How it works¶
Integration with Ironic¶
For information on how to install and configure Ironic drivers, including drivers for IPA, see the Ironic drivers documentation.
Lookup¶
On startup, the agent performs a lookup in Ironic to determine its node UUID by sending a hardware profile to the Ironic lookup endpoint: /v1/lookup.
Heartbeat¶
After successfully looking up its node, the agent heartbeats via
/v1/heartbeat/{node_ident}
every N seconds, where N is the Ironic conductor’s agent.heartbeat_timeout
value multiplied by a number between .3 and .6.
For example, if your conductor’s ironic.conf contains:
[agent]
heartbeat_timeout = 60
IPA will heartbeat between every 20 and 36 seconds. This is to ensure jitter for any agents reconnecting after a network or API disruption.
After the agent heartbeats, the conductor performs any actions needed against the node, including querying status of an already run command. For example, initiating in-band cleaning tasks or deploying an image to the node.
Inspection¶
IPA can conduct hardware inspection on start up and post data to the Ironic Inspector via the /v1/continue endpoint.
Edit your default PXE/iPXE configuration or IPA options baked in the image, and
set ipa-inspection-callback-url
to the full endpoint of Ironic Inspector,
for example:
ipa-inspection-callback-url=http://IP:5050/v1/continue
Make sure your DHCP environment is set to boot IPA by default.
If you use the new built-in Ironic in-band inspection, it is enough to only set a list of collectors (see inspection data), for example:
ipa-inspection-collectors=default,logs
Then the correct callback URL will be determined from the Ironic URL in
ipa-api-url
.
Instance agent¶
For the cases where the infrastructure operator and cloud user are the same,
an additional tool exists that can be installed alongside the agent inside
a running instance. This is the ironic-collect-introspection-data
command which allows for a node in ACTIVE
state to publish updated
introspection data to ironic-inspector. This ability requires ironic-inspector
to be configured with [processing]permit_active_introspection
set to
True
. For example:
ironic-collect-introspection-data --inspection_callback_url http://IP:5050/v1/continue
Alternatively, this command may also be used with multicast DNS functionality to identify the Ironic Inspector service endpoint. For example:
ironic-collect-introspection-data --inspection_callback_url mdns
An additional daemon mode may be useful for some operators who wish to receive
regular updates, in the form of the [DEFAULT]introspection_daemon
boolean
configuration option.
For example:
ironic-collect-introspection-data --inspection_callback_url mdns --introspection_daemon
The above command will attempt to connect to introspection and will then enter
a loop to publish every 300 seconds. This can be tuned with the
[DEFAULT]introspection_daemon_post_interval
configuration option.
Inspection Data¶
As part of the inspection process, data is collected on the machine and sent back to Ironic Inspector for storage. It can be accessed via the introspection data API.
The exact format of the data depends on the enabled collectors, which can be
configured using the ipa-inspection-collectors
kernel parameter. Each
collector appends information to the resulting JSON object. The in-tree
collectors are:
default
The default enabled collectors. Collects the following keys:
inventory
- Hardware Inventory.root_disk
- The default root device for this machine, which will be used for deployment if root device hints are not provided.configuration
- Inspection configuration, an object with two keys:collectors
- List of enabled collectors.managers
- List of enabled Hardware Managers: items with keysname
andversion
.
boot_interface
- Deprecated, use theinventory.boot.pxe_interface
field.
logs
Collect system logs. To yield useful results it must always go last in the list of collectors. Provides one key:
logs
- base64 encoded tarball with various logs.
pci-devices
Collects the list of PCI devices. Provides one key:
pci_devices
- list of objects with keysvendor_id
andproduct_id
.
extra-hardware
Collects a vast list of facts about the systems, using the hardware library, which is a required dependency for this collector. Adds one key:
data
- raw data from thehardware-collect
utility. Is a list of lists with 4 items each. It is recommended to use this collector together with theextra_hardware
processing hook on the Ironic Inspector side to convert it to a nested dictionary in theextra
key.If
ipa-inspection-benchmarks
is set, the corresponding benchmarks are executed and their result is also provided.
