Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 12/3/18 10:34 AM, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: Hi Kevin. Puppet not only creates config files but also executes a service dependent steps, like db sync, so neither '[base] -> [puppet]' nor '[base] -> [service]' would not be enough on its own. That requires some services specific code to be included into *config* images as well. PS. There is a related spec [0] created by Dan, please take a look and propose you feedback [0] https://review.openstack.org/620062 I'm terribly sorry, but that's a corrected link [0] to that spec. [0] https://review.openstack.org/620909 On 11/30/18 6:48 PM, Fox, Kevin M wrote: Still confused by: [base] -> [service] -> [+ puppet] not: [base] -> [puppet] and [base] -> [service] ? Thanks, Kevin From: Bogdan Dobrelya [bdobr...@redhat.com] Sent: Friday, November 30, 2018 5:31 AM To: Dan Prince; openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org; openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 11/30/18 1:52 PM, Dan Prince wrote: On Fri, 2018-11-30 at 10:31 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? Given we detached systemd from puppet, cronie et al, that would be 267-190MB, so the math below would be looking much better Would it be worth writing a spec that summarizes what action items are bing taken to optimize our base image with regards to the systemd? Perhaps it would be. But honestly, I see nothing biggie to require a full blown spec. Just changing RPM deps and layers for containers images. I'm tracking systemd changes here [0],[1],[2], btw (if accepted, it should be working as of fedora28(or 29) I hope) [0] https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/q/topic:base-container-reduction [1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1654659 [2] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Hi Kevin. Puppet not only creates config files but also executes a service dependent steps, like db sync, so neither '[base] -> [puppet]' nor '[base] -> [service]' would not be enough on its own. That requires some services specific code to be included into *config* images as well. PS. There is a related spec [0] created by Dan, please take a look and propose you feedback [0] https://review.openstack.org/620062 On 11/30/18 6:48 PM, Fox, Kevin M wrote: Still confused by: [base] -> [service] -> [+ puppet] not: [base] -> [puppet] and [base] -> [service] ? Thanks, Kevin From: Bogdan Dobrelya [bdobr...@redhat.com] Sent: Friday, November 30, 2018 5:31 AM To: Dan Prince; openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org; openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 11/30/18 1:52 PM, Dan Prince wrote: On Fri, 2018-11-30 at 10:31 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? Given we detached systemd from puppet, cronie et al, that would be 267-190MB, so the math below would be looking much better Would it be worth writing a spec that summarizes what action items are bing taken to optimize our base image with regards to the systemd? Perhaps it would be. But honestly, I see nothing biggie to require a full blown spec. Just changing RPM deps and layers for containers images. I'm tracking systemd changes here [0],[1],[2], btw (if accepted, it should be working as of fedora28(or 29) I hope) [0] https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/q/topic:base-container-reduction [1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1654659 [2] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1654672 It seems like the general consenses is that cleaning up some of the RPM dependencies so that we don't install Systemd is the biggest
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Still confused by: [base] -> [service] -> [+ puppet] not: [base] -> [puppet] and [base] -> [service] ? Thanks, Kevin From: Bogdan Dobrelya [bdobr...@redhat.com] Sent: Friday, November 30, 2018 5:31 AM To: Dan Prince; openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org; openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 11/30/18 1:52 PM, Dan Prince wrote: > On Fri, 2018-11-30 at 10:31 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: >> On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: >>> On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: >>>> On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> Reiterating again on previous points: >>>>>> >>>>>> -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and >>>>>> not via 'rpm >>>>>> -ev --nodeps'. >>>>>> -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can >>>>>> certainly put >>>>>> them in a separate container outside of the runtime service >>>>>> containers >>>>>> but doing so would actually cost you much more >>>>>> space/bandwidth for each >>>>>> service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to >>>>>> each node >>>>>> anyway in order to generate config files with our current >>>>>> mechanisms >>>>>> I'm not sure this buys you anything. >>>>> >>>>> +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded >>>>> yesterday on >>>>> IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously >>>>> consider. >>>>> But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by >>>>> leaner >>>>> production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by >>>>> duplicating >>>>> image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had >>>>> in mind >>>>> by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in >>>>> mind.) >>>>> >>>>> Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd >>>>> consider if we >>>>> got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this >>>>> would >>>>> consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how >>>>> serious >>>>> are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in >>>>> runtime >>>>> images. >>>>> >>>>> IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were >>>>> already >>>>> dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. >>>>> Bin/lib bind >>>>> mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really >>>>> solving the >>>>> problem (because it allows us to switch to having different >>>>> bins/libs >>>>> available, but it does not allow merging the availability of >>>>> bins/libs >>>>> from two containers into a single context). >>>>> >>>>>> We are going in circles here I think >>>>> >>>>> +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad >>>>> to have >>>>> config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree >>>>> that it >>>>> would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. >>>>> >>>>> I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we >>>>> do this >>>>> (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): >>>>> >>>>>> base container| --> |service container| --> |service >>>>>> container w/ >>>>> Puppet installed| >>>>> >>>>> How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node >>>>> (e.g. >>>>> separately per controller, per compute). This could help with >>>>> decision >>>>> making. >>>> >>>> As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: >>>> >>>> puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB >>>> puppet with dependencies ~61MB >>>> dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd >>>> ~190MB
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 11/30/18 1:52 PM, Dan Prince wrote: On Fri, 2018-11-30 at 10:31 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? Given we detached systemd from puppet, cronie et al, that would be 267-190MB, so the math below would be looking much better Would it be worth writing a spec that summarizes what action items are bing taken to optimize our base image with regards to the systemd? Perhaps it would be. But honestly, I see nothing biggie to require a full blown spec. Just changing RPM deps and layers for containers images. I'm tracking systemd changes here [0],[1],[2], btw (if accepted, it should be working as of fedora28(or 29) I hope) [0] https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/q/topic:base-container-reduction [1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1654659 [2] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1654672 It seems like the general consenses is that cleaning up some of the RPM dependencies so that we don't install Systemd is the biggest win. What confuses me is why are there still patches posted to move Puppet out of the base layer when we agree moving it out of the base layer would actually cause our resulting container image set to be larger in size. Dan In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for overlaps, the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By "components" here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other services. I just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct number.) So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf images used in this deployment. That means difference of +4.8 GB to the current image sizes. My /var/lib/registry dir on undercloud with all the images currently has 5.1 GB. We'd almost double that to 9.9 GB. Going from 5.1 to 9.9 GB seems like a lot of extra traffic for the CDNs (both external and e.g. internal within OpenStack Infra CI clouds). And for inte
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Fri, 2018-11-30 at 10:31 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: > > On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > > On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > Reiterating again on previous points: > > > > > > > > > > -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and > > > > > not via 'rpm > > > > > -ev --nodeps'. > > > > > -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can > > > > > certainly put > > > > > them in a separate container outside of the runtime service > > > > > containers > > > > > but doing so would actually cost you much more > > > > > space/bandwidth for each > > > > > service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to > > > > > each node > > > > > anyway in order to generate config files with our current > > > > > mechanisms > > > > > I'm not sure this buys you anything. > > > > > > > > +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded > > > > yesterday on > > > > IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously > > > > consider. > > > > But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by > > > > leaner > > > > production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by > > > > duplicating > > > > image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had > > > > in mind > > > > by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in > > > > mind.) > > > > > > > > Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd > > > > consider if we > > > > got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this > > > > would > > > > consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how > > > > serious > > > > are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in > > > > runtime > > > > images. > > > > > > > > IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were > > > > already > > > > dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. > > > > Bin/lib bind > > > > mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really > > > > solving the > > > > problem (because it allows us to switch to having different > > > > bins/libs > > > > available, but it does not allow merging the availability of > > > > bins/libs > > > > from two containers into a single context). > > > > > > > > > We are going in circles here I think > > > > > > > > +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad > > > > to have > > > > config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree > > > > that it > > > > would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. > > > > > > > > I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we > > > > do this > > > > (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): > > > > > > > > > base container| --> |service container| --> |service > > > > > container w/ > > > > Puppet installed| > > > > > > > > How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node > > > > (e.g. > > > > separately per controller, per compute). This could help with > > > > decision > > > > making. > > > > > > As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: > > > > > > puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB > > > puppet with dependencies ~61MB > > > dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd > > > ~190MB > > > > > > that would be an extra layer size for each of the container > > > images to be > > > downloaded/fetched into registries. > > > > Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in > > sizes > > as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we > > do > > this image layering: > > > > > base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| > > > > we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to > > the > > topmost level, per-component, right? > > Given we detached systemd from puppet, cronie et al, that would be > 267-190MB, so the math below would be looking much better Would it be worth writing a spec that summarizes what action items are bing taken to optimize our base image with regards to the systemd? It seems like the general consenses is that cleaning up some of the RPM dependencies so that we don't install Systemd is the biggest win. What confuses me is why are there still patches posted to move Puppet out of the base layer when we agree moving it out of the base layer would actually cause our resulting container image set to be larger in size. Dan > > > In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" > > (49 > > containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), > > and > > overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for > > overlaps, > > the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By > > "components" > > here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other > > services. I > > just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct > > number.) > > > > So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf > > images > > used in this deplo
