The goal goals of this document is to investigate about the PostgreSQL capability to handle Json documentsdocument storage, what is the impact in the performance point of view, how it could be used to adjust flexibility of Tosca Service Template Handling, and define a clear roadmap how to reach all those goals.
Table of Contents maxLevel 2
Introduction
PostgreSQL offers two types for storing JSON data: json
and jsonb. T
he json
data type stores an exact copy of the input text, which processing functions must reparse on each execution; while jsonb
data is stored in a decomposed binary format that makes it slightly slower to input due to added conversion overhead, but significantly faster to process, since no reparsing is needed. jsonb
also supports indexing, which can be a significant advantage.
Because the json
type stores an exact copy of the input text, it will preserve semantically-insignificant white space between tokens, as well as the order of keys within JSON objects. Also, if a JSON object within the value contains the same key more than once, all the key/value pairs are kept. (The processing functions consider the last value as the operative one.) By contrast, jsonb
does not preserve white space, does not preserve the order of object keys, and does not keep duplicate object keys. If duplicate keys are specified in the input, only the last value is kept.
Note
Using PostgreSQL special type as "json" or "jsonb" rather than "text", all applications will lose any compatibility with H2 and MariaDB. They will be mentioned in this document but not recommended.
...
Requirements
- Policy types/Policies/Node Types/Node Templates are first order items
- Data Types have a scope of a first order item, so a data type definition only applies in the scope of a policy type or node type definition
- We should keep our current APIs, all changes should be internal
- We must provide an upgrade path to the new data structure and a rollback to the current structure
ORM Layer using Document Storage
ORM layer using document storage (PostgreSQL or MongoDB) could be organized in two layer:
- Document layer (Domain Model to be converted in Json) - implementation has no dependency from DB
- Persistence layer - (Domain Model depend of the DB used): Entities for PostgreSQL, Documents for MongoDB
An implementation on the Document layer could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/models/+/13633
Example
In the example below DocToscaServiceTemplate should be serialized to Json.
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = true)
public class DocToscaServiceTemplate extends DocToscaEntity<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@SerializedName("data_types")
private Map<String, @Valid DocToscaDataType> dataTypes;
-------
public DocToscaServiceTemplate(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
this.fromAuthorative(authorativeConcept);
}
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
final var toscaServiceTemplate = new ToscaServiceTemplate();
super.setToscaEntity(toscaServiceTemplate);
super.toAuthorative();
if (dataTypes != null) {
toscaServiceTemplate.setDataTypes(DocUtil.docMapMap(dataTypes, DocToscaDataType::toAuthorative));
}
-------
return toscaServiceTemplate;
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate toscaServiceTemplate) {
super.fromAuthorative(toscaServiceTemplate);
if (toscaServiceTemplate.getDataTypes() != null) {
dataTypes = DocUtil.mapDocMap(toscaServiceTemplate.getDataTypes(), DocToscaDataType::new);
}
-------
}
}
|
In the example below the implementation of JpaToscaServiceTemplate for PostgreSQL/MariaDB (full implementation could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/clamp/+/13642)
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Entity
@Table(name = "ToscaServiceTemplate")
@Inheritance(strategy = InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS)
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = false)
public class JpaToscaServiceTemplate extends PfConcept implements PfAuthorative<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@EmbeddedId
@VerifyKey
@NotNull
private PfConceptKey key;
@Lob
@Convert(converter = StringToServiceTemplateConverter.class)
@NotNull
@Valid
private DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate;
-------
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
return serviceTemplate.toAuthorative();
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
serviceTemplate = new DocToscaServiceTemplate(authorativeConcept);
setKey(serviceTemplate.getKey().asIdentifier().asConceptKey());
}
-------
}
|
In the example below the implementation of JpaToscaServiceTemplate for MongoDB (full implementation could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/clamp/+/13615)
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Document(collection = "ToscaServiceTemplate")
@Inheritance(strategy = InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS)
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = false)
public class JpaToscaServiceTemplate extends PfConcept implements PfAuthorative<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@Id
@VerifyKey
@NonNull
private PfConceptKey key;
@NonNull
@Valid
private DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate;
-------
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
return serviceTemplate.toAuthorative();
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
serviceTemplate = new DocToscaServiceTemplate(authorativeConcept);
setKey(serviceTemplate.getKey().asIdentifier().asConceptKey());
}
-------
}
|
Converters
Jakarta and Spring do no support json Type, but we can use Converters to convert DocToscaServiceTemplate to a Json String.
