task.host
Minimal configlet:
[task#1]
type = host
Minimal setup command:
om test/vol/foo set --kw="type=host"
access
required: false
scopable: true
candidates: rwo, roo, rwx, rox
default: rwo
The access mode of the volume.
rwo
is Read Write Onceroo
is Read Only Oncerwx
is Read Write Manyrox
is Read Only Many
rox
and rwx
modes are served by flex volume services.
blocking_post_provision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
blocking_post_run
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource run
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
blocking_post_unprovision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource unprovision
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
blocking_pre_provision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute before the resource provision
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
blocking_pre_run
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute before the resource run
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
blocking_pre_unprovision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute before the resource unprovision
action.
Errors interrupt the action.
check
required: false
scopable: true
candidates: last_run,
Example:
check = last_run
If set to last_run
, the last run retcode is used to report a task resource
status.
If not set (default), the status of a task is always n/a.
command
required: false
scopable: true
The shlex expression of the command to execute on run
actions.
comment
required: false
scopable: false
Comments help the users understand the role of the object and its resources.
configs_environment
required: false
scopable: true
convert: shlex
Example:
configs_environment = PORT=http/port webapp/app1* {name}/* {name}-debug/settings
A whitespace-separated list of <var>=<cfg name>/<key path>
or
<cfg name>/<key matcher>
.
If the cfg
or config key doesn't exist then start
and stop
actions on
the resource will fail with a non 0 exit code.
A shell expression splitter is applied, so double quotes can be around
<cfg name>/<key path>
only or whole <var>=<cfg name>/<key path>
.
Example with,
-
<ns>/cfg/nginx
a config having auser
key with valueuser1
. -
<ns>/cfg/cfg1
a config having akey1
key with valueval1
.
configs_environment = NGINX_USER=nginx/user cfg1/*
creates the following
variables in the process execution environment:
NGINX_USER=user1
key1=val1
confirmation
required: false
scopable: false
convert: bool
If set to true
, ask for an interactive confirmation to run the task.
This flag can be used for dangerous tasks like data restoration.
cwd
required: false
scopable: true
Change the working directory to the specified location instead of the default
<pathtmp>
.
disable
required: false
scopable: true
convert: bool
A disabled resource will be ignored on start
, stop
, provision
and
unprovision
actions.
A disabled resource status is n/a
.
If set in the DEFAULT
section of an object, the object is disabled and
ignores start
, stop
, shutdown
, provision
and unprovision
actions.
These actions immediately return success.
om <path> disable
sets DEFAULT.disable=true
.
om <path> enable
sets DEFAULT.disable=false
.
Note: The
enable
anddisable
actions preserve the individual resourcedisable
state.
encap
required: false
scopable: false
convert: bool
Set to true
to ignore this resource in the nodes context and consider it in the encapnodes context. The resource is thus handled by agents deployed in the service containers.
environment
required: false
scopable: true
convert: shlex
Example:
environment = CRT=cert1/server.crt PEM=cert1/server.pem
A whitespace-separated list of <var>=<value>
.
A shell expression spliter is applied, so double quotes can be around
<value>
only or whole <var>=<value>
.
group
required: false
scopable: true
If the binary is owned by the root
user, run it as the specified group
instead of root
.
limit_as
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the total virtual memory that can be in use by a process (unit bytes) (same as limit_vmem).
When both limit_vmem
and limit_as
is used, the max value is chosen.
limit_core
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the largest core dump size that can be produced (unit byte).
limit_cpu
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
limit_cpu = 30s
The limit on CPU time (duration).
limit_data
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the data segment size of a process (unit byte).
limit_fsize
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the largest file that can be created (unit byte).
limit_memlock
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on how much memory a process can lock with mlock(2) (unit byte, no solaris support).
limit_nofile
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the number files a process can have open at once.
limit_nproc
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the number of processes this user can have at one time, no solaris support.
limit_rss
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the total physical memory that can be in use by a process (unit byte, no solaris support).
limit_stack
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the stack size of a process (unit bytes).
limit_vmem
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The limit on the total virtual memory that can be in use by a process (unit bytes).
log
required: false
scopable: true
default: true
convert: bool
Log the task outputs in the service log.
max_parallel
required: false
scopable: true
default: 1
convert: int
Example:
max_parallel = 2
Support limited, concurrent runs of tasks.
The task#xx.max_parallel=2 setting limits the number of concurrent task runs to 2.
The default value is 1, ensuring backward compatibility.
The run count is determined based on PID files created in the
The PID file is normally removed when the task execution ends, but if the executor dies abruptly (e.g., due to a SIGKILL), the stale PID file is not considered when computing the resource status. It is removed before the count check of the next run.
Staleness is evaluated using the condition: (PID file mtime < process birth time).
