These are things I noticed as I read through the documentation. There are a couple of minor substantive corrections as well.
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docs | Drivers: Java | docs-drivers-java | The Java task driver is used to run Jars using the JVM. |
Java Driver
Name: java
The java
driver is used to execute Java applications packaged into a Java Jar
file. The driver requires the Jar file to be accessible from the Nomad
client via the artifact
downloader.
Task Configuration
task "webservice" {
driver = "java"
config {
jar_path = "local/exaple.jar"
jvm_options = ["-Xmx2048m", "-Xms256m"]
}
}
The java
driver supports the following configuration in the job spec:
-
jar_path
- The path to the downloaded Jar. In most cases this will just be the name of the Jar. However, if the supplied artifact is an archive that contains the Jar in a subfolder, the path will need to be the relative path (subdir/from_archive/my.jar
). -
args
- (Optional) A list of arguments to the Jar's main method. References to environment variables or any interpretable Nomad variables will be interpreted before launching the task. -
jvm_options
- (Optional) A list of JVM options to be passed while invoking java. These options are passed without being validated in any way by Nomad.
Examples
A simple config block to run a Java Jar:
task "web" {
driver = "java"
config {
jar_path = "local/hello.jar"
jvm_options = ["-Xmx2048m", "-Xms256m"]
}
# Specifying an artifact is required with the "java" driver. This is the
# mechanism to ship the Jar to be run.
artifact {
source = "https://internal.file.server/hello.jar"
options {
checksum = "md5:123445555555555"
}
}
}
Client Requirements
The java
driver requires Java to be installed and in your system's $PATH
. On
Linux, Nomad must run as root since it will use chroot
and cgroups
which
require root privileges. The task must also specify at least one artifact to
download, as this is the only way to retrieve the Jar being run.
Client Attributes
The java
driver will set the following client attributes:
driver.java
- Set to1
if Java is found on the host node. Nomad determines this by executingjava -version
on the host and parsing the outputdriver.java.version
- Version of Java, ex:1.6.0_65
driver.java.runtime
- Runtime version, ex:Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_65-b14-466.1-11M4716)
driver.java.vm
- Virtual Machine information, ex:Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.65-b04-466.1, mixed mode)
Here is an example of using these properties in a job file:
job "docs" {
# Only run this job where the JVM is higher than version 1.6.0.
constraint {
attribute = "${driver.java.version}"
operator = ">"
value = "1.6.0"
}
}
Resource Isolation
The resource isolation provided varies by the operating system of the client and the configuration.
On Linux, Nomad will attempt to use cgroups, namespaces, and chroot to isolate the resources of a process. If the Nomad agent is not running as root, many of these mechanisms cannot be used.
As a baseline, the Java jars will be run inside a Java Virtual Machine, providing a minimum amount of isolation.