open-nomad/website/source/docs/runtime/interpolation.html.md.erb
Brian Lalor 337a6befa1
Oxford comma in variable interpolation summary
This improves the readability of this section.
2019-01-10 16:15:41 -05:00

240 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext

---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Variable Interpolation"
sidebar_current: "docs-variable-interpolation"
description: |-
Learn about the Nomad's interpolation and interpreted variables.
---
# Variable Interpolation
Nomad supports interpreting two classes of variables: node attributes and
runtime environment variables. Node attributes are interpretable in constraints,
task environment variables, and certain driver fields. Runtime environment
variables are not interpretable in constraints because they are only defined
once the scheduler has placed them on a particular node.
The syntax for interpreting variables is `${variable}`. An example and a
comprehensive list of interpretable fields can be seen below:
```hcl
task "docs" {
driver = "docker"
# Drivers support interpreting node attributes and runtime environment
# variables
config {
image = "my-app"
# Interpret runtime variables to inject the address to bind to and the
# location to write logs to.
args = [
"--bind", "${NOMAD_ADDR_RPC}",
"--logs", "${NOMAD_ALLOC_DIR}/logs",
]
port_map {
RPC = 6379
}
}
# Constraints only support node attributes as runtime environment variables
# are only defined after the task is placed on a node.
constraint {
attribute = "${attr.kernel.name}"
value = "linux"
}
# Environment variables are interpreted and can contain both runtime and
# node attributes. There environment variables are passed into the task.
env {
"DC" = "Running on datacenter ${node.datacenter}"
"VERSION" = "Version ${NOMAD_META_VERSION}"
}
# Meta keys are also interpretable.
meta {
VERSION = "v0.3"
}
}
```
## Node Variables <a id="interpreted_node_vars"></a>
Below is a full listing of node attributes that are interpretable. These
attributes are interpreted by __both__ constraints and within the task and
driver.
<table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
<tr>
<th>Variable</th>
<th>Description</th>
<th>Example Value</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${node.unique.id}</tt></td>
<td>36 character unique client identifier</td>
<td><tt>9afa5da1-8f39-25a2-48dc-ba31fd7c0023</tt></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${node.datacenter}</tt></td>
<td>Client's datacenter</td>
<td><tt>dc1</tt></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${node.unique.name}</tt></td>
<td>Client's name</td>
<td><tt>nomad-client-10-1-2-4</tt></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${node.class}</tt></td>
<td>Client's class</td>
<td><tt>linux-64bit</tt></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.&lt;property&gt;}</tt></td>
<td>Property given by <tt>property</tt> on the client</td>
<td><tt>${attr.cpu.arch} => amd64</tt></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${meta.&lt;key&gt;}</tt></td>
<td>Metadata value given by <tt>key</tt> on the client</td>
<td><tt>${meta.foo} => bar</tt></td>
</tr>
</table>
Below is a table documenting common node properties:
<table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
<tr>
<th>Property</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.cpu.arch}</tt></td>
<td>CPU architecture of the client (e.g. <tt>amd64</tt>, <tt>386</tt>)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.cpu.numcores}</tt></td>
<td>Number of CPU cores on the client</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.cpu.totalcompute}</tt></td>
<td>
<tt>cpu.frequency &times; cpu.numcores</tt> but may be overridden by <tt>client.cpu_total_compute</tt>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.consul.datacenter}</tt></td>
<td>The Consul datacenter of the client (if Consul is found)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.driver.&lt;property&gt;}</tt></td>
<td>See the [task drivers](/docs/drivers/index.html) for property documentation</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.unique.hostname}</tt></td>
<td>Hostname of the client</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.unique.network.ip-address}</tt></td>
<td>The IP address fingerprinted by the client and from which task ports are allocated</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.kernel.name}</tt></td>
<td>Kernel of the client (e.g. <tt>linux</tt>, <tt>darwin</tt>)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.kernel.version}</tt></td>
<td>Version of the client kernel (e.g. <tt>3.19.0-25-generic</tt>, <tt>15.0.0</tt>)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.platform.aws.ami-id}</tt></td>
<td>AMI ID of the client (if on AWS EC2)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.platform.aws.instance-type}</tt></td>
<td>Instance type of the client (if on AWS EC2)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.os.name}</tt></td>
<td>Operating system of the client (e.g. <tt>ubuntu</tt>, <tt>windows</tt>, <tt>darwin</tt>)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>${attr.os.version}</tt></td>
<td>Version of the client OS</td>
</tr>
</table>
Here are some examples of using node attributes and properties in a job file:
```hcl
job "docs" {
# This will constrain this job to only run on 64-bit clients.
constraint {
attribute = "${attr.cpu.arch}"
value = "amd64"
}
# This will restrict the job to only run on clients with 4 or more cores.
# Note: you may also declare a resource requirement for CPU for a task.
constraint {
attribute = "${cpu.numcores}"
operator = ">="
value = "4"
}
# Only run this job on a memory-optimized AWS EC2 instance.
constraint {
attribute = "${attr.platform.aws.instance-type}"
value = "m4.xlarge"
}
}
```
## Environment Variables <a id="interpreted_env_vars"></a>
The following are runtime environment variables that describe the environment
the task is running in. These are only defined once the task has been placed on
a particular node and as such can not be used in constraints.
Environment variables should be enclosed in brackets `${...}` for
interpolation.
### Dots in Variables <a id="dots_in_vars"></a>
Starting in Nomad 0.9, task configuration interpolation requires variables to
be valid identifiers. While this does not affect default variables or common
custom variables, it is possible to define a variable that is not a valid
identifier:
```hcl
env {
"valid.name" = "ok"
"invalid...name" = "not a valid identifier"
}
```
The environment variable `invalid...name` cannot be interpolated using the
standard `"${invalid...name}"` syntax. The dots wil be interpreted as object
notation so multiple consecutive dots are invalid.
To continue supporting all user environment variables Nomad 0.9 added a new
`env` variable which allows accessing any environment variable through index
syntax:
```hcl
task "redis" {
driver = "docker"
config {
image = "redis:3.2"
labels {
label1 = "${env["invalid...name"]}"
label2 = "${env["valid.name"]}"
}
}
}
```
<%= partial "envvars.html.md" %>