YAML Blueprint Reference
Root Elements
name: human readable namesservices: a list ofServiceSpecificationelementslocation(orlocationstaking a list): aLocationSpecificationelement as a string or a map
Service Specification Elements
Within the services block, a list of maps should be supplied, with each map
defining a ServiceSpecification. Each ServiceSpecification should declare the
service type (synonyms serviceType and service_type), indicating what type of
service is being specified there. The following formats are supported for
defining types:
com.acme.brooklyn.package.JavaEntityClassjava:com.acme.brooklyn.package.JavaEntityClassjava-entity-class(where this has been added to the catalog)
A reference of some of the common service type instances used is included in a section below.
Within the ServiceSpecification, other key-value pairs can be supplied to customize
the entity being defined, with these being the most common:
-
id: an ID string, used to refer to this service -
location(orlocations): as defined in the root element -
brooklyn.config: configuration key-value pairs passed to the service entity being created -
brooklyn.children: a list ofServiceSpecificationswhich will be configured as children of this entity -
brooklyn.policies: a list of policies, each as a map described with theirtypeand theirbrooklyn.configas keys -
brooklyn.enrichers: a list of enrichers, each as a map described with theirtypeand theirbrooklyn.configas keys; see the keys declared on individual enrichers; also see this enricher example for a detailed and commented illustration -
brooklyn.initializers: a list ofEntityInitializerinstances to be constructed and run against the entity, each as a map described with theirtypeand theirbrooklyn.configas keys. AnEntityInitiailzercan perform arbitrary customization to an entity whilst it is being constructed, such as adding dynamic sensors and effectors. These classes must expose a public constructor taking a singleMapwhere thebrooklyn.configis passed in. Some common initializers are:-
org.apache.brooklyn.core.effector.ssh.SshCommandEffector: takes anameandcommand, and optionally a map of namedparametersto theirdescriptionanddefaultValue, to define an effector with the given name implemented by the given SSH command (on an entity which as an ssh-able machine) -
org.apache.brooklyn.core.sensor.ssh.SshCommandSensor: takes anameandcommand, and optionally aperiod, to create a sensor feed which populates the sensor with the given name by running the given command (on an entity which as an ssh-able machine) -
org.apache.brooklyn.core.sensor.windows.WinRmCommandSensor: For a command supplied via WinRm. Takes aname,command, and optionally aperiodandexecutionDir, to create a sensor feed which populates the sensor with the given name by running the given command (on an entity which as an winrm-able machine).
"~"will use the default execution directory for the WinRm session which is usually%USERPROFILE%
-
brooklyn.parameters: documents a list of typed parameters the entity accepts. If none are specified the config keys declared in the entity’s class are used (including the information from the@CatalogConfigannotation). The items have the following properties:name(required): identifier by which to reference the parameter when setting or retrieving its valuelabel: a value to present to the user, same asnameif emptydescription: short text describing the parameter behaviour/usage, presented to the usertype: the type of the parameter, one ofstring,integer,long,float,double,timestamp,duration,port, or a fully qualified Java type name; the default isstring; obvious coercion is supported sotimestampaccepts most common ISO date formats,durationaccepts5m, and port accepts8080+default: a default value; this will be coerced to the declaredtypepinned: mark the parameter as pinned (always displayed) for the UI. The default istrueconstraints: a list of constraints the parameter should meet; for details, see Entity Configuration.
A shorthand notation is also supported where just the name of the parameter is supplied as an item in the list, with the other values being unset or the default. See
displayNamein the following example for an illustration of this:brooklyn.parameters: # user.age parameter is required, pinned and fully specified - name: user.age type: integer label: Age description: the age of the user pinned: true constraints: - required # user.name is optional, is not pinned and has a default - name: user.name default: You pinned: false # shorthand notation: displayName will be an optional config of type string with no default - displayNameEntities, policies, and initializers may accept additional key-value pairs, usually documented in their documentation (e.g. javadoc), or in the case of Java often as static fields in the underlying Java class. Often there are config keys or flags (indicated by
@SetFromFlag) declared on the class; these declared flags and config keys may be passed in at the root of theServiceSpecificationor inbrooklyn.config. (Undeclared config is only accepted in thebrooklyn.configmap.) Referencing the parameters from within java classes is identical to using config keys. In yaml it’s usually referenced using$brooklyn:scopeRoot().config("displayName"). See below for more details on scopes.brooklyn.tags: documents a list of tag objects which should be assigned to the entity.
Location Specification Elements
In brief, location specs are supplied as follows, either for the entire application (at the root)
or for a specific ServiceSpecification:
location:
jclouds:aws-ec2:
region: us-east-1
identity: AKA_YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID
credential: <access-key-hex-digits>
Or in many cases it can be in-lined:
location: localhost
location: named:my_openstack
location: aws-ec2:us-west-1
For the first immediately, you’ll need password-less ssh access to localhost.