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Converter(autoApply = true)
public class StringToServiceTemplateConverter implements AttributeConverter<DocToscaServiceTemplate, String> {
private static final Coder coder = new StandardCoder();
@Override
public String convertToDatabaseColumn(DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate) {
try {
return serviceTemplate == null ? null : coder.encode(serviceTemplate);
} catch (CoderException e) {
throw new PfModelRuntimeException(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST, e.getMessage(), e);
}
}
@Override
public DocToscaServiceTemplate convertToEntityAttribute(String dbData) {
if (dbData == null) {
return new DocToscaServiceTemplate();
}
try {
return coder.decode(dbData, DocToscaServiceTemplate.class);
} catch (CoderException e) {
throw new PfModelRuntimeException(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST, e.getMessage(), e);
}
}
}
|
Note: Serialization and deserialization in Json is already used in policy-model (Un example could be found here [JpaToscaPolicy.java]). @Converter is just an elegant way to do the same thing.
ToscaServiceTemplate Table
...
There are different approaches that could be used to Implement a document storage: convert a the concept model to Json text or using a database document oriented. A service template stored as document, it will make simple to have more than one service template into a db.
Also it will be possible to implement a more complex solution using namespace and imports.
Roadmap
- Convert all applications to document storage
- performance improvements
- Keep our current APIs, all changes will be internal
- Provide an upgrade path to the new data structure and a rollback to the current structure
- Old ORM layer will be not removed during this step
- namespace and imports could be defined but not implemented
- create more the one service template (Multi-service templates) is initially disabled in ORM layer
- Add multi-service templates support (related to POLICY-3236 - adjust flexibility of Tosca Service Template Handling)
- Remove old ORM layer
- Enable namespace and Multi-service templates in ORM layer
- Adapt the current APIs to handle Multi-service templates where it needs
- move common code in policy-model
- Define and support any other complex features not implemented yet
- Enable import support
Investigation about PostgreSQL and json types
PostgreSQL offers two types for storing JSON data: json
and jsonb. T
he json
data type stores an exact copy of the input text, which processing functions must reparse on each execution; while jsonb
data is stored in a decomposed binary format that makes it slightly slower to input due to added conversion overhead, but significantly faster to process, since no reparsing is needed. jsonb
also supports indexing, which can be a significant advantage.
Because the json
type stores an exact copy of the input text, it will preserve semantically-insignificant white space between tokens, as well as the order of keys within JSON objects. Also, if a JSON object within the value contains the same key more than once, all the key/value pairs are kept. (The processing functions consider the last value as the operative one.) By contrast, jsonb
does not preserve white space, does not preserve the order of object keys, and does not keep duplicate object keys. If duplicate keys are specified in the input, only the last value is kept.
Note
Using PostgreSQL special type as "json" or "jsonb" rather than "text", has as consequence that all applications will lose any compatibility with H2 and MariaDB, so that solution is not recommended. The table below shows the compatibility by type.
Type | DataStore | Support Query | Index | Preserve Order |
---|---|---|---|---|
longtext | MariaDB | Yes | No | Yes |
PostgreSQL | No | No | Yes | |
H2 | No | No | Yes | |
json | PostgreSQL | Yes | No | Yes |
jsonb | PostgreSQL | Yes | Yes | No |
ORM Layer using Document Storage
ORM layer using document storage (PostgreSQL or MongoDB) could be organized in two layer:
- Document layer (Domain Model to be converted in Json) - implementation has no dependency from DB
- Persistence layer - (Domain Model depend of the DB used): Entities for PostgreSQL, Documents for MongoDB
An implementation on the Document layer could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/models/+/13633
Example
In the example below DocToscaServiceTemplate should be serialized to Json.
