Installation
External Dependencies
Zuul interacts with several other systems described below.
Nodepool
In order to run all but the simplest jobs, Zuul uses a companion program Nodepool to supply the nodes (whether dynamic cloud instances or static hardware) used by jobs. Before starting Zuul, ensure you have Nodepool installed and any images you require built.
Zuul must be able to log into the nodes provisioned by Nodepool with a given username and SSH private key. Executors should also be able to talk to nodes on TCP port 19885 for log streaming; see Log streaming.
ZooKeeper
Zuul and Nodepool use ZooKeeper to communicate internally among their components, and also to communicate with each other. You can run a simple single-node ZooKeeper instance, or a multi-node cluster. Ensure that all Zuul and Nodepool hosts have access to the cluster.
Executor Deployment
The Zuul executor requires Ansible to run jobs. There are two approaches that can be used to install Ansible for Zuul.
First you may set manage_ansible
to True in the executor config. If you
do this Zuul will install all supported Ansible versions on zuul-executor
startup. These installations end up in Zuul’s state dir,
/var/lib/zuul/ansible-bin
if unchanged.
The second option is to use zuul-manage-ansible
to install the supported
Ansible versions. By default this will install Ansible to
zuul_install_prefix/lib/zuul/ansible
. This method is preferable to the
first because it speeds up zuul-executor start time and allows you to
preinstall ansible in containers (avoids problems with bind mounted zuul
state dirs).
WARNING:root:Cryptography backend lacks _rsa_skip_check_key flag, key loading may be slow
usage: zuul-manage-ansible [-h] [-c CONFIG] [--version] [-v] [-u] [-l]
[--validate] [-r INSTALL_ROOT]
Zuul ansible manager.
This command installs or upgrades all supported Ansible installations
so zuul can use them.
You can set the following environnment variables
to install additional packages you might need along with ansible.
These variables must contain a space separated list of dependencies
that can be parsed by pip.
ANSIBLE_EXTRA_PACKAGES
Packages to add to every ansible installation.
ANSIBLE_<VERSION>_EXTRA_PACKAGES
Packages to add to a specific version of Ansible. The version must
be the same as listed in 'zuul-manage-ansible -l' but without
special characters. e.g. ANSIBLE_27_EXTRA_PACKAGES=myextradep
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-c CONFIG specify the config file
--version show zuul version
-v verbose output
-u upgrade ansible versions
-l list supported versions
--validate validate installed versions
-r INSTALL_ROOT root path for ansible venv installations
In both cases if using a non default path you will want to set
ansible_root
in the executor config file.
Web Deployment
The zuul-web
service provides a web dashboard, a REST API and a websocket
log streaming service as a single holistic web application. For production use
it is recommended to run it behind a reverse proxy, such as Apache or Nginx.
The zuul-web
service is entirely self-contained and can be run
with minimal configuration, however, more advanced users may desire to
do one or more of the following:
- White Label
Serve the dashboard of an individual tenant at the root of its own domain. https://zuul.openstack.org is an example of a Zuul dashboard that has been white labeled for the
openstack
tenant of its Zuul.- Static Offload
Shift the duties of serving static files, such as HTML, Javascript, CSS or images to the reverse proxy server.
- Static External
Serve the static files from a completely separate location that does not support programmatic rewrite rules such as a Swift Object Store.
- Sub-URL
Serve a Zuul dashboard from a location below the root URL as part of presenting integration with other application. https://softwarefactory-project.io/zuul/ is an example of a Zuul dashboard that is being served from a Sub-URL.
Most deployments shouldn’t need these, so the following discussion
will assume that the zuul-web
service is exposed via a reverse
proxy. Where rewrite rule examples are given, they will be given with
Apache syntax, but any other reverse proxy should work just fine.
Reverse Proxy
Using Apache as the reverse proxy requires the mod_proxy
,
mod_proxy_http
and mod_proxy_wstunnel
modules to be installed
and enabled.
All of the cases require a rewrite rule for the websocket streaming, so the simplest reverse-proxy case is:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^/api/tenant/(.*)/console-stream ws://localhost:9000/api/tenant/$1/console-stream [P]
RewriteRule ^/(.*)$ http://localhost:9000/$1 [P]
This is the recommended configuration unless one of the following features is required.
Static Offload
To have the reverse proxy serve the static html/javascript assets
instead of proxying them to the REST layer, enable the mod_rewrite
Apache module, register the location where you unpacked the web
application as the document root and add rewrite rules:
<Directory /usr/share/zuul>
Require all granted
</Directory>
Alias / /usr/share/zuul/
<Location />
RewriteEngine on
RewriteBase /
# Rewrite api to the zuul-web endpoint
RewriteRule api/tenant/(.*)/console-stream ws://localhost:9000/api/tenant/$1/console-stream [P,L]
RewriteRule api/(.*)$ http://localhost:9000/api/$1 [P,L]
# Backward compatible rewrite
RewriteRule t/(.*)/(.*).html(.*) /t/$1/$2$3 [R=301,L,NE]
# Don't rewrite files or directories
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /index.html [L]
</Location>
Sub directory serving
The web application needs to be rebuilt to update the internal location of the static files. Set the homepage setting in the package.json to an absolute path or url. For example, to deploy the web interface through a ‘/zuul/’ sub directory:
Note
The web dashboard source code and package.json are located in the web
directory. All the yarn commands need to be executed from the web
directory.
sed -e 's#"homepage": "/"#"homepage": "/zuul/"#' -i package.json
yarn build
Then assuming the web application is unpacked in /usr/share/zuul,
enable the mod_rewrite
Apache module and add the following rewrite
rules:
<Directory /usr/share/zuul>
Require all granted
</Directory>
Alias /zuul /usr/share/zuul/
<Location /zuul>
RewriteEngine on
RewriteBase /zuul
# Rewrite api to the zuul-web endpoint
RewriteRule api/tenant/(.*)/console-stream ws://localhost:9000/api/tenant/$1/console-stream [P,L]
RewriteRule api/(.*)$ http://localhost:9000/api/$1 [P,L]
# Backward compatible rewrite
RewriteRule t/(.*)/(.*).html(.*) /t/$1/$2$3 [R=301,L,NE]
# Don't rewrite files or directories
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /zuul/index.html [L]
</Location>
White Labeled Tenant
Running a white-labeled tenant is similar to the offload case, but adds a rule to ensure connection webhooks don’t try to get put into the tenant scope.
Note
It’s possible to do white-labeling without static offload, but it is more complex with no benefit.
Enable the mod_rewrite
Apache module, and assuming the Zuul tenant
name is example
, the rewrite rules are:
<Directory /usr/share/zuul>
Require all granted
</Directory>
Alias / /usr/share/zuul/
<Location />
RewriteEngine on
RewriteBase /
# Rewrite api to the zuul-web endpoint
RewriteRule api/connection/(.*)$ http://localhost:9000/api/connection/$1 [P,L]
RewriteRule api/console-stream ws://localhost:9000/api/tenant/example/console-stream [P,L]
RewriteRule api/(.*)$ http://localhost:9000/api/tenant/example/$1 [P,L]
# Backward compatible rewrite
RewriteRule t/(.*)/(.*).html(.*) /t/$1/$2$3 [R=301,L,NE]
# Don't rewrite files or directories
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /index.html [L]
</Location>
Static External
Note
Hosting the Zuul dashboard on an external static location that does not support dynamic url rewrite rules only works for white-labeled deployments.
In order to serve the zuul dashboard code from an external static location,
REACT_APP_ZUUL_API
must be set at javascript build time:
REACT_APP_ZUUL_API='http://zuul-web.example.com' yarn build