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 11/29/18 6:42 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: |base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? Given we detached systemd from puppet, cronie et al, that would be 267-190MB, so the math below would be looking much better In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for overlaps, the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By "components" here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other services. I just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct number.) So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf images used in this deployment. That means difference of +4.8 GB to the current image sizes. My /var/lib/registry dir on undercloud with all the images currently has 5.1 GB. We'd almost double that to 9.9 GB. Going from 5.1 to 9.9 GB seems like a lot of extra traffic for the CDNs (both external and e.g. internal within OpenStack Infra CI clouds). And for internal traffic between local registry and overcloud nodes, it gives +3.7 GB per controller and +800 MB per compute. That may not be so critical but still feels like a considerable downside. Another gut feeling is that this way of image layering would take longer time to build and to run the modify-image Ansible role which we use in CI, so that could endanger how our CI jobs fit into the time limit. We could also probably measure this but i'm not sure if it's worth spending the time. All in all i'd argue we should be looking at different options still. Given that we should decouple systemd from all/some of the dependencies (an example topic for RDO [0]), that could save a 190MB. But it seems we cannot break the love of puppet and systemd as it heavily relies on the latter and changing packaging like that would higly likely affect baremetal deployments with puppet and systemd co-operating. Ack :/ Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, not with puppet :) May be we could with an
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 29. 11. 18 20:20, Fox, Kevin M wrote: If the base layers are shared, you won't pay extra for the separate puppet container Yes, and that's the state we're in right now. unless you have another container also installing ruby in an upper layer. Not just Ruby but also Puppet and Systemd. I think that's what the proposal we're discussing here suggests -- removing this content from the base layer (so that we can get service runtime images without this content present) and putting this content *on top* of individual service images. Unless i'm missing some trick to start sharing *top* layers rather than *base* layers, i think that effectively disables the space sharing for the Ruby+Puppet+Systemd content. With OpenStack, thats unlikely. the apparent size of a container is not equal to its actual size. Yes. :) Thanks Jirka Thanks, Kevin From: Jiří Stránský [ji...@redhat.com] Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2018 9:42 AM To: openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: |base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for overlaps, the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By "components" here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other services. I just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct number.) So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf images used in this deployment. That means difference of +4.8 GB to the current image sizes. My /var/lib/registry dir on undercloud with all the images currently has 5.1 GB. We'd almost double that to 9.9 GB. Going from 5.1 to 9.9 GB seems like
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Oh, rereading the conversation again, the concern is having shared deps move up layers? so more systemd related then ruby? The conversation about --nodeps makes it sound like its not actually used. Just an artifact of how the rpms are built... What about creating a dummy package that provides(systemd)? That avoids using --nodeps. Thanks, Kevin From: Fox, Kevin M [kevin@pnnl.gov] Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2018 11:20 AM To: Former OpenStack Development Mailing List, use openstack-discuss now Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes If the base layers are shared, you won't pay extra for the separate puppet container unless you have another container also installing ruby in an upper layer. With OpenStack, thats unlikely. the apparent size of a container is not equal to its actual size. Thanks, Kevin From: Jiří Stránský [ji...@redhat.com] Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2018 9:42 AM To: openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: >> >> >>> >>> Reiterating again on previous points: >>> >>> -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm >>> -ev --nodeps'. >>> -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put >>> them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers >>> but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each >>> service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node >>> anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms >>> I'm not sure this buys you anything. >> >> +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on >> IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. >> But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner >> production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating >> image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind >> by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) >> >> Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we >> got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would >> consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious >> are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. >> >> IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already >> dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind >> mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the >> problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs >> available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs >> from two containers into a single context). >> >>> >>> We are going in circles here I think >> >> +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have >> config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it >> would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. >> >> I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this >> (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): >> >> |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ >> Puppet installed| >> >> How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. >> separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision >> making. > > As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: > > puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB > puppet with dependencies ~61MB > dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB > > that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be > downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: |base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
If the base layers are shared, you won't pay extra for the separate puppet container unless you have another container also installing ruby in an upper layer. With OpenStack, thats unlikely. the apparent size of a container is not equal to its actual size. Thanks, Kevin From: Jiří Stránský [ji...@redhat.com] Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2018 9:42 AM To: openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: >> >> >>> >>> Reiterating again on previous points: >>> >>> -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm >>> -ev --nodeps'. >>> -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put >>> them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers >>> but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each >>> service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node >>> anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms >>> I'm not sure this buys you anything. >> >> +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on >> IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. >> But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner >> production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating >> image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind >> by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) >> >> Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we >> got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would >> consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious >> are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. >> >> IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already >> dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind >> mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the >> problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs >> available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs >> from two containers into a single context). >> >>> >>> We are going in circles here I think >> >> +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have >> config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it >> would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. >> >> I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this >> (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): >> >> |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ >> Puppet installed| >> >> How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. >> separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision >> making. > > As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: > > puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB > puppet with dependencies ~61MB > dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB > > that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be > downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: |base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for overlaps, the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By "components" here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other services. I just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct number.) So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf images used in this deployment. That means difference of +4.8 GB to the current image sizes. My /var/lib/registry dir on undercloud with all the images currently has 5.1 GB. We'd almost double that to 9.9 GB. Going from 5.1 to 9.9 GB seems like a lot of extra traffic for the CDNs (both external and e.g. internal within OpenStack Infra CI clouds).