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = true)
public class DocToscaServiceTemplate extends DocToscaEntity<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@SerializedName("data_types")
private Map<String, @Valid DocToscaDataType> dataTypes;
-------
public DocToscaServiceTemplate() {
super();
setName(DEFAULT_NAME);
setVersion(DEFAULT_VERSION);
-------
}
public DocToscaServiceTemplate(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
this.fromAuthorative(authorativeConcept);
}
public DocToscaServiceTemplate(final DocToscaServiceTemplate copyConcept) {
super(copyConcept);
this.toscaDefinitionsVersion = copyConcept.toscaDefinitionsVersion;
this.dataTypes = DocUtil.docMapToMap(copyConcept.dataTypes, DocToscaDataType::new, new LinkedHashMap<>());
-------
}
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
final var toscaServiceTemplate = new ToscaServiceTemplate();
super.setToscaEntity(toscaServiceTemplate);
super.toAuthorative();
toscaServiceTemplate.setDataTypes(DocUtil.docMapToMap(dataTypes, DocToscaDataType::toAuthorative));
-------
return toscaServiceTemplate;
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate toscaServiceTemplate) {
super.fromAuthorative(toscaServiceTemplate);
if (toscaServiceTemplate.getDataTypes() != null) {
dataTypes = DocUtil.mapDocMap(toscaServiceTemplate.getDataTypes(), DocToscaDataType::new);
}
-------
}
@Override
public int compareTo(DocToscaEntity<ToscaServiceTemplate> otherConcept) {
int result = compareToWithoutEntities(otherConcept);
if (result != 0) {
return result;
}
final DocToscaServiceTemplate other = (DocToscaServiceTemplate) otherConcept;
-------
return ObjectUtils.compare(toscaTopologyTemplate, other.toscaTopologyTemplate);
}
}
|
In the example below the implementation of JpaToscaServiceTemplate for PostgreSQL/MariaDB (full implementation could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/clamp/+/13642)
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Entity
@Table(name = "ToscaServiceTemplate")
@Inheritance(strategy = InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS)
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = false)
public class JpaToscaServiceTemplate extends PfConcept implements PfAuthorative<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@EmbeddedId
@VerifyKey
@NotNull
private PfConceptKey key;
@Lob
@Convert(converter = StringToServiceTemplateConverter.class)
@NotNull
@Valid
private DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate;
-------
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
return serviceTemplate.toAuthorative();
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
serviceTemplate = new DocToscaServiceTemplate(authorativeConcept);
setKey(serviceTemplate.getKey().asIdentifier().asConceptKey());
}
-------
}
|
In the example below the implementation of JpaToscaServiceTemplate for MongoDB (full implementation could be found here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/clamp/+/13615)
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Document(collection = "ToscaServiceTemplate")
@Inheritance(strategy = InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS)
@Data
@EqualsAndHashCode(callSuper = false)
public class JpaToscaServiceTemplate extends PfConcept implements PfAuthorative<ToscaServiceTemplate> {
@Id
@VerifyKey
@NonNull
private PfConceptKey key;
@NonNull
@Valid
private DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate;
-------
@Override
public ToscaServiceTemplate toAuthorative() {
return serviceTemplate.toAuthorative();
}
@Override
public void fromAuthorative(ToscaServiceTemplate authorativeConcept) {
serviceTemplate = new DocToscaServiceTemplate(authorativeConcept);
setKey(serviceTemplate.getKey().asIdentifier().asConceptKey());
}
-------
}
|
Converters
Jakarta and Spring do no support json Type, but we can use Converters to convert DocToscaServiceTemplate to a Json String.
Code Block | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
@Converter(autoApply = true)
public class StringToServiceTemplateConverter implements AttributeConverter<DocToscaServiceTemplate, String> {
private static final Coder coder = new StandardCoder();
@Override
public String convertToDatabaseColumn(DocToscaServiceTemplate serviceTemplate) {
try {
return serviceTemplate == null ? null : coder.encode(serviceTemplate);
} catch (CoderException e) {
throw new PfModelRuntimeException(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST, e.getMessage(), e);
}
}
@Override
public DocToscaServiceTemplate convertToEntityAttribute(String dbData) {
if (dbData == null) {
return new DocToscaServiceTemplate();
}
try {
return coder.decode(dbData, DocToscaServiceTemplate.class);
} catch (CoderException e) {
throw new PfModelRuntimeException(Response.Status.BAD_REQUEST, e.getMessage(), e);
}
}
}
|
Note: Serialization and deserialization in Json is already used in policy-model (Un example could be found here [JpaToscaPolicy.java]). @Converter is just an elegant way to do the same thing.