A new status log message may appear to indicate that the maximum concurrency limit has been reached.
monitor
required: false
scopable: true
convert: bool
A resource with monitor=true
will trigger the monitor_action
(crash or reboot the node, freezestop or switch the service) if:
-
The resource is
down
. -
The instance has
local_expect=started
in its daemon monitor data, which means the daemon considers this instance is and should remain started. -
All restart tentatives failed.
on_error
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
on_error = /srv/{name}/data/scripts/task_on_error.sh
A command to execute on run
action if command
returned an error.
optional
required: false
scopable: true
convert: bool
Action errors on optional resources are logged but do not interrupt the action sequence.
The status of optional resources is not included in the instance availability status but is considered in the overall status.
The status of task and sync resources is always included in the overall status, regardless of whether they are marked as optional.
Resources tagged as noaction
are considered optional by default.
Dump filesystems are a typical use case for optional=true.
pg_blkio_weight
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
pg_blkio_weight = 50
Block IO relative weight. Value: between 10
and 1000
.
The kernel default is 1000
.
pg_cpu_quota
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
pg_cpu_quota = 50%@all
The kernel default value is used, which usually is 1024 shares.
In a cpu-bound situation, this setting ensures the service does not use more than its share of cpu resource. The actual percentile depends on shares allowed to other services.
pg_cpu_shares
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
Example:
pg_cpu_shares = 512
The kernel default value is used, which usually is 1024 shares.
In a cpu-bound situation, this setting ensures the service does not use more than its share of cpu resource. The actual percentile depends on shares allowed to other services.
pg_cpus
required: false
scopable: true
depends: create_pg=true
Example:
pg_cpus = 0-2
Allow service process to bind only the specified cpus.
Cpus are specified as list or range : 0,1,2
or 0-2
.
pg_mem_limit
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
Example:
pg_mem_limit = 512m
Ensures the service does not use more than specified memory (in bytes).
The Out-Of-Memory killer is triggered in case of tresspassing.
pg_mem_oom_control
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
pg_mem_oom_control = 1
A flag (0 or 1) that enables or disables the Out of Memory killer for the processes of the group.
- If enabled (0), tasks that attempt to consume more memory than they are allowed are immediately killed by the OOM killer.
- If disabled (1), tasks are allowed to continue to try allocating memory, stressing the system.
The OOM killer is enabled by default in every cgroup using the memory controller.
pg_mem_swappiness
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
pg_mem_swappiness = 40
Set a swappiness percentile value for the process group.
pg_mems
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
pg_mems = 0-2
Allow service process to bind only the specified memory nodes.
Memory nodes are specified as list or range : 0,1,2
or 0-2
.
pg_vmem_limit
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
Example:
pg_vmem_limit = 1g
Ensures the service does not use more than specified memory+swap (in bytes).
The Out-Of-Memory killer is triggered in case of tresspassing.
The specified value must be greater than pg_mem_limit
.
pool
required: false
scopable: true
The name of the pool this volume was allocated from.
post_provision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
post_run
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
post_unprovision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
pre_provision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
pre_run
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
pre_unprovision
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
provision
required: false
scopable: false
default: true
convert: bool
Set to false
to ignore the provision
and unprovision
actions on the
resource.
Warning:
provision
andunprovision
use data-destructive operations like formatting.
It is recommended to set provision=false
on long-lived critical objects,
to force administrators to remove this setting when they really want to
destroy data.
provision_requires
required: false
scopable: false
Example:
provision_requires = ip#0 fs#0(down,stdby down)
A whitespace-separated list of conditions to meet to accept a 'provision' action.
A condition is expressed as <rid>(<state>,...)
.
If states are omitted, up,stdby up
is used as the default expected states.
provision_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
provision_timeout = 1m30s
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the action a failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
retcodes
required: false
scopable: true
default: 0:up 1:down
Example:
retcodes = 0:up 1:down 3:warn 4: n/a 5:undef
The whitespace-separated list of <retcode>:<status name>
.
All undefined retcodes are mapped to the warn
status.
Valid <status names>
are:
up
down
warn
n/a
undef
run_requires
required: false
scopable: false
Example:
run_requires = ip#0 fs#0(down,stdby down)
A whitespace-separated list of conditions to meet to accept a 'run' action.
A condition is expressed as <rid>(<state>,...)
.
If states are omitted, up,stdby up
is used as the default expected states.
run_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
run_timeout = 1m30s
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the action a failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
schedule
required: false
scopable: true
Example:
schedule = 00:00-01:00 mon
Set the task run
schedule.
See usr/share/doc/opensvc/schedule
for the schedule syntax reference.
secrets_environment
required: false
scopable: true
convert: shlex
Example:
secrets_environment = CRT=cert1/server.pem sec1/*
A whitespace-separated list of <var>=<sec name>/<key path>
or
<sec name>/<key matcher>
.