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 28. 11. 18 18:29, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Thanks, i tried to do the math of the reduction vs. inflation in sizes as follows. I think the crucial point here is the layering. If we do this image layering: |base| --> |+ service| --> |+ Puppet| we'd drop ~267 MB from base image, but we'd be installing that to the topmost level, per-component, right? In my basic deployment, undercloud seems to have 17 "components" (49 containers), overcloud controller 15 components (48 containers), and overcloud compute 4 components (7 containers). Accounting for overlaps, the total number of "components" used seems to be 19. (By "components" here i mean whatever uses a different ConfigImage than other services. I just eyeballed it but i think i'm not too far off the correct number.) So we'd subtract 267 MB from base image and add that to 19 leaf images used in this deployment. That means difference of +4.8 GB to the current image sizes. My /var/lib/registry dir on undercloud with all the images currently has 5.1 GB. We'd almost double that to 9.9 GB. Going from 5.1 to 9.9 GB seems like a lot of extra traffic for the CDNs (both external and e.g. internal within OpenStack Infra CI clouds). And for internal traffic between local registry and overcloud nodes, it gives +3.7 GB per controller and +800 MB per compute. That may not be so critical but still feels like a considerable downside. Another gut feeling is that this way of image layering would take longer time to build and to run the modify-image Ansible role which we use in CI, so that could endanger how our CI jobs fit into the time limit. We could also probably measure this but i'm not sure if it's worth spending the time. All in all i'd argue we should be looking at different options still. Given that we should decouple systemd from all/some of the dependencies (an example topic for RDO [0]), that could save a 190MB. But it seems we cannot break the love of puppet and systemd as it heavily relies on the latter and changing packaging like that would higly likely affect baremetal deployments with puppet and systemd co-operating. Ack :/ Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, not with puppet :) May be we could with ansible replacing puppet fully... So splitting config and runtime images is the only choice yet to address the raised security concerns. And let's forget about edge cases for no
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 11/28/18 8:55 PM, Doug Hellmann wrote: I thought the preferred solution for more complex settings was config maps. Did that approach not work out? Regardless, now that the driver work is done if someone wants to take another stab at etcd integration it’ll be more straightforward today. Doug While sharing configs is a feasible option to consider for large scale configuration management, Etcd only provides a strong consistency, which is also known as "Unavailable" [0]. For edge scenarios, to configure 40,000 remote computes over WAN connections, we'd rather want instead weaker consistency models, like "Sticky Available" [0]. That would allow services to fetch their configuration either from a central "uplink" or locally as well, when the latter is not accessible from remote edge sites. Etcd cannot provide 40,000 local endpoints to fit that case I'm afraid, even if those would be read only replicas. That is also something I'm highlighting in the paper [1] drafted for ICFC-2019. But had we such a sticky available key value storage solution, we would indeed have solved the problem of multiple configuration management system execution for thousands of nodes as James describes it. [0] https://jepsen.io/consistency [1] https://github.com/bogdando/papers-ieee/blob/master/ICFC-2019/LaTeX/position_paper_1570506394.pdf On 11/28/18 11:22 PM, Dan Prince wrote: On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 13:28 -0500, James Slagle wrote: On Wed, Nov 28, 2018 at 12:31 PM Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, not with puppet :) May be we could with ansible replacing puppet fully... So splitting config and runtime images is the only choice yet to address the raised security concerns. And let's forget about edge cases for now. Tossing around a pair of extra bytes over 40,000 WAN-distributed computes ain't gonna be our the biggest problem for sure. I think it's this last point that is the crux of this discussion. We can agree to disagree about the merits of this proposal and whether it's a pre-optimzation or micro-optimization, which I admit are somewhat subjective terms. Ultimately, it seems to be about the "why" do we need to do this as to the reason why the conversation seems to be going in circles a bit. I'm all for reducing container image size, but the reality is that this proposal doesn't necessarily help us with the Edge use cases we are talking about trying to solve. Why would we even run the exact same puppet binary + manifest individually 40,000 times so that we can produce the exact same set of configuration files that differ only by things such as IP address, hostnames, and passwords? Maybe we should instead be thinking about how we can do that *1* time centrally, and produce a configuration that can be reused across 40,000 nodes with little effort. The opportunity for a significant impact in terms of how we can scale TripleO is much larger if we consider approaching these problems with a wider net of what we could do. There's opportunity for a lot of better reuse in TripleO, configuration is just one area. The plan and Heat stack (within the ResourceGroup) are some other areas. We run Puppet for configuration because that is what we did on baremetal and we didn't break backwards compatability for our configuration options for upgrades. Our Puppet model relies on being executed on each local host in order to splice in the correct IP address and hostname. It executes in a distributed fashion, and works fairly well considering the history of the project. It is robust, guarantees no duplicate configs are being set, and is backwards compatible with all the options TripleO supported on baremetal. Puppet is arguably better for configuration than Ansible (which is what I hear people most often suggest we replace it with). It suits our needs fine, but it is perhaps a bit overkill considering we are only generating config files. I think the answer here is moving to something like Etcd. Perhaps Not Etcd I think, see my comment above. But you're absolutely right Dan. skipping over Ansible entirely as a config management tool (it is arguably less capable than Puppet in this category anyway). Or we could use Ansible for "legacy" services only, switch to Etcd for a majority of the OpenStack services, and drop Puppet entirely (my favorite option). Consolidating our technology stack would be wise. We've already put some work and analysis into the Etcd effort. Just need to push on it some more. Looking at the previous Kubernetes prototypes for TripleO would be the place to start. Config management migration is going to be tedious. Its technical debt that needs to be handled at some point anyway. I think it is a general TripleO improvement that could benefit all clouds, not just Edge. Dan At the same time, if some folks want to work on smaller optimizations (such as container image size), with an approach that can be agreed upon, then they should do so.
