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Discoteq

discoteq -- discover services from service registries

Synopsis

discoteq [-c config-file] [-k chef-key] [-s chef-server] [-E chef-environment] [-u chef-client-name] [file]

Description

discoteq(1) is a tool for service discovery integration. Its job is to attach your application to all those fancy service coordination systems that are popping up. In an ideal world, you wouldn't need discoteq. But when you've got to iterate into something better, discoteq can help.

Unlike most other tools in the space, discoteq(1) does not handle scheduling, templating, triggering reloads, or other complex behaviour. Other tools exist for these problems: cron(8), tilt(1), kill(1), &c.

The simplest thing that could possibly work

apt-get install discoteq
cat >/etc/discoteq.json <<EOF
{
    "services": {
        "myface-fascade": {
            "role": "myface-lb"
        },
        "myface": {
            "role": "myface"
        },
        "myface-db-master": {
            "query": "role:myface-db AND tag:master"
        },
        "myface-db-slave": {
            "query": "role:myface-db AND tag:slave"
        },
        "myface-cache": {
            "role": "myface-cache"
        },
        "statsd": {
            "role": "statsd",
            "include_chef_environment": false,
            "attrs": {
                "hostname": "cloud.private_ipv4",
                "port": "statsd.port"
            }
        }
    }
}
EOF

discoteq < /etc/discoteq.json > /var/lib/discoteq/services.json
cat /var/lib/discoteq/services.json
{
    "services": {
        "myface-fascade": [
            {
                "hostname": "myface-lb.example.net"
            }
        ],
        "myface": [
            {
                "hostname": "myface-001.example.net"
            }
        ],
        "myface-db-master": [
            {
                "hostname": "myface-db-001.example.net"
            }
        ],
        "myface-db-slave": [
            {
                "hostname": "myface-db-002.example.net"
            },
            {
                "hostname": "myface-db-003.example.net"
            }
        ],
        "myface-cache": [
            {
                "hostname": "myface-cache-001.example.net"
            }
        ],
        "statsd": [
            {
                "hostname": "10.0.0.216",
                "port": 8126
            }
        ]
    }
}

As you can see, you just need to drop a config file, run discoteq with an output file, and it will populate the file with the host attributes you need.

This assumes the some (somewhat unlikely) defaults for speaking to a chef server.

Installation

Eventually, the installation process should be:

add-apt-repository ppa:discoteq/discoteq
apt-get update
apt-get install discoteq

But today you'll need a working go development environment, and you can install with:

go get github.com/discoteq/discoteq-go

Usage

By default, discoteq(1) expects config as its standard input, and writes its service map to standard output. Of course, a few things occasionally need to be specified for your particular environment.

Options

-c config-file : config file path, default "/etc/discoteq.json"

-E chef-environment : Chef environment query scope, default: node.chef_environment || "_default"

-k chef-key : Chef client key file path, default: "/etc/chef/client.pem"

-s chef-server : Chef server URL, default: "http://localhost:4545"

-u chef-client-name : Chef client username, default: node.fqdn

Supported queries types

Each service query needs to return a list of service host records, each of which must have a hostname attribute.

[
  {
    "hostname": "myface-002.example.net",
    "port": 8080
  },
  {
    "hostname": "myface-003.example.net",
    "port": 8081
  }
]

As such, queries need a way to select a set of hosts and a way to extract key-value pairs for each.

At the moment, the only type of query supported are Chef searches of the node index.

query : Chef search query.

role : Shorthand for a query of role:{role}.

tag : Shorthand for a query of tag:{tag}.

include_chef_environment : whether to append "AND chef_environment:{chef-environment}" to the query. Defaults to true. The chef-environment comes from the -E parameter, or defaults to "_default"

attrs : Map of exported key onto an attribute key. Nested attributes may be accessed by combining the keys with a ., eg: setting the hostname attribute from node['cloud']['private_ipv4'] can use the notation "attrs": { "hostname": "cloud.private_ipv4" }. attrs defaults to {"hostname": "fqdn"} and will merge the default with any provided attrs.

Templating from JSON

Of course, your app probably doesn't expect its services in the format discoteq provides. Perhaps you're currently using chef to populate a config file using ERB, and it seems awfully inconvenient to have to change your app to accommodate this tool.

Fear not! The ever powerful tilt(1) templating tool will handle your needs! Simply specify your data and template files and it will print the rendered text to standard out.

discoteq < /etc/discoteq.conf > /etc/myface.json
tilt -d /etc/myface.json myface-template.erb > $APP/myface.config

How do I make it act like confd?

confd is an awesome tool that tries to solve similar problems to discoteq. But while confd is a one-stop-shop for configuration management, discoteq requires you to use existing tools to do similar things.

How to I schedule discoteq to update files?

At the moment discoteq only supports polling data stores, so scheduling updates is just a matter of frequency. Ye olde crontab(5) is more than equipped for your needs.

*/5 * * * *  /usr/local/bin/discoteq \
             < /etc/discoteq/services-conf.json \
             > /var/lib/discoteq/services.json

My app doesn't understand discoteq's JSON, how do I populate a template with it?

Your favorite templating language probably already has a command line client that you can use:

  • tilt(1) is a ruby gem that supports a large number of template formats, and has recently been updated to accept JSON input. This is currently our recommended tool for ERB templating.
  • mustache(1) is the ubiquitous logic-less templating language available on every platform ever. This accepts a YAML data input, so JSON is fine.

We'd also like to create command-line tools for jinja and test/template.

What if an invalid config file is generated? How do I avoid breaking everything?

Config file check-and-swap is a common problem and deserves a common solution. At the moment we don't know a good tool to recommend. If you know of one, please let us know! If you want to build one yourself, we'd love to help!

What if someone else is touching the file? Couldn't this lead to inconsistant behaviour?

flock(1) allows you to create exclusive locks for writes and shared locks for reads. It's designed to be used in shell scripts and is probably easier to use than modifying your existing programs to have mutual exclusion.

On Linux, you can use the util-linux flock(1). If you aren't on Linux, we've developed a portable flock(1) which supports Darwin, FreeBSD and Illumos.

How do I trigger my service when the config updates?

fswatch(7) can trigger events whenever a file changes, either as a one-off or for every event.

$ fswatch -1 /var/lib/discoteq/services.json |
  xargs -n1 -I% echo "Hello, %!" &
$ touch /var/lib/discoteq/services.json
Hello, /var/lib/discoteq/services.json!

Of course this depends triggers on every modification of inode state, not file contents. Make sure not to touch files you aren't actually changing!

That sounds lovely, but what does a real solution look like?

Yeah, tying all this together can be… exciting.

Run this script through a process manager like runit or systemd:

#!/bin/sh
# myface-cfg-update - watch for service updates
#   and safely load them into myface

BASE=myface
TEMP=`mktemp -t $BASE.XXXXXXXXXX` || exit 1

SERVICE_MAP=/var/lib/discoteq/services.json
TEMPLATE=/opt/myface/config.erb
CONFIG=/etc/myface.cfg
DAEMON=myface

# watch for service info changes in registry
# re-eval config template
# verify generated config is valid
# swap if valid and different
# reload if swapped
fswatch -1 $SERVICE_MAP &&
  tilt -d $SERVICE_MAP $TEMPLATE > $TEMP &&
  myface --check-cfg $TEMP &&
  flock $CONFIG diffswp $TEMP $CONFIG &&
  service $DAEMON reload

With this in your crontab(5):

*/5 * * * *  /usr/local/bin/discoteq \
             < /etc/discoteq/services-conf.json \
             > /var/lib/discoteq/services.json

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