For the second, you’ll need to define a named location in brooklyn.properties,
using brooklyn.location.named.my_openstack.... properties.
For the third, you’ll need to have the identity and credentials defined in
brooklyn.properties, using brooklyn.location.jclouds.aws-ec2.... properties.
If specifying multiple locations, e.g. for a fabric:
locations:
- localhost
- named:my_openstack
- aws-ec2:us-east-2 # if credentials defined in `brooklyn.properties
- jclouds:aws-ec2:
region: us-east-1
identity: AKA_YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID
credential: <access-key-hex-digits>
If you have pre-existing nodes, you can use the byon provider, either in this format:
location:
byon:
user: root
privateKeyFile: ~/.ssh/key.pem
hosts:
- 81.95.144.58
- 81.95.144.59
- brooklyn@159.253.144.139
- brooklyn@159.253.144.140
or:
location:
byon:
user: root
privateKeyFile: ~/.ssh/key.pem
hosts: "{81.95.144.{58,59},brooklyn@159.253.144.{139-140}"
You cannot use glob expansions with the list notation, nor can you specify per-host
information apart from user within a single byon declaration.
However you can combine locations using multi:
location:
multi:
targets:
- byon:
user: root
privateKeyFile: ~/.ssh/key.pem
hosts:
- 81.95.144.58
- 81.95.144.59
- byon:
privateKeyFile: ~/.ssh/brooklyn_key.pem
hosts: brooklyn@159.253.144{139-140}
DSL Commands
Dependency injection other powerful references and types can be built up within the YAML using the concise DSL defined here:
$brooklyn:attributeWhenReady("sensor")will store a future which will be blocked when it is accessed, until the givensensorfrom this entity “truthy” (i.e. non-trivial, non-empty, non-zero) value (see below oncomponentfor looking up values on other sensors)$brooklyn:config("key")will insert the value set against the given key at this entity (or nearest ancestor); can be used to supply config at the root which is used in multiple places in the plan$brooklyn:sensor("sensor.name")returns the given sensor on the current entity if found, or an untyped (Object) sensor;$brooklyn:sensor("com.acme.brooklyn.ContainingEntityClass", "sensor.name")returns the strongly typed sensor defined in the given class$brooklyn:entity("ID")refers to a Brooklyn entity with the given ID; you can then access the following subfields, using the same syntax as defined above but with a different reference entity, e.g.$brooklyn:entity("ID").attributeWhenReady("sensor"):.attributeWhenReady("sensor").config("key").sensor("sensor.name")
$brooklyn:component("scope", "ID")is also supported, to limit scope to any ofglobal: looks for theIDanywhere in the planchild: looks for theIDanywhere in the child onlydescendant: looks for theIDanywhere in children or their descendantssibling: looks for theIDanywhere among children of the parent entityparent: returns the parent entity (ignores theID)this: returns this entity (ignores theID)
$brooklyn:root()will return the topmost entity (the application)$broopklyn:scopeRoot()will return the root entity in the current plan scope. For catalog items it’s the topmost entity in the plan, for application plans it is the same as$brooklyn:root().$brooklyn:formatString("pattern e.g. %s %s", "field 1", "field 2")returns a future which creates the formatted string with the given parameters, where parameters may be strings or other tasks such asattributeWhenReady$brooklyn:urlEncode("val")returns a future which creates a string with the characters escaped so it is a valid part of a URL. The parameter can be a string or another task. For example,$brooklyn:urlEncode($brooklyn:config(\"mykey\")). It uses “www-form-urlencoded” for the encoding, which is appropriate for query parameters but not for some other parts of the URL (e.g. space is encoded as ‘+’).$brooklyn:literal("string")returns the given string as a literal (suppressing any$brooklyn:expansion)$brooklyn:object(Map)creates an object, using keystypeto define the java type, and eitherobject.fieldsorbrooklyn.configto supply bean/constructor/flags to create an instance$brooklyn:entitySpec(Map)returns a newServiceSpecificationas defined by the givenMap, but as anEntitySpecsuitable for setting as the value ofConfigKey<EntitySpec>config items (such asdynamiccluster.memberspecinDynamicCluster)
Parameters above can be supplied either as strings or as lists and maps in YAML,
and the $brooklyn: syntax can be used within those parameters.
Some Powerful YAML Entities
All entities support configuration via YAML, but these entities in particular have been designed for general purpose use from YAML. Consult the Javadoc for these elements for more information:
- Vanilla Software in
VanillaSoftwareProcess: makes it very easy to build entities which usebashcommands to install and the PID to stop and restart - Chef in
ChefSoftwareProcess: makes it easy to use Chef cookbooks to build entities, either with recipes following conventions or with configuration in theServiceSpecificationto use artibitrary recipes DynamicCluster: provides resizable clusters given adynamiccluster.memberspecset with$brooklyn.entitySpec(Map)as described aboveDynamicFabric: provides a set of homogeneous instances started in different locations, with an effector toaddLocation, i.e. add a new instance in a given location, at runtime