Properly monitor the embedded ansible service#13978
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Fryguy merged 2 commits intoManageIQ:masterfrom Feb 21, 2017
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Before this change if someone called start before calling configure, they would get into a bad state because we would not have the secret key saved. This would lead tower to use the one on the filesystem which was generated at RPM install time which means that every build would have access to that key. This change makes sure that start also does the work of configure if configure had not been called yet.
Only heartbeat when the locally running ansible service is alive. Also, start the service if it isn't alive and all the processes are not running (EmbeddedAnsible.running?). We are aware that this opens the potential for a race condition when the worker is killed and the server starts a replacement before the original worker is completely down. The combination of implementing EmbeddedAnsibleWorker#kill as #stop and starting the service every time we can't heartbeat should allow the new worker to recover even if the stop is run after the new worker runs EmbeddedAnsible.start If this does become a problem we will need to implement some new mechanisms for dealing with such "singleton" workers.
Fryguy
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Feb 17, 2017
| if EmbeddedAnsible.running? | ||
| _log.info("#{log_prefix} supervisord is ok!") | ||
| if EmbeddedAnsible.alive? | ||
| heartbeat |
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Doesn't this introduce a delay? That is, you have to wait for the worker heartbeat detection to stop the worker.
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@Fryguy yeah, we'll keep trying to fix the situation by reconfiguring and starting the service via the setup script until the worker hasn't responded. It was the simplest thing to do until we figure out what ways the service can fail.
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Checked commits carbonin/manageiq@3d7229f~...678c4e7 with ruby 2.2.6, rubocop 0.47.1, and haml-lint 0.20.0 |
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This PR mostly handles implementing a better worker lifecycle (start, do_work, kill) for the
EmbeddedAnsibleWorkerFor this we should only heartbeat when the locally running ansible service is alive and start the service if it isn't alive and all the processes are not running (EmbeddedAnsible.running?).
We are aware that this opens the potential for a race condition when the worker is killed and the server starts a replacement before the original worker is completely down.
The combination of implementing
EmbeddedAnsibleWorker#killas#stopand starting the service every time we can't heartbeat should allow the new worker to recover even if the stop is run after the new worker runsEmbeddedAnsible.startIf this does become a problem we will need to implement some new mechanisms for dealing with such "singleton" workers.