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 13:28 -0500, James Slagle wrote: > On Wed, Nov 28, 2018 at 12:31 PM Bogdan Dobrelya > wrote: > > Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, > > not > > with puppet :) May be we could with ansible replacing puppet > > fully... > > So splitting config and runtime images is the only choice yet to > > address > > the raised security concerns. And let's forget about edge cases for > > now. > > Tossing around a pair of extra bytes over 40,000 WAN-distributed > > computes ain't gonna be our the biggest problem for sure. > > I think it's this last point that is the crux of this discussion. We > can agree to disagree about the merits of this proposal and whether > it's a pre-optimzation or micro-optimization, which I admit are > somewhat subjective terms. Ultimately, it seems to be about the "why" > do we need to do this as to the reason why the conversation seems to > be going in circles a bit. > > I'm all for reducing container image size, but the reality is that > this proposal doesn't necessarily help us with the Edge use cases we > are talking about trying to solve. > > Why would we even run the exact same puppet binary + manifest > individually 40,000 times so that we can produce the exact same set > of > configuration files that differ only by things such as IP address, > hostnames, and passwords? Maybe we should instead be thinking about > how we can do that *1* time centrally, and produce a configuration > that can be reused across 40,000 nodes with little effort. The > opportunity for a significant impact in terms of how we can scale > TripleO is much larger if we consider approaching these problems with > a wider net of what we could do. There's opportunity for a lot of > better reuse in TripleO, configuration is just one area. The plan and > Heat stack (within the ResourceGroup) are some other areas. We run Puppet for configuration because that is what we did on baremetal and we didn't break backwards compatability for our configuration options for upgrades. Our Puppet model relies on being executed on each local host in order to splice in the correct IP address and hostname. It executes in a distributed fashion, and works fairly well considering the history of the project. It is robust, guarantees no duplicate configs are being set, and is backwards compatible with all the options TripleO supported on baremetal. Puppet is arguably better for configuration than Ansible (which is what I hear people most often suggest we replace it with). It suits our needs fine, but it is perhaps a bit overkill considering we are only generating config files. I think the answer here is moving to something like Etcd. Perhaps skipping over Ansible entirely as a config management tool (it is arguably less capable than Puppet in this category anyway). Or we could use Ansible for "legacy" services only, switch to Etcd for a majority of the OpenStack services, and drop Puppet entirely (my favorite option). Consolidating our technology stack would be wise. We've already put some work and analysis into the Etcd effort. Just need to push on it some more. Looking at the previous Kubernetes prototypes for TripleO would be the place to start. Config management migration is going to be tedious. Its technical debt that needs to be handled at some point anyway. I think it is a general TripleO improvement that could benefit all clouds, not just Edge. Dan > > At the same time, if some folks want to work on smaller optimizations > (such as container image size), with an approach that can be agreed > upon, then they should do so. We just ought to be careful about how > we > justify those changes so that we can carefully weigh the effort vs > the > payoff. In this specific case, I don't personally see this proposal > helping us with Edge use cases in a meaningful way given the scope of > the changes. That's not to say there aren't other use cases that > could > justify it though (such as the security points brought up earlier). > __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Wed, Nov 28, 2018 at 12:31 PM Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, not > with puppet :) May be we could with ansible replacing puppet fully... > So splitting config and runtime images is the only choice yet to address > the raised security concerns. And let's forget about edge cases for now. > Tossing around a pair of extra bytes over 40,000 WAN-distributed > computes ain't gonna be our the biggest problem for sure. I think it's this last point that is the crux of this discussion. We can agree to disagree about the merits of this proposal and whether it's a pre-optimzation or micro-optimization, which I admit are somewhat subjective terms. Ultimately, it seems to be about the "why" do we need to do this as to the reason why the conversation seems to be going in circles a bit. I'm all for reducing container image size, but the reality is that this proposal doesn't necessarily help us with the Edge use cases we are talking about trying to solve. Why would we even run the exact same puppet binary + manifest individually 40,000 times so that we can produce the exact same set of configuration files that differ only by things such as IP address, hostnames, and passwords? Maybe we should instead be thinking about how we can do that *1* time centrally, and produce a configuration that can be reused across 40,000 nodes with little effort. The opportunity for a significant impact in terms of how we can scale TripleO is much larger if we consider approaching these problems with a wider net of what we could do. There's opportunity for a lot of better reuse in TripleO, configuration is just one area. The plan and Heat stack (within the ResourceGroup) are some other areas. At the same time, if some folks want to work on smaller optimizations (such as container image size), with an approach that can be agreed upon, then they should do so. We just ought to be careful about how we justify those changes so that we can carefully weigh the effort vs the payoff. In this specific case, I don't personally see this proposal helping us with Edge use cases in a meaningful way given the scope of the changes. That's not to say there aren't other use cases that could justify it though (such as the security points brought up earlier). -- -- James Slagle -- __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 11/28/18 6:02 PM, Jiří Stránský wrote: Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. As I've already evaluated in the related bug, that is: puppet-* modules and manifests ~ 16MB puppet with dependencies ~61MB dependencies of the seemingly largest a dependency, systemd ~190MB that would be an extra layer size for each of the container images to be downloaded/fetched into registries. Given that we should decouple systemd from all/some of the dependencies (an example topic for RDO [0]), that could save a 190MB. But it seems we cannot break the love of puppet and systemd as it heavily relies on the latter and changing packaging like that would higly likely affect baremetal deployments with puppet and systemd co-operating. Long story short, we cannot shoot both rabbits with a single shot, not with puppet :) May be we could with ansible replacing puppet fully... So splitting config and runtime images is the only choice yet to address the raised security concerns. And let's forget about edge cases for now. Tossing around a pair of extra bytes over 40,000 WAN-distributed computes ain't gonna be our the biggest problem for sure. [0] https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/q/topic:base-container-reduction Dan Thanks Jirka __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev -- Best regards, Bogdan Dobrelya, Irc #bogdando __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. +1. I was actually under the impression that we concluded yesterday on IRC that this is the only thing that makes sense to seriously consider. But even then it's not a win-win -- we'd gain some security by leaner production images, but pay for it with space+bandwidth by duplicating image content (IOW we can help achieve one of the goals we had in mind by worsening the situation w/r/t the other goal we had in mind.) Personally i'm not sold yet but it's something that i'd consider if we got measurements of how much more space/bandwidth usage this would consume, and if we got some further details/examples about how serious are the security concerns if we leave config mgmt tools in runtime images. IIRC the other options (that were brought forward so far) were already dismissed in yesterday's IRC discussion and on the reviews. Bin/lib bind mounting being too hacky and fragile, and nsenter not really solving the problem (because it allows us to switch to having different bins/libs available, but it does not allow merging the availability of bins/libs from two containers into a single context). We are going in circles here I think +1. I think too much of the discussion focuses on "why it's bad to have config tools in runtime images", but IMO we all sorta agree that it would be better not to have them there, if it came at no cost. I think to move forward, it would be interesting to know: if we do this (i'll borrow Dan's drawing): |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| How much more space and bandwidth would this consume per node (e.g. separately per controller, per compute). This could help with decision making. Dan Thanks Jirka __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Ok, so you have the workflow in place, but it sounds like the containers are not laid out to best use that workflow. Puppet is in the base layer. That means whenever puppet gets updated, all the other containers must be too. And other such update coupling issues. I'm with you, that binaries should not be copied from one container to another though. Thanks, Kevin From: Dan Prince [dpri...