5bd14244c2
Signed-off-by: Nico Schottelius <nico@brief.schottelius.org>
173 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
173 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
[[!meta title="cdist: Why we require Python 3.2 on the source host"]]
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## Introduction
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As [[cdist|software/cdist]] is getting more popular, more people are using
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cdist and some questions arrive more often from newbies than others.
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One of them is why we require having Python 3.2 on the source host.
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If you are also wondering about the motivation, or you're screaming because
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you only have Python 2.x or Python 3.1 available in your distribution, this
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article is for you.
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Note: Cdist does *not* require Python on the target hosts!
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Note: Cdist requires only ssh and a posix shell on the targets.
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## History of cdist
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Because you may be one of the people who are screaming, I'm giving you
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an overview about the whole development history of cdist, which will
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make things more clear for you.
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At the end of 2010 [I was claiming that most current configuration management
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(***CM***) tools are not only overly complex designed, but also that their
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implementations are way too
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complex](http://www.usenix.org/event/lisa10/tech/slides/snyder_bof2.pdf).
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This is definitely a strong statement, which I
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also used to provoke people to thing about the current situation of CM.
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The logical consequence of my statement was to try out, whether it's
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actually possible to write a CM tool completly in a very simple manner.
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For instance in posix shell script. This led to the first commit to the
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newly born cdist repository:
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commit 28a9807fe5e6bfa95015fe72456d63cbb2a5821f
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Date: Thu Sep 16 02:20:35 2010 +0200
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After a lot of discussions, design ideas, pictures on the whiteboard,
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trying out different implementations, weighting up advantages of
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each one, the first official release of cdist was put into public,
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cdist 1.0.0:
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tag 1.0.0
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Date: Mon Mar 7 18:21:18 2011 +0100
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Cdist 1.0.0 is completly implemented in posix shell and had almost all
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features of the current cdist implementation. With one major drawback:
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Performance. When running cdist 1.0.0 in parallel mode, the source host
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easily became the bottleneck. A typical run of cdist 1.0.0 caused around
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3500 - 5000 forks. Running in parallel mode with about 10-15 target hosts,
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most time of a cdist run was spent in kernel space to handle the forks.
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The logical sequence again was to search for the reason for the huge amount
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of forks, which was easily detected: Every routine was a shell script on its
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own, that required a new launch of the shell. Now, for some operations,
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like working on the dependency tree, a lot of sub-routines were called, leading
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to the huge number of forks.
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We tried to minimise the number of forks by migrating from shell scripts to
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shell functions, which was a big pain, when we realised that posix shell
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does not have **local** variable support anymore. Posix states that you should
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use shell scripts instead of shell functions, if you need distinct environments.
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Which is exactly were we came from...
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Thus we decided to switch to a different programming language for cdist's core,
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but only for the core. For us it is very important to minimise the dependencies
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on the target hosts: We do not want to install Ruby, Python, Java, libfoo or
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anything that is not usually available on a freshly installed base system.
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Cdist should be able to take over, as soon as the system is setup in a very
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basic state.
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The choice felt on Python, because it felt very mature and easy to use.
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Additionally, Python 3 already provides a lot of functionality in its
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base installation: Everything we were used to do in shell, could easily be
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rewritten in plain Python 3. After **exactly** one year after
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the initial commit, ***cdist 2.0.0***, a complete rewrite in Python 3
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was finished and released:
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tag 2.0.0
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Date: Fri Sep 16 12:11:28 2011 +0200
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## Now, why Python 3.2?
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During the development of cdist 2.0, we had a lot of discussions
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about clean design, pythonic ways of doing stuff (versus using the
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shell approach in python) and which functions to use. In the beginning,
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we were discussing about whether to settle for Python 2 or Python 3.
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As we did not have any dependencies or old code that relies on Python 2,
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the choice for the current stable tree, Python 3, was easy to make.
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Python 3.2, in contrast to Python 3.1, includes the very good usable
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[argparse module](http://docs.python.org/py3k/library/argparse.html),
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as well as an enhanced variant of the
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[os.makedirs](http://docs.python.org/py3k/library/os.html#os.makedirs)
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method that supports the ***exist_ok*** parameter.
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The argparse module is also available for Python 3.1, but not the
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enhanced **os.makedirs** method. So we had to decide: Should we
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integrate a simple workaround to support the previous Python 3 release,
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Python 3.1, or shall we upset users with old Python installations?
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To answer this question, we had a look at the current situation of
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Python in various distributions.
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## Python support in Linux/BSD
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A very quick research showed the following results:
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[[!table data="""
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Distro | Version | Python version | Python 3? | Usable as cdist source host?
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Archlinux | rolling release | 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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CentOS | 6 | 2.6.6 | no | no
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Debian | squeeze | 3.1.3 | yes | no
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Debian | wheezy | 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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Fedora | 14 | 3.1.2 | yes | no
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Fedora | 15-17 | 3.2 - 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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FreeBSD | Ports | 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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Gentoo | rolling release | 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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NetBSD | Ports | 3.1.4 | yes | no
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OpenBSD: | -current | 2.7.1 | no | no
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OpenBSD: | Ports | 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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OpenSuse | 11.4 | 3.1.3 | yes | no
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OpenSuse | 12.1 | 3.2.1 | yes | yes
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Redhat | 6 | 2.6.6 | no | no
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Slackware | 13.37 | 2.6.6 | no | no
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Ubuntu | maverick (10.10) | 3.1.3 | yes | no
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Ubuntu | natty (11.04) - precise (12.04) | 3.2 - 3.2.2 | yes | yes
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"""]]
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So we have the following situations:
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* There are a lot of distros with Python 3.2 available (Archlinux,
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Debian >= Wheezy, Fedora >= 15, FreeBSD, Gentoo, OpenBSD, OpenSuse,
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Ubuntu >= 11.04)
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* There are distros which do not have Python 3 at all (Centos, Redhat, Slackware)
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* Python 3 is definitely needed, so requiring 3.1 or 3.2
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does not make a difference
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* There are only two cases, which would make it interesting to support
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Python 3.1: Debian Squeeze (currently stable) and NetBSD.
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* As I've been a long time Debian user, I understand this may be a bit
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annoying, because it's unclear, when wheezy will become stable.
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On the other hand, you can easily install python 3.2 from source to
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anywhere, like you'd do in the situation, when you wouldn't have
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python 3 at all.
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* Another point speaking against 3.1 support for Debian is the fact that
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distributions should support the user and not developers should support
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distributions that ship old software (there's nothing against supporting
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old **and** new versions, though). That's by the way one of the reasons
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why I moved away from Debian...
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* I am short on experience regarding NetBSD, but installing via source
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shouldn't be an issue either.
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To summarise: Support for Python 3.1 only makes sense for Debian Squeeze
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and NetBSD at the moment. This requirement will soon [tm] be superseeded
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and can easily be worked around by selecting one of many distributions
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with more recent software packages. And that's the reason, why we settled
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for Python 3.2.
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## Btw, who is we?
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You mave have noticed that I am often referring to **we** in this article.
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The second main developer for cdist is
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[Steven Armstrong](https://github.com/asteven), a sysadmin at
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ETH Zurich and good friend of mine.
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The discussions and development time we spent together was very valuable
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for me as well for the whole cdist project and thus I wanted to use this
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article to say
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Thank you, Steven.
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[Disclaimer: I do not work for ETH Zurich anymore, but for [local.ch](http://www.local.ch)]
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[[!tag config sysadmin unix]]
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