Ansible tuning¶
In this section we cover some options for tuning Ansible for performance and scale.
SSH pipelining¶
SSH pipelining is disabled in Ansible by default, but is generally safe to enable, and provides a reasonable performance improvement.
[ssh_connection]
pipelining = True
Forks¶
By default Ansible executes tasks using a fairly conservative 5 process forks. This limits the parallelism that allows Ansible to scale. Most Ansible control hosts will be able to handle far more forks than this. You will need to experiment to find out the CPU, memory and IO limits of your machine.
For example, to increase the number of forks to 20:
[defaults]
forks = 20
Fact caching¶
By default, Ansible gathers facts for each host at the beginning of every play,
unless gather_facts
is set to false
. With a large number of hosts this
can result in a significant amount of time spent gathering facts.
One way to improve this is through Ansible’s support for fact caching.
In order to make this work with Kolla Ansible, it is necessary to change
Ansible’s gathering
configuration option to smart
.
Example¶
In the following example we configure Kolla Ansible to use fact caching using the jsonfile cache plugin.
[defaults]
gathering = smart
fact_caching = jsonfile
fact_caching_connection = /tmp/ansible-facts
You may also wish to set the expiration timeout for the cache via [defaults]
fact_caching_timeout
.
Populating the cache¶
In some situations it may be helpful to populate the fact cache on demand. The
kolla-ansible gather-facts
command may be used to do this.
One specific case where this may be helpful is when running kolla-ansible
with a --limit
argument, since in that case hosts that match the limit will
gather facts for hosts that fall outside the limit. In the extreme case of a
limit that matches only one host, it will serially gather facts for all other
hosts. To avoid this issue, run kolla-ansible gather-facts
without a limit
to populate the fact cache in parallel before running the required command with
a limit. For example:
kolla-ansible gather-facts
kolla-ansible deploy --limit control01
Fact variable injection¶
By default, Ansible injects a variable for every fact, prefixed with
ansible_
. This can result in a large number of variables for each host,
which at scale can incur a performance penalty. Ansible provides a
configuration option
that can be set to False
to prevent this injection of facts. In this case,
facts should be referenced via ansible_facts.<fact>
. In recent releases of
Kolla Ansible, facts are referenced via ansible_facts
, allowing users to
disable fact variable injection.
[defaults]
inject_facts_as_vars = False
Fact filtering¶
Ansible facts filtering can be used to speed up Ansible. Environments with
many network interfaces on the network and compute nodes can experience very
slow processing with Kolla Ansible. This happens due to the processing of the
large per-interface facts with each task. To avoid storing certain facts, we
can use the kolla_ansible_setup_filter
variable, which is used as the
filter
argument to the setup
module. For example, to avoid collecting
facts for virtual interfaces beginning with q or t:
kolla_ansible_setup_filter: "ansible_[!qt]*"
This causes Ansible to collect but not store facts matching that pattern, which
includes the virtual interface facts. Currently we are not referencing other
facts matching the pattern within Kolla Ansible. Note that including the
ansible_
prefix causes meta facts module_setup
and gather_subset
to
be filtered, but this seems to be the only way to get a good match on the
interface facts.
The exact improvement will vary, but has been reported to be as large as 18x on systems with many virtual interfaces.
Fact gathering subsets¶
It is also possible to configure which subsets of facts are gathered, via
kolla_ansible_setup_gather_subset
, which is used as the gather_subset
argument to the setup
module. For example, if one wants to avoid collecting
facts via facter:
kolla_ansible_setup_gather_subset: "all,!facter"
Max failure percentage¶
It is possible to specify a maximum failure percentage
using kolla_max_fail_percentage
. By default this is undefined, which is
equivalent to a value of 100, meaning that Ansible will continue execution
until all hosts have failed or completed. For example:
kolla_max_fail_percentage: 50
A max fail percentage may be set for specific services using
<service>_max_fail_percentage
. For example:
kolla_max_fail_percentage: 50
nova_max_fail_percentage: 25