@redhat.com] Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2018 5:31 AM To: Former OpenStack Development Mailing List, use openstack-discuss now; openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 00:31 +, Fox, Kevin M wrote: > The pod concept allows you to have one tool per container do one > thing and do it well. > > You can have a container for generating config, and another container > for consuming it. > > In a Kubernetes pod, if you still wanted to do puppet, > you could have a pod that: > 1. had an init container that ran puppet and dumped the resulting > config to an emptyDir volume. > 2. had your main container pull its config from the emptyDir volume. We have basically implemented the same workflow in TripleO today. First we execute Puppet in an "init container" (really just an ephemeral container that generates the config files and then goes away). Then we bind mount those configs into the service container. One improvement we could make (which we aren't doing yet) is to use a data container/volume to store the config files instead of using the host. Sharing *data* within a 'pod' (set of containers, etc.) is certainly a valid use of container volumes. None of this is what we are really talking about in this thread though. Most of the suggestions and patches are about making our base container(s) smaller in size. And the means by which the patches do that is to share binaries/applications across containers with custom mounts/volumes. I don't think it is a good idea at all as it violates encapsulation of the containers in general, regardless of whether we use pods or not. Dan > > Then each container would have no dependency on each other. > > In full blown Kubernetes cluster you might have puppet generate a > configmap though and ship it to your main container directly. Thats > another matter though. I think the example pod example above is still > usable without k8s? > > Thanks, > Kevin > > From: Dan Prince [dpri...@redhat.com] > Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2018 10:10 AM > To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions); > openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org > Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of > containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes > > On Tue, 2018-11-27 at 16:24 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop > > incluiding > > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > > and > > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. > > I think your assertion that we need to rearchitect the config images > to > container the puppet bits is incorrect here. > > After reviewing the patches you linked to below it appears that you > are > proposing we use --volumes-from to bind mount application binaries > from > one container into another. I don't believe this is a good pattern > for > containers. On baremetal if we followed the same pattern it would be > like using an /nfs share to obtain access to binaries across the > network to optimize local storage. Now... some people do this (like > maybe high performance computing would launch an MPI job like this) > but > I don't think we should consider it best practice for our containers > in > TripleO. > > Each container should container its own binaries and libraries as > much > as possible. And while I do think we should be using --volumes-from > more often in TripleO it would be for sharing *data* between > containers, not binaries. > > > > Background: > > 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially > > tens > > of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected > > over > > WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a > > 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. Reducing the base layer size > > becomes > > a decent goal there. See the security background below. > > The reason we put Puppet into the base layer was in fact to prevent > it > from being downloaded multiple times. I
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
Hi, On Tue, Nov 27, 2018 at 7:13 PM Dan Prince wrote: > On Tue, 2018-11-27 at 16:24 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop incluiding > > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > > and > > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. > > I think your assertion that we need to rearchitect the config images to > container the puppet bits is incorrect here. > > After reviewing the patches you linked to below it appears that you are > proposing we use --volumes-from to bind mount application binaries from > one container into another. I don't believe this is a good pattern for > containers. On baremetal if we followed the same pattern it would be > like using an /nfs share to obtain access to binaries across the > network to optimize local storage. Now... some people do this (like > maybe high performance computing would launch an MPI job like this) but > I don't think we should consider it best practice for our containers in > TripleO. > > Each container should container its own binaries and libraries as much > as possible. And while I do think we should be using --volumes-from > more often in TripleO it would be for sharing *data* between > containers, not binaries. > > > > > > Background: > > 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially > > tens > > of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected > > over > > WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a > > 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. Reducing the base layer size > > becomes > > a decent goal there. See the security background below. > > The reason we put Puppet into the base layer was in fact to prevent it > from being downloaded multiple times. If we were to re-architect the > image layers such that the child layers all contained their own copies > of Puppet for example there would actually be a net increase in > bandwidth and disk usage. So I would argue we are already addressing > the goal of optimizing network and disk space. > > Moving it out of the base layer so that you can patch it more often > without disrupting other services is a valid concern. But addressing > this concern while also preserving our definiation of a container (see > above, a container should contain all of its binaries) is going to cost > you something, namely disk and network space because Puppet would need > to be duplicated in each child container. > > As Puppet is used to configure a majority of the services in TripleO > having it in the base container makes most sense. And yes, if there are > security patches for Puppet/Ruby those might result in a bunch of > containers getting pushed. But let Docker layers take care of this I > think... Don't try to solve things by constructing your own custom > mounts and volumes to work around the issue. > > > > 2) For a generic security (Day 2, maintenance) case, when > > puppet/ruby/systemd/name-it gets a CVE fixed, the base layer has to > > be > > updated and all layers on top - to be rebuild, and all of those > > layers, > > to be re-fetched for cloud hosts and all containers to be > > restarted... > > And all of that because of some fixes that have nothing to OpenStack. > > By > > the remote edge sites as well, remember of "tens of thousands", high > > latency and limited bandwith?.. > > 3) TripleO CI updates (including puppet*) packages in containers, not > > in > > a common base layer of those. So each a CI job has to update puppet* > > and > > its dependencies - ruby/systemd as well. Reducing numbers of packages > > to > > update for each container makes sense for CI as well. > > > > Implementation related: > > > > WIP patches [0],[1] for early review, uses a config "pod" approach, > > does > > not require to maintain a two sets of config vs runtime images. > > Future > > work: a) cronie requires systemd, we'd want to fix that also off the > > base layer. b) rework to podman pods for docker-puppet.py instead of > > --volumes-from a side car container (can't be backported for Queens > > then, which is still nice to have a support for the Edge DCN case, > > at > > least downstream only perhaps). > > > > Some questions raised on IRC: > > > > Q: is having a service be able to configure itself really need to > > involve a separate pod? > > A: Highly likely yes, removing not-runtime things is a good idea and > > pods is an established PaaS paradigm already. That will require some > > changes in the architecture though (see the topic with WIP patches). > > I'm a little confused on this one. Are you suggesting that we have 2 > containers for each service? One with Puppet and one without? > > That is certainly possible, but to pull it off would likely require you > to have things built like this: > > |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ > Puppet installed| > > The end result would be Puppet being dupl
