--- layout: "docs" page_title: "constraint Stanza - Job Specification" sidebar_current: "docs-job-specification-constraint" description: |- The "constraint" stanza allows restricting the set of eligible nodes. Constraints may filter on attributes or metadata. Additionally constraints may be specified at the job, group, or task levels for ultimate flexibility. --- # `constraint` Stanza
Placement job -> **constraint**
job -> group -> **constraint**
job -> group -> task -> **constraint**
The `constraint` allows restricting the set of eligible nodes. Constraints may filter on [attributes][interpolation] or [client metadata][client-meta]. Additionally constraints may be specified at the [job][job], [group][group], or [task][task] levels for ultimate flexibility. ~> **It is possible to define irreconcilable constraints in a job.** For example, because all [tasks within a group are scheduled on the same client node][group], specifying different [`${attr.unique.hostname}`][node-variables] constraints at the task level will cause a job to be unplaceable. ```hcl job "docs" { # All tasks in this job must run on linux. constraint { attribute = "${attr.kernel.name}" value = "linux" } group "example" { # All groups in this job should be scheduled on different hosts. constraint { operator = "distinct_hosts" value = "true" } task "server" { # All tasks must run where "my_custom_value" is greater than 3. constraint { attribute = "${meta.my_custom_value}" operator = ">" value = "3" } } } } ``` Placing constraints at both the job level and at the group level is redundant since constraints are applied hierarchically. The job constraints will affect all groups (and tasks) in the job. ## `constraint` Parameters - `attribute` `(string: "")` - Specifies the name or reference of the attribute to examine for the constraint. This can be any of the [Nomad interpolated values](/docs/runtime/interpolation.html#interpreted_node_vars). - `operator` `(string: "=")` - Specifies the comparison operator. The ordering is compared lexically. Possible values include: ```text = != > >= < <= distinct_hosts distinct_property regexp set_contains version is_set is_not_set ``` For a detailed explanation of these values and their behavior, please see the [operator values section](#operator-values). - `value` `(string: "")` - Specifies the value to compare the attribute against using the specified operation. This can be a literal value, another attribute, or any [Nomad interpolated values](/docs/runtime/interpolation.html#interpreted_node_vars). ### `operator` Values This section details the specific values for the "operator" parameter in the Nomad job specification for constraints. The operator is always specified as a string, but the string can take on different values which change the behavior of the overall constraint evaluation. ```hcl constraint { operator = "..." } ``` - `"distinct_hosts"` - Instructs the scheduler to not co-locate any groups on the same machine. When specified as a job constraint, it applies to all groups in the job. When specified as a group constraint, the effect is constrained to that group. This constraint can not be specified at the task level. Note that the `attribute` parameter should be omitted when using this constraint. ```hcl constraint { operator = "distinct_hosts" value = "true" } ``` The constraint may also be specified as follows for a more compact representation: ```hcl constraint { distinct_hosts = true } ``` - `"distinct_property"` - Instructs the scheduler to select nodes that have a distinct value of the specified property. The `value` parameter specifies how many allocations are allowed to share the value of a property. The `value` must be 1 or greater and if omitted, defaults to 1. When specified as a job constraint, it applies to all groups in the job. When specified as a group constraint, the effect is constrained to that group. This constraint can not be specified at the task level. ```hcl constraint { operator = "distinct_property" attribute = "${meta.rack}" value = "3" } ``` The constraint may also be specified as follows for a more compact representation: ```hcl constraint { distinct_property = "${meta.rack}" value = "3" } ``` - `"regexp"` - Specifies a regular expression constraint against the attribute. The syntax of the regular expressions accepted is the same general syntax used by Perl, Python, and many other languages. More precisely, it is the syntax accepted by RE2 and described at in the [Google RE2 syntax](https://golang.org/s/re2syntax). ```hcl constraint { attribute = "..." operator = "regexp" value = "[a-z0-9]" } ``` - `"set_contains"` - Specifies a contains constraint against the attribute. The attribute and the list being checked are split using commas. This will check that the given attribute contains **all** of the specified elements. ```hcl constraint { attribute = "..." operator = "set_contains" value = "a,b,c" } ``` - `"version"` - Specifies a version constraint against the attribute. This supports a comma-separated list of constraints, including the pessimistic operator. For more examples please see the [go-version repository](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-version) for more specific examples. ```hcl constraint { attribute = "..." operator = "version" value = ">= 0.1.0, < 0.2" } ``` - `"is_set"` - Specifies that a given attribute must be present. This can be combined with the `"!="` operator to require that an attribute has been set before checking for equality. The default behavior for `"!="` is to include nodes that don't have that attribute set. - `"is_not_set"` - Specifies that a given attribute must not be present. ## `constraint` Examples The following examples only show the `constraint` stanzas. Remember that the `constraint` stanza is only valid in the placements listed above. ### Kernel Data This example restricts the task to running on nodes which have a kernel version higher than "3.19". ```hcl constraint { attribute = "${attr.kernel.version}" operator = "version" value = "> 3.19" } ``` ### Distinct Property A potential use case of the `distinct_property` constraint is to spread a service with `count > 1` across racks to minimize correlated failure. Nodes can be annotated with which rack they are on using [client metadata][client-meta] with values such as "rack-12-1", "rack-12-2", etc. The following constraint would assure that an individual rack is not running more than 2 instances of the task group. ```hcl constraint { distinct_property = "${meta.rack}" value = "2" } ``` ### Operating Systems This example restricts the task to running on nodes that are running Ubuntu 14.04 ```hcl constraint { attribute = "${attr.os.name}" value = "ubuntu" } constraint { attribute = "${attr.os.version}" value = "14.04" } ``` ### Cloud Metadata When possible, Nomad populates node attributes from the cloud environment. These values are accessible as filters in constraints. This example constrains this task to only run on nodes that are memory-optimized on AWS. ```hcl constraint { attribute = "${attr.platform.aws.instance-type}" value = "m4.xlarge" } ``` ### User-Specified Metadata This example restricts the task to running on nodes where the binaries for redis, cypress, and nginx are all cached locally. This particular example is utilizing node [metadata][meta]. ```hcl constraint { attribute = "${meta.cached_binaries}" set_contains = "redis,cypress,nginx" } ``` [job]: /docs/job-specification/job.html "Nomad job Job Specification" [group]: /docs/job-specification/group.html "Nomad group Job Specification" [client-meta]: /docs/configuration/client.html#meta "Nomad meta Job Specification" [task]: /docs/job-specification/task.html "Nomad task Job Specification" [interpolation]: /docs/runtime/interpolation.html "Nomad interpolation" [node-variables]: /docs/runtime/interpolation.html#node-variables- "Nomad interpolation-Node variables"