ToscaServiceTemplate Table
clampacm=# \d ToscaServiceTemplate
Table "public.toscaservicetemplate"
Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default
-----------------+------------------------+-----------+----------+---------
name | character varying(120) | | not null |
version | character varying(20) | | not null |
servicetemplate | text | | |
Indexes:
"toscaservicetemplate_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (name, version)
clampacm=# select * from public.ToscaServiceTemplate;
name | version | servicetemplate
--------------------+---------+-----------------
PMSH_Test_Instance | 1.0.0 | 16505
(1 row)
clampacm=# select convert_from(lo_get(servicetemplate::oid), 'UTF8') from toscaservicetemplate;
{"tosca_definitions_version":"tosca_simple_yaml_1_3", ...
Proposals
The new ORM layer will be implemented into an additional package and the old layer will be not changed. My propose options are shown below:
- Save ToscaServiceTemplace as Json String in a single Entity:
- Each Service Template is stored as a JSON "LOB"
- It is compatible with H2, MariaDB and PostgreSQL
- It is an additional code for policy-models and a medium impact for all applications that are using it
- That solution is compatible with Applications not implemented in Spring
- MongoDB/Cassandra
- Document oriented approach full supported by SpringBoot (not needs Converters)
- Compatible only with MongoDB/Cassandra (MongoDB and Cassandra are not compatible to each other)
- It is an additional code for policy-models and a huge impact for all applications that are using it (all repositories and persistence classes have to change to a Document oriented classes)
- Unit tests need an Embedded Server (example for cassandra: EmbeddedCassandraServerHelper or CassandraContainer)
- Spring Boot has own annotations for Documents. Eventually for application not in Spring Boot, it needs additional dao style implementation
Note
- Using document storage, it involves only the ORM layer, it does not change the functionality of the application (first step of Roadmap)
- Business logic could be optimized reducing the number of access to DB: read one time a service template and using it during the elaboration rather then fetch data from data from DB for each single search (load a property, load a list of ToscaNodeTemplate ecc..)
Benchmark Performance of runtime-acm
In order to generate the benchmark I have used (into a laptop) a Virtual Machine whit the follow configuration:
- 8192 Mb
- 2 CPU
For the tests:
- Jmeter to generate requests (same used by performance tests)
- Prometheus for monitoring
- DMaap simulator
- Participant simulator
- MariaDB/PostgreSQL/MongoDB
The existing system
Hibernate/Mariadb. Tosca Service template is saved as a schema entity relation.
Using Json in MariaDB
Hibernate/Mariadb. Tosca Service Template is saved into a longtext as Json.
Using Json in Postgres
Hibernate/PostgreSQL. Tosca Service Template is saved into a text type as Json.
MongoDB
MongoDB. Tosca Service Template and all other entities (Participants and AutomationComposition) are saved as MongoDB Document.
id cannot have dot '.' in MongoDB : solved with minimal configuration
Implementation (First step of Roadmap)
Current ORM layer for ToscaServiceTemplate
ORM layer for ToscaServiceTemplate Proposed (during first step in Roadmap)
Simple-concepts entities will be maintained but not used.
Namespace and Import service templates (second and third step in Roadmap)
In TOSCA language namespace is supposed to be a URI. Name and version of service template, are not defined in TOSCA language, not used in yaml files, and not present in all examples neither Unit Tests, but they are used as primary key of the ToscaServiceTemplate table and they are used in REST endpoints as id of a resource.
- TOSCA language could be found here: https://docs.oasis-open.org/tosca/TOSCA-Simple-Profile-YAML/v1.3/os/TOSCA-Simple-Profile-YAML-v1.3-os.pdf
- A yaml file contains only one service template
- TOSCA Service Templates MUST always have, as the first line of YAML, the keyword “tosca_definitions_version” with an associated TOSCA Namespace Alias value.
- Each service template has a unique name space
- A service template could import other service templates
- namespace as URI could be an issue if used as id of a resource
- name could be extracted as host of the namespace, and version could be extracted from the postfix of the namespace.
