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Noah cookbook

================ This cookbook has been tested on the following platforms (for installing the server)

  • Natty 32-bit Rubygems install
  • Natty 64-bit Rubygems install
  • Lucid 32-bit Vagrant
  • Lucid 64-bit Vagrant

Right now, only the ubuntu-related stuff is really stubbed out. Init script templates for redhat and non-upstart debian need to be written. The init scripts should be resilient enough to get populated with the proper path to the noah binscript. It uses Gem.bin_path to get it. The main reason for this is working around system rubies that do stupid crap like dump binaries in /var/lib/gems/bin or something.

If you want to test it, the recipe you want is noah::server.

This will install Noah from rubygems, compile redis from source into a self-contained directory and then create two startup scripts - noah-redis and noah.

Recipes

  • noah::default: provides the Noah LWRP
  • noah::server: Installs a Noah server
  • noah::client: For use with Chef Server. Searches for local Noah server and sets default attributes for clients.
  • noah::register: Registers the current node in Noah both as a Host primitive and an Ephemeral record under /chef/node_name

Client usage

If you are running with a Chef server, the best option is to use noah::client as the first recipe in your role/run_list and noah::register as the last recipe in your role/run_list

Search Attribute

A single attribute is exposed for use in search. By assigning a node with this role, clients can find the local Noah server.

  • server_role

Server Attributes

You can see the exposed attributes but the key server ones are:

  • redis_version
  • redis_port
  • noah_port

If you're okay with it, the default install dir for everything is /var/lib/noah.

Client Attributes

Client attributes are a bit different in how they operate based on the resource you're using

  • timeout
  • on_failure
  • retry_interval
  • noah_host
  • noah_port

You can read more about what happens with each specific resource below.

Just the LWRP

If you just want to use the LWRP, all you need to do is add noah::default as a dependency to your cookbook and include the recipe. This also provides additional methods in your cookbook:

  • noah_get
  • noah_search

Resources

The following resources are exposed by the LWRP:

  • noah_application - no custom parameters
  • noah_service - host, status
  • noah_ephemeral - data
  • noah_configuration - data, format
  • noah_host - status
  • noah_block* - data, on_failure

Each of these resource take a common set of parameters in the DSL:

  • noah_host
  • noah_port
  • retry_interval
  • timeout

These are pulled from node attributes unless otherwise specified. With the exception of noah_block, timeout and retry_interval only take effect when the Noah server is unreachable. Errors are thrown if the connection to the Noah server times out or Noah returns anything other than a 200 response. Each resource also has a specific set of parameters related to that resource which match up with the Noah attributes

Additionally, two new methods are available that you can call to lookup information:

  • noah_get
  • noah_search

noah_get takes a full URL to a Noah resource and converts the JSON result to a ruby hash. The response is unaltered beyond that. If the response cannot be converted, it assumed to be an ephemeral and served "raw". noah_search takes a Noah object type and an string. This is not a "real" search. It simply grabs all objects of the given type and looks for keys that contain the provided string. It is not a replacement for Chef's built in search.

Blocking

noah_block is a special resource best used for coordinating interaction between client bootstraps. Imaging a use case where a load balancer needs to know all of the application servers. Until those application servers have bootstrapped fully, they will not be available as search results. Using Ephemerals (for now), noah_block allows you to "block" a portion of a chef-client run until some data is available in Noah. Using the on_failure attribute, you can either :pass, :retry or :fail based on the results of Noah query.

Take the following example:

noah_block "wait for dbmaster" do
  path            "http://localhost:5678/ephemerals/foo"
  timeout         600
  data            "someval1"
  retry_interval  5
  on_failure      :pass
end

In this case, the client run will poll every 5 seconds for 600 seconds until it gets "someval" as a response from "http://localhost:5678/ephemerals/foo". If Noah is unreachable or it does not get the response it expects, it will simply continue with the rest of the recipe. An on_failure value of :fail will error out immediately. An on_failure value of :retry will continue retrying even if Noah is unreachable until the timeout value.

The exception to a :pass is when the data doesn't match. It makes no sense to allow you to continue if there is data there but is not correct. Imagine the scenario where you need the value of the path to be "go" but it's "stop". If we were to pass from there, we might perform something that should not performed.

All noah_block resource will retry, the on_failure guard is to determine how to respond to an error

Test Suite

There's a small "test suite" of recipes included. If you include noah::test in your run_list, it will perform a series of tests that ensure some basic functionality. The last test to run is for noah_block and it's designed to test proper failure. This test suite will fail intentionally at the end if everything is working properly.

TODO

  • DRY the code out.
  • ??????????

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