This document provides some necessary points for developers to consider when
writing and reviewing Ironic code. The checklist will help developers get
things right.
Adding new features
Starting with the Mitaka development cycle, Ironic tracks new features using
RFEs (Requests for Feature Enhancements) instead of blueprints. These are bugs
with ‘rfe’ tag, and they should be submitted before a spec or code is proposed.
When a member of ironic-drivers launchpad team decides that the proposal
is worth implementing, a spec (if needed) and code should be submitted,
referencing the RFE bug. Contributors are welcome to submit a spec and/or code
before the RFE is approved, however those patches will not land until the RFE
is approved.
Here is a list of steps to do during the new process of adding a new feature to
Ironic:
- Submit a bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ironic/+filebug.
There are two fields that must be filled: ‘summary’ and
‘further information’. The ‘summary’ must be brief enough to fit in one
line: if you can’t describe it in a few words it may mean that you are
either trying to capture more than one RFE at once, or that you are having
a hard time defining what you are trying to solve at all.
- Describe the proposed change in the ‘further information’ field. The
description should provide enough details for a knowledgeable developer to
understand what is the existing problem in the current platform that needs
to be addressed, or what is the enhancement that would make the platform
more capable, both from a functional and a non-functional standpoint.
- Submit the bug, add an ‘rfe’ tag to it and assign yourself or whoever is
going to work on this feature.
- As soon as a member of the ironic-drivers team acknowledges the bug, it
will be moved into the ‘Triaged’ state. The importance will be set to
‘Wishlist’ to signal the fact that the report is indeed a feature and there
is no severity associated to it. Discussion about the RFE, and whether to
approve it, happens in bug comments while in the ‘Triaged’ state.
- The ironic-drivers team will evaluate the RFE and may advise the submitter
to file a spec in ironic-specs to elaborate on the feature request, in case
the RFE requires extra scrutiny, more design discussion, etc. For the spec
submission process, please see the
specs process
wiki page.
- If a spec is not required, once the discussion has happened and there is
positive consensus among the ironic-drivers team on the RFE, the RFE is
‘approved’, and its tag will move from ‘rfe’ to ‘rfe-approved’. This means
that the feature is approved and the related code may be merged.
- If a spec is required, the spec must be submitted (with the bug properly
referenced as ‘Partial-Bug’ in the commit message), reviewed, and merged
before the RFE will be ‘approved’ (and the tag changed to ‘rfe-approved’).
- The bug then goes through the usual process – first to ‘In progress’ when
the spec/code is being worked on, then ‘Fix Released’ when it is
implemented.
- If the RFE is rejected, the ironic-drivers team will move the bug to
“Won’t Fix” status.
When working on an RFE, please be sure to tag your commits properly:
“Partial-Bug: #xxxx” or “Related-Bug: #xxxx” for intermediate commits for the
feature, and “Closes-Bug: #xxxx” for the final commit. It is also helpful to
set a consistent review topic, such as “bug/xxxx” for all patches related to
the RFE.
If the RFE spans across several projects (e.g. ironic and python-ironicclient),
but the main work is going to happen within ironic, please use the same bug for
all the code you’re submitting, there is no need to create a separate RFE in
every project.
Note that currently the Ironic bug tracker is managed by the open ‘ironic-bugs’
team, not the ironic-drivers team. This means that anyone may edit bug details,
and there is room to game the system here. RFEs may only be approved by
members of the ironic-drivers team. Attempts to sneak around this rule will
not be tolerated, and will be called out in public on the mailing list.
Driver Internal Info
The driver_internal_info node field was introduced in the Kilo release. It allows
driver developers to store internal information that can not be modified by end users.
Here is the list of existing common and agent driver attributes:
- Common attributes:
- is_whole_disk_image: A Boolean value to indicate whether the user image contains ramdisk/kernel.
- clean_steps: An ordered list of clean steps that will be performed on the node.
- instance: A list of dictionaries containing the disk layout values.
- root_uuid_or_disk_id: A String value of the bare metal node’s root partition uuid or disk id.
- persistent_boot_device: A String value of device from ironic.common.boot_devices.
- is_next_boot_persistent: A Boolean value to indicate whether the next boot device is
persistent_boot_device.
- Agent driver attributes:
- agent_url: A String value of IPA API URL so that Ironic can talk to IPA ramdisk.
- agent_last_heartbeat: An Integer value of the last agent heartbeat time.
- hardware_manager_version: A String value of the version of the hardware manager in IPA ramdisk.
- target_raid_config: A Dictionary containing the target RAID configuration. This is a copy of
the same name attribute in Node object. But this one is never actually saved into DB and is only
read by IPA ramdisk.
Note
These are only some fields in use. Other vendor drivers might expose more driver_internal_info
properties, please check their development documentation and/or module docstring for details.
It is important for developers to make sure these properties follow the precedent of prefixing their
variable names with a specific interface name(e.g., iboot_bar, amt_xyz), so as to minimize or avoid
any conflicts between interfaces.