- A pattern could be like a http://{host_namespace}/service/template/{x}/{y}/{z}. As example "http://tosca/service/template/0/0/1" we can extract name: "tosca" and version: "0.0.1"
- Version could be omitted: http://{host_namespace}/service/template. As example "http://tosca/service/template/onap/org" we can extract name: "tosca" and default version: "0.0.1"
- http://tosca/service/template/onap/org could be used as default namespace
- name and version will be not present into the yaml file (service template) as now, but we can continue to use them as id of a resource
- host will be used as key to reference to external service template, and with "namespace_prefix" will be used to avoid collisions with same host but different version
- about type and type_version backward compatibility still valid
- type_version will be deprecated, type will be used as formatted string as follow:
- {type}
- {type}:{type_version}
- {host_namespace}:{type}:{type_version}
tosca001.yaml
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
tosca_definitions_version: tosca_simple_yaml_1_1_0
node_types:
org.onap.nodeTypeA:
derived_from: tosca.nodetypes.Root
org.onap.nodeTypeB:
derived_from: org.onap.nodeTypeA
version: 1.2.3
topology_template:
node_templates:
nodeTemplate01:
version: 4.5.6
type: org.onap.nodeTypeB
type_version: 1.2.3
|
ServiceTemplate002.yaml
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
tosca_definitions_version: tosca_simple_yaml_1_1_0
namespace: http://ServiceTemplate/service/template/onap/org/0/0/2
imports:
- repository: http://tosca/service/template/onap/org
node_types:
org.onap.nodeTypeC:
derived_from: tosca:org.onap.nodeTypeA
version: 2.3.4
topology_template:
node_templates:
nodeTemplate02:
version: 5.6.7
type: tosca:org.onap.nodeTypeB
type_version: 1.2.3
nodeTemplate03:
version: 6.7.8
type: tosca:org.onap.nodeTypeB:1.2.3
nodeTemplate04:
version: 7.8.9
type: org.onap.nodeTypeC
type_version: 2.3.4
nodeTemplate05:
version: 8.9.10
type: org.onap.nodeTypeC:2.3.4
|
ServiceTemplate003.yaml
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
tosca_definitions_version: tosca_simple_yaml_1_1_0
namespace: http://ServiceTemplate/onap.org/service/template/onap/org/0/0/3
imports:
- repository: http://tosca/service/template/onap/org
namespace_prefix: defaultST
- repository: http://ServiceTemplate/service/template/onap/org/0/0/2
namespace_prefix: st02
node_types:
org.onap.nodeTypeZ:
derived_from: defaultST:org.onap.nodeTypeA
version: 9.3.4
org.onap.nodeTypeY:
derived_from: st02:org.onap.nodeTypeA
version: 9.3.4
topology_template:
node_templates:
nodeTemplate10:
version: 9.6.7
type: defaultST:org.onap.nodeTypeB:1.2.3
nodeTemplate11:
version: 9.8.9
type: org.onap.nodeTypeZ:2.3.4
|
Tosca Service Template Handling
The current work in progress is available here: https://gerrit.nordix.org/c/onap/policy/clamp/+/13755
Validation
Validation in current ORM layer
As the first step of Roadmap is backward compatible, the current validation will be maintained as it is, but it should be adapted to new DocToscaEntities. In the second step do not need other changes.
"type" and "type_version" | Referenced to |
---|---|
ToscaProperty | ToscaDataType |
ToscaPolicy | ToscaPolicyType |
ToscaNodeTemplate | ToscaNodeType |
"type_version" is optional and "0.0.0" is the default value. The "Key" is used for the validation to find if the ToscaEntity exists.
Examples:
Example | Key |
---|---|
type: onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier | onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:0.0.0 |
type: org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement | org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0 |
"derivedFrom" |
---|
ToscaCapabilityAssignment |
ToscaCapabilityType |
ToscaDataType |
ToscaNodeTemplate |
ToscaNodeType |
ToscaPolicy |
ToscaPolicyType |
ToscaRelationshipType |
ToscaRequirement |
"derivedFrom" is referenced to a ToscaEntity of the same type and placed in same collection.
Example | Key |
---|---|
derivedFrom: onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier | onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:{last_version} |
derivedFrom: org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0 | org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0 |
Validation in third step
In the last step, due the introduction of imports and namespace support, it needs to extend the validation.
"type_version" is optional and "0.0.0" is the default value, "host_namespace" is optional and "tosca" is the default value, type could be used as formatted string: {host_namespace}:{name}:{version}. The "Key" is used for the validation to find if the ToscaEntity exists in same ServiceTemplate or in other one.