If the sec
or secret key doesn't exist then start
and stop
actions on
the resource will fail with a non 0 exit code.
A shell expression splitter is applied, so double quotes can be around
<sec name>/<key path>
only or whole <var>=<sec name>/<key path>
.
Example with,
-
<ns>/sec/cert1
a secret having aserver.pem
key with valuemycrt
. -
<ns>/sec/sec1
a secret having akey1
key with valueval1
.
secrets_environment = CRT=cert1/server.pem sec1/*
creates the following
variables in the process execution environment:
CRT=mycrt
key1=val1
shared
required: false
scopable: true
convert: bool
If true
, the resource will be considered shared during provision and
unprovision actions.
A shared resource driver can implement a different behaviour depending on weither it is run from the leader instance, or not:
-
When
--leader
is set, the driver creates and configures the system objects. For example the disk.disk driver allocates a SAN disk and discover its block devices. -
When
--leader
is not set, the driver does not redo the actions already done by the leader, but may do some. For example, the disk.disk driver skips the SAN disk allocation, but discovers the block devices.
The daemon takes care of setting the --leader
flags on the commands
it submits during deploy, purge, provision and unprovision
orchestrations.
Warning: If admins want to submit
--local
provision or unprovision commands themselves, they have to set the--leader
flag correctly.
Flex objects usually don't use shared resources. But if they do, only
the flex primary gets --leader
commands.
Warning: All resources depending on a shared resource must also be flagged as shared.
size
required: false
scopable: true
convert: size
The size used by this volume in its pool.
snooze
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
snooze = 10m
Snooze the service before running the task, so if the command is cause a status degradation the user can decide to snooze alarms for the duration set as value.
standby
required: false
scopable: true
convert: bool
If true
, always start the resource, even on non-started instances.
The daemon is responsible for starting standby resources.
A resource can be set standby on a subset of nodes using keyword scoping.
A typical use-case is a synchronized filesystem on non-shared disks. The remote filesystem must be mounted to not overflow the underlying filesystem.
Warning: In most situation, don't set shared resources standby, a non-clustered fs on shared disks for example.
start_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
start_timeout = 1m30s
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the action a failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
stat_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
The fs resources status evaluation includes a stat syscall test. This keyword defines the maximum wait time for those stat calls to respond.
When expired, the resource status is degraded is to warn, which can trigger a monitor action (reboot or crash the node) if the resource is monitored.
status_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
default: 1m
convert: duration
Example:
status_timeout = 10s
The maximum duration of the instance status evaluation.
For example, the total start action duration is constrained by different timeouts:
-
the
start_timeout
Limiting the start action duration. -
the
stop_timeout
Limiting the start rollback duration triggered by start errors. -
the
status_timeout
Limiting the post-start instance status evaluation duration.
stop
required: false
scopable: true
-
true
Execute the
script
command withstop
argument onstop
action. -
false
Do nothing on
stop
action. -
<shlex expression>
Execute this command on
stop
action.
stop_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
stop_timeout = 180
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the app launcher stop
action a
failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
If neither timeout
nor stop_timeout
is set, the agent waits indefinitely
for the app launcher to return.
A timeout can be coupled with optional=true
to not abort a service instance
stop when an app launcher did not return.
subset
required: false
scopable: true
A command or script to execute after the resource provision
action.
Errors do not interrupt the action.
sync_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
sync_timeout = 1m30s
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the action a failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
tags
required: false
scopable: true
convert: set
A whitespace-separated list of tags.
Tags can be used for resource selection by tag.
Some tags can influence the driver behaviour:
-
noaction
Skip any state changing action on the resource and imply
optional=true
. -
nostatus
Force the status
n/a
.
timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
timeout = 5m
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the task run
action a failure.
If no timeout is set, the agent waits indefinitely for the task command to exit.
type
required: false
scopable: false
The resource driver name.
umask
required: false
scopable: true
convert: umask
Example:
umask = 022
The umask to set for the application process.
unprovision
required: false
scopable: false
default: true
convert: bool
Set to false
to ignore the unprovision
action on the resource.
Warning:
unprovision
use data-destructive operations like formatting.
It is recommended to set provision=false
on long-lived critical objects,
to force administrators to remove this setting when they really want to
destroy data.
unprovision_requires
required: false
scopable: false
Example:
unprovision_requires = ip#0 fs#0(down,stdby down)
A whitespace-separated list of conditions to meet to accept a 'unprovision' action.
A condition is expressed as <rid>(<state>,...)
.
If states are omitted, up,stdby up
is used as the default expected states.
unprovision_timeout
required: false
scopable: true
convert: duration
Example:
unprovision_timeout = 1m30s
Wait for <duration>
before declaring the action a failure.
Takes precedence over timeout
.
user
required: false
scopable: true
If the binary is owned by the root
user, run it as the specified user
instead of root
.