A Policy object can attached to at least one Cluster at the same time. A cluster at any time can have more than one Policy objects attached to it.
After a policy object is attached to a cluster, you can still enable or disable it or update some properties of the policy object.
The openstack cluster command provides a sub-command
policy binding list to list policy objects that are attached to a
cluster. You can provide the name, the ID or the “short ID” of a cluster as
the identifier to reference a cluster. For example, the command below lists
the policies attached to the cluster webservers
:
$ openstack cluster policy binding list webservers
You can specify the sorting keys and sorting direction when list cluster
policies, using the option --sort
. The --sort
option
accepts a string of format key1[:dir1],key2[:dir2],key3[:dir3]
, where the
keys used are properties of the policy bound to a cluster and the dirs can be
one of asc
and desc
. When omitted, Senlin sorts a given key using
asc
as the default direction.
For example, the following command line sorts the policy bindings using the
enabled
property in descending order:
$ openstack cluster policy binding list --sort enabled:desc
When sorting the list of policies, enabled
is the only key you can specify
for sorting.
The openstack cluster command also supports options for filtering
the policy list at the server side. The option --filters
can be used
for this purpose. For example, the following command filters clusters by the
is_enabled
field:
$ openstack cluster policy binding list --filters enabled=True c3
+-----------+-------------+-----------------------+------------+
| policy_id | policy_name | policy_type | is_enabled |
+-----------+-------------+-----------------------+------------+
| 0705f0f4 | up01 | senlin.policy.scaling | True |
+-----------+-------------+-----------------------+------------+
The option --filters
accepts a list of key-value pairs separated by
semicolon (;
), where each key-value pair is expected to be of format
<key>=<value>
. The only key that can be used for filtering as of today is
enabled
.
Senlin permits policy objects to be attached to clusters and to be detached from clusters dynamically. When attaching a policy object to a cluster, you can customize the policy properties for the particular cluster. For example, you can specify whether the policy should be enabled once attached.
The following options are supported for the command openstack cluster policy attach:
--enabled
: a boolean indicating whether the policy to be enabled
once attached.For example, the following command attaches a policy named up01
to the
cluster c3
, with its enabled status set to True
:
$ openstack cluster policy attach --enabled True --policy up01 c3
Note that most of the time, Senlin doesn’t more than one policy of the same type to be attached to the same cluster. This restriction is relaxed for some policy types. For example, when working with policies about scaling, you can actually attach more than one policy instances to the same cluster, each of which is about a specific scenario.
For the identifiers specified for the cluster and the policy, you can use the name, the ID or the “short ID” of an object. The Senlin engine will try make a guess on each case. If no entity matches the specified identifier or there are more than one entity matching the identifier, you will get an error message.
To examine the detailed properties of a policy object that has been attached to a cluster, you can use the openstack cluster policy binding show command with the policy identifier and the cluster identifier specified. For example:
$ openstack cluster policy binding show --policy dp01 c3
+--------------+--------------------------------------+
| Property | Value |
+--------------+--------------------------------------+
| cluster_name | c3 |
| data | None |
| id | 2b7e9294-b5cd-470f-b191-b18f7e672495 |
| is_enabled | True |
| location | None |
| name | None |
| policy_id | 239d7212-6196-4a89-9446-44d28717d7de |
| policy_name | dp01 |
| policy_type | senlin.policy.deletion-1.0 |
+--------------+--------------------------------------+
You can use the name, the ID or the “short ID” of a policy and/or a cluster to name the objects.
Once a policy is attached to a cluster, you can request its property on this
cluster be changed by using the command
openstack cluster policy binding update. Presently, you can only
specify the enabled
property to be updated.
For example, the following command disables a policy on the specified cluster:
$ openstack cluster policy binding update \
--enabled False --policy dp01 \
mycluster
The Senlin engine will perform validation of the arguments in the same way as that for the policy attach operation. You can use the name, the ID or the “short ID” of an entity to reference it, as you do with the policy attach operation as well.
Finally, to remove the binding between a specified policy object from a cluster, you can use the openstack cluster policy detach command as shown below:
$ openstack cluster policy detach --policy dp01 mycluster
This command will detach the specified policy from the specified cluster.
You will use the option --policy
to specify the policy.
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