Examples:
Example | Key (if defined in same service template) | Key (for external service template) |
---|---|---|
type: onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier | onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:0.0.0 | tosca:onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:0.0.0 |
type: org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement | org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0 | tosca:org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0 |
type: onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 | onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 | tosca:onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 |
type: CustomNamespace:onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 | onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 | CustomNamespace:onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 |
"derivedFrom" should have same logic as before and it could be used as formatted string: {host_namespace}:{name}:{version}.
Example | Key (if defined in same service template) | Key (for external service template) |
---|---|---|
derivedFrom: onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier | onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:{last_version} | tosca:onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:{last_version} |
derivedFrom: onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 | onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 | tosca:onap.datatype.acm.Target:1.2.3 |
derivedFrom: CustomNamespace:onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 | onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 | CustomNamespace:onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1 |
Policy-Api
Enabling namespace and multi-service templates
Current Api in policy-api | Api in policy-api with namespace support |
---|---|
POST /nodetemplates GET /policytypes | POST /servicetemplates/{st_name}/versions/{st_version}/nodetemplates GET /servicetemplates/{st_name}/versions/{st_version}/policytypes |
Update functionality (second and third step of Roadmap)
There are two kind of update:
- values (example "description", "metadata", ...)
- data structure (example Create or Delete of a ToscaEntity, or Update a reference as "type", "type_version" or "host_namespace")
Proposals
- We could consider Service templates references to each other as a DAG ( directed acyclic graph), where Service templates are nodes, and a references as edges. Cyclic references are not allowed.
- Should be available a functionality to load a full version of the service template that contains own tosca entities and also all tosca entities referenced from other service templates (this functionality in for validation or business logic purpose and will be not visible to the end user)
- A service template cannot be deleted if there are references to it
- Any Tosca Entity in a common service template cannot be deleted if there are references to that service template
- Any Tosca Entity in a common service template cannot change "host_namespace", "type" and "type_version" if there are references to that service template
- Any Tosca Entity in a common service template cannot change values if there are automation compositions referenced to that service template (and references to that service template?)
- A Tosca Entity cannot be add in a common service template if there are automation compositions referenced to that service template
- Functionality as create, update and delete of a ToscaEntity in a service template should be validated and restricted to the service template itself. (Example: update property values of a service template should never update property values from other service templates referenced)
- To reduce the complexity, could be useful to save additional information about the service template:
- A full version of the service template that contains own tosca entities and also all tosca entities referenced from other service templates. it will be used in read-only for business logic purpose
- A table to save relations between service templates
- A table to save relations between service templates and automation compositions (with all service templates referenced)
Conclusion
- Move to document storage does not change the functionality of the application. Example if clampacm move to document storage, and policyadmin not yet, those applications will continue to work fine.
- Enable namespace and enable to handle more than one service template, impacts functionalities and applications dependency. Example if clampacm has namespace enabled, and policyadmin not yet, due the dependency, they could have some issues.
Document storage Optional?: using SpringBoot profiles and interfaces it could be possible to have a double implementation and run only one, (based on parameter in properties file), but it does not make sense due the second point.
Proposals
The new ORM level should be additional and optional to the existence one. My propose options are shown below:
- Save ToscaServiceTemplace as Json String in a single Entity:
- ToscaServiceTemplace saved in a Text field as Json
- It is compatible with H2, MariaDB and PostgreSQL
- It is an additional code for policy-models and a medium impact for all applications that are using it
- That solution is compatible with not Spring Applications
- MongoDB/Cassandra
- Document oriented approach full supported by SpringBoot (not needs Converters)
- Compatible only with MongoDB/Cassandra (MongoDB and Cassandra are not compatible to each other)
- It is an additional code for policy-models and a huge impact for all applications that are using it (all repositories and persistence classes have to change to a Document oriented classes)
- Unit tests need an Embedded Server (example for cassandra: EmbeddedCassandraServerHelper or CassandraContainer)
- Spring Boot has own annotations for Documents. Eventually for application not in Spring Boot, it needs additional dao style implementation
Note
- Using document storage, it involves only the ORM layer, it does not change the functionality of the application
- After migration to document storage, it will possible to adjust flexibility of Tosca Service Template Handling (POLICY-3236); as new feature it will impact the business logic of the application
Benchmark Performance of runtime-acm
In order to generate the benchmark I have used (into a laptop) a Virtual Machine whit the follow configuration:
- 8192 Mb
- 2 CPU
For the tests:
- Jmeter to generate requests (same used by performance tests)
- Prometheus for monitoring
- DMaap simulator
- Participant simulator
- MariaDB/PostgreSQL/MongoDB
The existing system
Hibernate/Mariadb. Tosca Service template is saved as a schema entity relation.