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 15:12 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > On 11/28/18 2:58 PM, Dan Prince wrote: > > On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 12:45 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > > To follow up and explain the patches for code review: > > > > > > The "header" patch https://review.openstack.org/620310 -> > > > (requires) > > > https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/c/17534/, and also > > > https://review.openstack.org/620061 -> (which in turn requires) > > > https://review.openstack.org/619744 -> (Kolla change, the 1st to > > > go) > > > https://review.openstack.org/619736 > > > > This email was cross-posted to multiple lists and I think we may > > have > > lost some of the context in the process as the subject was changed. > > > > Most of the suggestions and patches are about making our base > > container(s) smaller in size. And the means by which the patches do > > that is to share binaries/applications across containers with > > custom > > mounts/volumes. I've -2'd most of them. What concerns me however is > > that some of the TripleO cores seemed open to this idea yesterday > > on > > IRC. Perhaps I've misread things but what you appear to be doing > > here > > is quite drastic I think we need to consider any of this carefully > > before proceeding with any of it. > > > > > > > Please also read the commit messages, I tried to explain all > > > "Whys" > > > very > > > carefully. Just to sum up it here as well: > > > > > > The current self-containing (config and runtime bits) > > > architecture > > > of > > > containers badly affects: > > > > > > * the size of the base layer and all containers images as an > > > additional 300MB (adds an extra 30% of size). > > > > You are accomplishing this by removing Puppet from the base > > container, > > but you are also creating another container in the process. This > > would > > still be required on all nodes as Puppet is our config tool. So you > > would still be downloading some of this data anyways. Understood > > your > > reasons for doing this are that it avoids rebuilding all containers > > when there is a change to any of these packages in the base > > container. > > What you are missing however is how often is it the case that > > Puppet is > > updated that something else in the base container isn't? > > For CI jobs updating all containers, its quite an often to have > changes > in openstack/tripleo puppet modules to pull in. IIUC, that > automatically > picks up any updates for all of its dependencies and for the > dependencies of dependencies, and all that multiplied by a hundred > of > total containers to get it updated. That is a *pain* we're used to > have > these day for quite often timing out CI jobs... Ofc, the main cause > is > delayed promotions though. Regarding CI I made a separate suggestion on that below in that rebuilding the base layer more often could be a good solution here. I don't think the puppet-tripleo package is that large however so we could just live with it. > > For real deployments, I have no data for the cadence of minor updates > in > puppet and tripleo & openstack modules for it, let's ask operators > (as > we're happened to be in the merged openstack-discuss list)? For its > dependencies though, like systemd and ruby, I'm pretty sure it's > quite > often to have CVEs fixed there. So I expect what "in the fields" > security fixes delivering for those might bring some unwanted hassle > for > long-term maintenance of LTS releases. As Tengu noted on IRC: > "well, between systemd, puppet and ruby, there are many security > concernes, almost every month... and also, what's the point keeping > them > in runtime containers when they are useless?" Reiterating again on previous points: -I'd be fine removing systemd. But lets do it properly and not via 'rpm -ev --nodeps'. -Puppet and Ruby *are* required for configuration. We can certainly put them in a separate container outside of the runtime service containers but doing so would actually cost you much more space/bandwidth for each service container. As both of these have to get downloaded to each node anyway in order to generate config files with our current mechanisms I'm not sure this buys you anything. We are going in circles here I think Dan > > > I would wager that it is more rare than you'd think. Perhaps > > looking at > > the history of an OpenStack distribution would be a valid way to > > assess > > this more critically. Without this data to backup the numbers I'm > > afraid what you are doing here falls into "pre-optimization" > > territory > > for me and I don't think the means used in the patches warrent the > > benefits you mention here. > > > > > > > * Edge cases, where we have containers images to be distributed, > > > at > > > least once to hit local registries, over high-latency and > > > limited > > > bandwith, highly unreliable WAN connections. > > > * numbers of packages to update in CI for all containers for all > > > services (
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On 11/28/18 2:58 PM, Dan Prince wrote: On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 12:45 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: To follow up and explain the patches for code review: The "header" patch https://review.openstack.org/620310 -> (requires) https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/c/17534/, and also https://review.openstack.org/620061 -> (which in turn requires) https://review.openstack.org/619744 -> (Kolla change, the 1st to go) https://review.openstack.org/619736 This email was cross-posted to multiple lists and I think we may have lost some of the context in the process as the subject was changed. Most of the suggestions and patches are about making our base container(s) smaller in size. And the means by which the patches do that is to share binaries/applications across containers with custom mounts/volumes. I've -2'd most of them. What concerns me however is that some of the TripleO cores seemed open to this idea yesterday on IRC. Perhaps I've misread things but what you appear to be doing here is quite drastic I think we need to consider any of this carefully before proceeding with any of it. Please also read the commit messages, I tried to explain all "Whys" very carefully. Just to sum up it here as well: The current self-containing (config and runtime bits) architecture of containers badly affects: * the size of the base layer and all containers images as an additional 300MB (adds an extra 30% of size). You are accomplishing this by removing Puppet from the base container, but you are also creating another container in the process. This would still be required on all nodes as Puppet is our config tool. So you would still be downloading some of this data anyways. Understood your reasons for doing this are that it avoids rebuilding all containers when there is a change to any of these packages in the base container. What you are missing however is how often is it the case that Puppet is updated that something else in the base container isn't? For CI jobs updating all containers, its quite an often to have changes in openstack/tripleo puppet modules to pull in. IIUC, that automatically picks up any updates for all of its dependencies and for the dependencies of dependencies, and all that multiplied by a hundred of total containers to get it updated. That is a *pain* we're used to have these day for quite often timing out CI jobs... Ofc, the main cause is delayed promotions though. For real deployments, I have no data for the cadence of minor updates in puppet and tripleo & openstack modules for it, let's ask operators (as we're happened to be in the merged openstack-discuss list)? For its dependencies though, like systemd and ruby, I'm pretty sure it's quite often to have CVEs fixed there. So I expect what "in the fields" security fixes delivering for those might bring some unwanted hassle for long-term maintenance of LTS releases. As Tengu noted on IRC: "well, between systemd, puppet and ruby, there are many security concernes, almost every month... and also, what's the point keeping them in runtime containers when they are useless?" I would wager that it is more rare than you'd think. Perhaps looking at the history of an OpenStack distribution would be a valid way to assess this more critically. Without this data to backup the numbers I'm afraid what you are doing here falls into "pre-optimization" territory for me and I don't think the means used in the patches warrent the benefits you mention here. * Edge cases, where we have containers images to be distributed, at least once to hit local registries, over high-latency and limited bandwith, highly unreliable WAN connections. * numbers of packages to update in CI for all containers for all services (CI jobs do not rebuild containers so each container gets updated for those 300MB of extra size). It would seem to me there are other ways to solve the CI containers update problems. Rebuilding the base layer more often would solve this right? If we always build our service containers off of a base layer that is recent there should be no updates to the system/puppet packages there in our CI pipelines. * security and the surface of attacks, by introducing systemd et al as additional subjects for CVE fixes to maintain for all containers. We aren't actually using systemd within our containers. I think those packages are getting pulled in by an RPM dependency elsewhere. So rather than using 'rpm -ev --nodeps' to remove it we could create a sub-package for containers in those cases and install it instead. In short rather than hack this to remove them why not pursue a proper packaging fix? In general I am a fan of getting things out of the base container we don't need... so yeah lets do this. But lets do it properly. * services uptime, by additional restarts of services related to security maintanence of irrelevant to openstack components sitting as a dead weight in containers images for ever. Like I said ab
