LinuxConfigurator Operator
The LinuxConfigurator operator allows configuring systems tuned by Akamas by applying parameters related to the Linux kernel using different strategies.
The operator can configure provided Components or can configure every Component which has parameters related to the Linux kernel.
The parameters are applied via SSH protocol.
Operator arguments
Name | Type | Value Restrictions | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| String | It should match the name of an existing Component of the System under test | No | The name of the Component for which available Linux kernel parameters will be configured |
If no component
is provided, this operator will try to configure every parameter defined for the Components of the System under test
Example
In this example, the Operator is used to automatically the OS parameters of the specified component.
component
structure and arguments
component
structure and argumentsThe following table describes the component
structure and arguments.
Name | Type | Value Restrictions | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| String | Yes | SSH login username | ||
| Multiline string | Yes | SSH login key, provided directly its value or the path of the file to import from. The operator supports RSA and DSA Keys | ||
| List of objects | It should have a structure like the one described here below | No | Allows the user to restrict and specify to which block-device apply block-device-related parameters | |
| List of objects | It should have a structure like the one described here below | No | Allows the user to restrict and specify to which network-device apply network-device-related parameters |
blockDevices
and networkDevices
structure and arguments
blockDevices
and networkDevices
structure and argumentsThe properties blockDevices
and networkDevices
allow to speficify which parameters to apply each block and network device associated with the Component, as well as which block and network device should be left untouched by the LinuxConfigurator operator_._
If the properties are omitted, then all block and network devices associated with the Component will be configured will all the available related parameters.
Notice: all block devices called _loopN
_ (where N is an integer number greater or equal to 0) are automatically excluded from the Component’s block devices.
The properties blockDevices
and networkDevices
are lists of objects with the following structure:
Name | Type | Value Restrictions | Required | Default | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| String | It should be a valid regular expression to match block/network-devices | Yes | A regular expression that matches block/network-devices to configure with related parameters of the Component | |
| List of strings | It should contain the names of matching parameters of the Component | No | The list of parameters to be configured for the specified block/network-devices. If the list is empty, then no parameter will be applied for the block/network-devices matched by |
Examples
In the following example, only the parameters os_StorageReadAhead
_ and os_StorageQeueuScheduler
_ are applied to all the devices that match the regex ‘xvd[a-z]
’ (i.e. xvda
, xvdb
, …, xvdc
):
In the following example, only the parameter os_StorageMaxSectorKb
is applied to block device xvdb
and loop0
:
Also notice that in this example, the parameter is applied also to the block device loop0
, since it is explicitly specified in the name filter, which overrides the default behavior since loopN
devices are excluded by the Linux Optimization Pack.
In the following example, no parameters are applied to the wlp4s0
network device, which is therefore excluded from the optimization:
Strategies
Several strategies are supported by this operator which, depending on the specific strategy, can be specified at ComponentType and at each parameter level.
Sysctl strategy
With this strategy, a parameter is configured by leveraging the sysctl utility. The sysctl variable to map to the parameter that needs to be configured is specified using the key
argument.
Echo strategy
With this strategy, a parameter is configured by echoing and piping its value into a provided file. The path of the file is specified using the file
argument.
Map strategy
With this strategy, each possible value of a parameter is mapped to a command to be executed on the machine the LinuxConfigurator operates on(this is especially useful for categorical parameters).
Command strategy
With this strategy, a parameter is configured by executing a command into which the parameter value is interpolated.
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