Using Json in MariaDB
Hibernate/Mariadb. Tosca Service Template is saved into a longtext as Json.
Using Json in Postgres
Hibernate/PostgreSQL. Tosca Service Template is saved into a text type as Json.
MongoDB
MongoDB. Tosca Service Template and all other entities (Participants and AutomationComposition) are saved as MongoDB Document.
id cannot have dot '.' in MongoDB : solved with minimal configuration
Discussion
- Each Service Template is stored as a JSON "LOB"
- Each service template has a unique name space
- When a TOSCA entity is referred to by another TOSCA entity, the following rules apply
- The entity is referred to using
- name
- version (optional if there is only one version in the name space)
- namespace (optional)
- The version is optional if the name of the referred entity is unique in the specified name space, if there are more than one entities with a given name in a name space, version MUST be specified
- Namespace lookup is as follows
- If a name space is specified, the Service Template referred to by that namespace is used to look up the TOSCA entity
- If an name space is not specified, then the following precedence is used
- The current service template is checked for the referred TOSCA entity, if it's not found...
- The default service template is checked for the referred TOSCA entity
- The entity is referred to using
- Update and delete of service templates is tricky because we need to make sure that no external references are disrupted.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
# Node template refers to node type in same Service Template
ServiceTemplate
NodeType
name: myNodeType
NodeTempalate
name: myNodeTemplate
type: myNodeType
# Default Service Template
DefaultServiceTemplate
NodeType
name: sysNodeType123
# Node template refers to node type in default Service Template
ServiceTemplate
NodeTempalate
name: anotherNodeTemplate
type: sysNodeType123
# Custom Definition Service Template
CustomDefinitionServiceTemplate
NodeType
name: custonNodeType456
# Node template refers to node type in custome Service Template
ServiceTemplate
NodeTempalate
name: customNodeTemplate
type: customNodeType456
namespace: CustomDefinitionServiceTemplate
|
Validation
Validation in current ORM layer
...
"type" and "type_version"
...
"type_version" is optional and "0.0.0" is the default value. The "Key" is used for the validation to find if the ToscaEntity exists.
Examples:
...
type: org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement
type_version: 1.0.0
...
"derivedFrom"
...
"derivedFrom" is referenced to a ToscaEntity of the same type and placed in same collection.
Validation in new ORM layer
...
"type", "type_version" and "namespace"
...
"type_version" is optional and "0.0.0" is the default value. "namespace" is optional and "DefaultNameSpace" is the default value. The "Key" is used for the validation to find if the ToscaEntity exists in same ServiceTemplate or in other one.
Examples:
...
"onap.datatypes.ToscaConceptIdentifier:0.0.0"
...
type: org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement
type_version: 1.0.0
...
"org.onap.policy.clamp.acm.PolicyAutomationCompositionElement:1.0.0"
...
type: onap.datatype.acm.Target
namespace: CustomNamespace
...
type: onap.datatype.acm.Operation
type_version: 1.0.1
namespace: CustomNamespace
...
"onap.datatype.acm.Operation:1.0.1"
...
"derivedFrom" should have same logic as before.
Update
There are two kind of update:
- values (example "description", "metadata", ...)
- data structure (example Create or Delete of a ToscaEntity, or Update a reference as "type", "type_version" or "namespace")
Open Questions
Case scenario: we have two custom service template, a common service template and two automation composition. participant-policy creates and deletes policies and policy types connecting to policy-api.
- Could we have that scenario?
- Should participant-policy receive a full service template (custom and common service template)?
- Should participant policy collect all policies and policy types by GET policy-api, to know if them are already created?
- How participant policy know if can delete a policy and policy type if it could be used to other automation composition?
Proposals
A service template could have references to other service templates.
- Should be available a functionality to load a service template and automatically it loads all other service templates referenced
- All functionality create, update and delete of a ToscaEntity in a service template should be validated and restricted to the service template itself. (Example: update property values of a service template should never update property values from other service templates referenced)
Conclusion
- Work in progress