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 12:45 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > To follow up and explain the patches for code review: > > The "header" patch https://review.openstack.org/620310 -> (requires) > https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/c/17534/, and also > https://review.openstack.org/620061 -> (which in turn requires) > https://review.openstack.org/619744 -> (Kolla change, the 1st to go) > https://review.openstack.org/619736 This email was cross-posted to multiple lists and I think we may have lost some of the context in the process as the subject was changed. Most of the suggestions and patches are about making our base container(s) smaller in size. And the means by which the patches do that is to share binaries/applications across containers with custom mounts/volumes. I've -2'd most of them. What concerns me however is that some of the TripleO cores seemed open to this idea yesterday on IRC. Perhaps I've misread things but what you appear to be doing here is quite drastic I think we need to consider any of this carefully before proceeding with any of it. > > Please also read the commit messages, I tried to explain all "Whys" > very > carefully. Just to sum up it here as well: > > The current self-containing (config and runtime bits) architecture > of > containers badly affects: > > * the size of the base layer and all containers images as an >additional 300MB (adds an extra 30% of size). You are accomplishing this by removing Puppet from the base container, but you are also creating another container in the process. This would still be required on all nodes as Puppet is our config tool. So you would still be downloading some of this data anyways. Understood your reasons for doing this are that it avoids rebuilding all containers when there is a change to any of these packages in the base container. What you are missing however is how often is it the case that Puppet is updated that something else in the base container isn't? I would wager that it is more rare than you'd think. Perhaps looking at the history of an OpenStack distribution would be a valid way to assess this more critically. Without this data to backup the numbers I'm afraid what you are doing here falls into "pre-optimization" territory for me and I don't think the means used in the patches warrent the benefits you mention here. > * Edge cases, where we have containers images to be distributed, at >least once to hit local registries, over high-latency and limited >bandwith, highly unreliable WAN connections. > * numbers of packages to update in CI for all containers for all >services (CI jobs do not rebuild containers so each container gets >updated for those 300MB of extra size). It would seem to me there are other ways to solve the CI containers update problems. Rebuilding the base layer more often would solve this right? If we always build our service containers off of a base layer that is recent there should be no updates to the system/puppet packages there in our CI pipelines. > * security and the surface of attacks, by introducing systemd et al > as >additional subjects for CVE fixes to maintain for all containers. We aren't actually using systemd within our containers. I think those packages are getting pulled in by an RPM dependency elsewhere. So rather than using 'rpm -ev --nodeps' to remove it we could create a sub-package for containers in those cases and install it instead. In short rather than hack this to remove them why not pursue a proper packaging fix? In general I am a fan of getting things out of the base container we don't need... so yeah lets do this. But lets do it properly. > * services uptime, by additional restarts of services related to >security maintanence of irrelevant to openstack components sitting >as a dead weight in containers images for ever. Like I said above how often is it that these packages actually change where something else in the base container doesn't? Perhaps we should get more data here before blindly implementing a solution we aren't sure really helps out in the real world. > > On 11/27/18 4:08 PM, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop > > incluiding > > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > > and > > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. > > > > Background: 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there > > is > > potentially tens of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge > > sites > > connected over WAN to a single control plane, which is having high > > latency, like a 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. > > 2) For a generic security case, > > 3) TripleO CI updates all > > > > Challenge: > > > > > Here is a related bug [1] and implementation [1] for that. PTAL > > > folks! > > > > > > [0] https://bugs.launchpad.net/tripleo/+bug/1804822 > > > [1] > > > https://review.openstack.org/#/q
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Wed, 2018-11-28 at 00:31 +, Fox, Kevin M wrote: > The pod concept allows you to have one tool per container do one > thing and do it well. > > You can have a container for generating config, and another container > for consuming it. > > In a Kubernetes pod, if you still wanted to do puppet, > you could have a pod that: > 1. had an init container that ran puppet and dumped the resulting > config to an emptyDir volume. > 2. had your main container pull its config from the emptyDir volume. We have basically implemented the same workflow in TripleO today. First we execute Puppet in an "init container" (really just an ephemeral container that generates the config files and then goes away). Then we bind mount those configs into the service container. One improvement we could make (which we aren't doing yet) is to use a data container/volume to store the config files instead of using the host. Sharing *data* within a 'pod' (set of containers, etc.) is certainly a valid use of container volumes. None of this is what we are really talking about in this thread though. Most of the suggestions and patches are about making our base container(s) smaller in size. And the means by which the patches do that is to share binaries/applications across containers with custom mounts/volumes. I don't think it is a good idea at all as it violates encapsulation of the containers in general, regardless of whether we use pods or not. Dan > > Then each container would have no dependency on each other. > > In full blown Kubernetes cluster you might have puppet generate a > configmap though and ship it to your main container directly. Thats > another matter though. I think the example pod example above is still > usable without k8s? > > Thanks, > Kevin > > From: Dan Prince [dpri...@redhat.com] > Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2018 10:10 AM > To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions); > openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org > Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of > containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes > > On Tue, 2018-11-27 at 16:24 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop > > incluiding > > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > > and > > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. > > I think your assertion that we need to rearchitect the config images > to > container the puppet bits is incorrect here. > > After reviewing the patches you linked to below it appears that you > are > proposing we use --volumes-from to bind mount application binaries > from > one container into another. I don't believe this is a good pattern > for > containers. On baremetal if we followed the same pattern it would be > like using an /nfs share to obtain access to binaries across the > network to optimize local storage. Now... some people do this (like > maybe high performance computing would launch an MPI job like this) > but > I don't think we should consider it best practice for our containers > in > TripleO. > > Each container should container its own binaries and libraries as > much > as possible. And while I do think we should be using --volumes-from > more often in TripleO it would be for sharing *data* between > containers, not binaries. > > > > Background: > > 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially > > tens > > of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected > > over > > WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a > > 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. Reducing the base layer size > > becomes > > a decent goal there. See the security background below. > > The reason we put Puppet into the base layer was in fact to prevent > it > from being downloaded multiple times. If we were to re-architect the > image layers such that the child layers all contained their own > copies > of Puppet for example there would actually be a net increase in > bandwidth and disk usage. So I would argue we are already addressing > the goal of optimizing network and disk space. > > Moving it out of the base layer so that you can patch it more often > without disrupting other services is a valid concern. But addressing > this concern while also preserving our definiation of a container > (see > above, a container should contain all of its binaries) is going to > cost > you something, namely disk and network space because Puppet would > need > to be duplicated in
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
