  "reason": <error message from the parser.>
}

If the parser successfully parsed the action’s raw inputs, the policy tries again to find if there is either creation or deletion field in the action’s data property. It will use the count value from the field found as the number of nodes to be handled.

When the placement policy finds out the number of nodes to create (or delete), it proceeds to calculate a distribution plan. If the action is about growing the size of the cluster, the logic and the output format are the same as that have been outlined in scenario S2. Otherwise, the logic and the output format are identical to that have been describled in scenario S1.

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