dmi-decode
Collects information from
dmidecode
. Provides one key:dmi
DMI information in three keys:bios
,cpu
andmemory
.
numa-topology
Collects NUMA topology information. Provides one key:
numa_topology
with three nested keys:ram
- list of objects with keysnuma_node
(node ID) andsize_kb
.cpus
- list of objects with keyscpu
(CPU ID),numa_node
(node ID) andthread_siblings
(list of sibling threads).nics
- list of objects with keysname
(NIC name) andnuma_node
(node ID).
lldp
Collects information about the network connectivity using LLDP. Provides one key:
lldp_raw
- mapping of interface names to lists of raw type-length-value (TLV) records.
Hardware Inventory¶
IPA collects various hardware information using its Hardware Managers, and sends it to Ironic on lookup and to Ironic Inspector on Inspection.
The exact format of the inventory depends on the hardware manager used. Here is the basic format expected to be provided by all hardware managers. The inventory is a dictionary (JSON object), containing at least the following fields:
cpu
CPU information:
model_name
,frequency
,count
,architecture
,flags
andsocket_count
.memory
RAM information:
total
(total size in bytes),physical_mb
(physically installed memory size in MiB, optional).Note
The difference is that the latter includes the memory region reserved by the kernel and is always slightly bigger. It also matches what the Nova flavor would contain for this node and thus is used by the inspection process instead of
total
.bmc_address
IPv4 address of the node’s BMC (aka IPMI v4 address), optional.
bmc_v6address
IPv6 address of the node’s BMC (aka IPMI v6 address), optional.
disks
list of disk block devices with fields:
name
,model
,size
(in bytes),rotational
(boolean),wwn
,serial
,uuid
,vendor
,wwn_with_extension
,wwn_vendor_extension
,hctl
andby_path
(the full disk path, in the form/dev/disk/by-path/<rest-of-path>
).interfaces
list of network interfaces with fields:
name
,mac_address
,ipv4_address
,lldp
,vendor
,product
, and optionallybiosdevname
(BIOS given NIC name) andspeed_mbps
(maximum supported speed).Note
For backward compatibility, interfaces may contain
lldp
fields. They are deprecated, consumers should rely on thelldp
inspection collector instead.system_vendor
system vendor information from SMBIOS as reported by
dmidecode
:product_name
,serial_number
andmanufacturer
, as well as afirmware
structure with fieldsvendor
,version
andbuild_date
.boot
boot information with fields:
current_boot_mode
(boot mode used for the current boot - BIOS or UEFI) andpxe_interface
(interface used for PXE booting, if any).hostname
hostname for the system
Note
This is most likely to be set by the DHCP server. Could be localhost if the DHCP server does not set it.
Image Checksums¶
As part of the process of downloading images to be written to disk as part of
image deployment, a series of fields are utilized to determine if the
image which has been downloaded matches what the user stated as the expected
image checksum utilizing the instance_info/image_checksum
value.
OpenStack, as a whole, has replaced the “legacy” checksum
field with
os_hash_value
and os_hash_algo
fields, which allows for an image
checksum and value to be asserted. An advantage of this is a variety of
algorithms are available, if a user/operator is so-inclined.
For the purposes of Ironic, we continue to support the pass-through checksum field as we support the checksum being retrieved via a URL.
We also support determining the checksum by length.
The field can be utilized to designate:
A URL to retrieve a checksum from.
MD5 (Disabled by default, see
[DEFAULT]md5_enabled
in the agent configuration file.)SHA-2 based SHA256
SHA-2 based SHA512
SHA-3 based checksums are not supported for auto-determination as they can
have a variable length checksum result. At of when this documentation was
added, SHA-2 based checksum algorithms have not been withdrawn from from
approval. If you need to force use of SHA-3 based checksums, you must
utilize the os_hash_algo
setting along with the os_hash_value
setting.