To follow up and explain the patches for code review: The "header" patch https://review.openstack.org/620310 -> (requires) https://review.rdoproject.org/r/#/c/17534/, and also https://review.openstack.org/620061 -> (which in turn requires) https://review.openstack.org/619744 -> (Kolla change, the 1st to go) https://review.openstack.org/619736 Please also read the commit messages, I tried to explain all "Whys" very carefully. Just to sum up it here as well: The current self-containing (config and runtime bits) architecture of containers badly affects: * the size of the base layer and all containers images as an additional 300MB (adds an extra 30% of size). * Edge cases, where we have containers images to be distributed, at least once to hit local registries, over high-latency and limited bandwith, highly unreliable WAN connections. * numbers of packages to update in CI for all containers for all services (CI jobs do not rebuild containers so each container gets updated for those 300MB of extra size). * security and the surface of attacks, by introducing systemd et al as additional subjects for CVE fixes to maintain for all containers. * services uptime, by additional restarts of services related to security maintanence of irrelevant to openstack components sitting as a dead weight in containers images for ever. On 11/27/18 4:08 PM, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: Changing the topic to follow the subject. [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop incluiding config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime and pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. Background: 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially tens of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected over WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. 2) For a generic security case, 3) TripleO CI updates all Challenge: Here is a related bug [1] and implementation [1] for that. PTAL folks! [0] https://bugs.launchpad.net/tripleo/+bug/1804822 [1] https://review.openstack.org/#/q/topic:base-container-reduction Let's also think of removing puppet-tripleo from the base container. It really brings the world-in (and yum updates in CI!) each job and each container! So if we did so, we should then either install puppet-tripleo and co on the host and bind-mount it for the docker-puppet deployment task steps (bad idea IMO), OR use the magical --volumes-from option to mount volumes from some "puppet-config" sidecar container inside each of the containers being launched by docker-puppet tooling. On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 11:16 AM Harald Jensås wrote: We add this to all images: https://github.com/openstack/tripleo-common/blob/d35af75b0d8c4683a677660646e535cf972c98ef/container-images/tripleo_kolla_template_overrides.j2#L35 /bin/sh -c yum -y install iproute iscsi-initiator-utils lvm2 python socat sudo which openstack-tripleo-common-container-base rsync cronie crudini openstack-selinux ansible python-shade puppet-tripleo python2- kubernetes && yum clean all && rm -rf /var/cache/yum 276 MB Is the additional 276 MB reasonable here? openstack-selinux <- This package run relabling, does that kind of touching the filesystem impact the size due to docker layers? Also: python2-kubernetes is a fairly large package (18007990) do we use that in every image? I don't see any tripleo related repos importing from that when searching on Hound? The original commit message[1] adding it states it is for future convenience. On my undercloud we have 101 images, if we are downloading every 18 MB per image thats almost 1.8 GB for a package we don't use? (I hope it's not like this? With docker layers, we only download that 276 MB transaction once? Or?) [1] https://review.openstack.org/527927 -- Best regards, Bogdan Dobrelya, Irc #bogdando -- Best regards, Bogdan Dobrelya, Irc #bogdando __ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: openstack-dev-requ...@lists.openstack.org?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
The pod concept allows you to have one tool per container do one thing and do it well. You can have a container for generating config, and another container for consuming it. In a Kubernetes pod, if you still wanted to do puppet, you could have a pod that: 1. had an init container that ran puppet and dumped the resulting config to an emptyDir volume. 2. had your main container pull its config from the emptyDir volume. Then each container would have no dependency on each other. In full blown Kubernetes cluster you might have puppet generate a configmap though and ship it to your main container directly. Thats another matter though. I think the example pod example above is still usable without k8s? Thanks, Kevin From: Dan Prince [dpri...@redhat.com] Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2018 10:10 AM To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions); openstack-disc...@lists.openstack.org Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes On Tue, 2018-11-27 at 16:24 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop incluiding > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > and > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. I think your assertion that we need to rearchitect the config images to container the puppet bits is incorrect here. After reviewing the patches you linked to below it appears that you are proposing we use --volumes-from to bind mount application binaries from one container into another. I don't believe this is a good pattern for containers. On baremetal if we followed the same pattern it would be like using an /nfs share to obtain access to binaries across the network to optimize local storage. Now... some people do this (like maybe high performance computing would launch an MPI job like this) but I don't think we should consider it best practice for our containers in TripleO. Each container should container its own binaries and libraries as much as possible. And while I do think we should be using --volumes-from more often in TripleO it would be for sharing *data* between containers, not binaries. > > Background: > 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially > tens > of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected > over > WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a > 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. Reducing the base layer size > becomes > a decent goal there. See the security background below. The reason we put Puppet into the base layer was in fact to prevent it from being downloaded multiple times. If we were to re-architect the image layers such that the child layers all contained their own copies of Puppet for example there would actually be a net increase in bandwidth and disk usage. So I would argue we are already addressing the goal of optimizing network and disk space. Moving it out of the base layer so that you can patch it more often without disrupting other services is a valid concern. But addressing this concern while also preserving our definiation of a container (see above, a container should contain all of its binaries) is going to cost you something, namely disk and network space because Puppet would need to be duplicated in each child container. As Puppet is used to configure a majority of the services in TripleO having it in the base container makes most sense. And yes, if there are security patches for Puppet/Ruby those might result in a bunch of containers getting pushed. But let Docker layers take care of this I think... Don't try to solve things by constructing your own custom mounts and volumes to work around the issue. > 2) For a generic security (Day 2, maintenance) case, when > puppet/ruby/systemd/name-it gets a CVE fixed, the base layer has to > be > updated and all layers on top - to be rebuild, and all of those > layers, > to be re-fetched for cloud hosts and all containers to be > restarted... > And all of that because of some fixes that have nothing to OpenStack. > By > the remote edge sites as well, remember of "tens of thousands", high > latency and limited bandwith?.. > 3) TripleO CI updates (including puppet*) packages in containers, not > in > a common base layer of those. So each a CI job has to update puppet* > and > its dependencies - ruby/systemd as well. Reducing numbers of packages > to > update for each container makes sense for CI as well. > > Implementation related: > > WIP patches [0],[1] for early review, uses a config "pod" approach, > does > not require to maintain a two sets of config vs runtime images. > Future > work: a) cronie requires systemd
Re: [openstack-dev] [TripleO][Edge] Reduce base layer of containers for security and size of images (maintenance) sakes
On Tue, 2018-11-27 at 16:24 +0100, Bogdan Dobrelya wrote: > Changing the topic to follow the subject. > > [tl;dr] it's time to rearchitect container images to stop incluiding > config-time only (puppet et al) bits, which are not needed runtime > and > pose security issues, like CVEs, to maintain daily. I think your assertion that we need to rearchitect the config images to container the puppet bits is incorrect here. After reviewing the patches you linked to below it appears that you are proposing we use --volumes-from to bind mount application binaries from one container into another. I don't believe this is a good pattern for containers. On baremetal if we followed the same pattern it would be like using an /nfs share to obtain access to binaries across the network to optimize local storage. Now... some people do this (like maybe high performance computing would launch an MPI job like this) but I don't think we should consider it best practice for our containers in TripleO. Each container should container its own binaries and libraries as much as possible. And while I do think we should be using --volumes-from more often in TripleO it would be for sharing *data* between containers, not binaries. > > Background: > 1) For the Distributed Compute Node edge case, there is potentially > tens > of thousands of a single-compute-node remote edge sites connected > over > WAN to a single control plane, which is having high latency, like a > 100ms or so, and limited bandwith. Reducing the base layer size > becomes > a decent goal there. See the security background below. The reason we put Puppet into the base layer was in fact to prevent it from being downloaded multiple times. If we were to re-architect the image layers such that the child layers all contained their own copies of Puppet for example there would actually be a net increase in bandwidth and disk usage. So I would argue we are already addressing the goal of optimizing network and disk space. Moving it out of the base layer so that you can patch it more often without disrupting other services is a valid concern. But addressing this concern while also preserving our definiation of a container (see above, a container should contain all of its binaries) is going to cost you something, namely disk and network space because Puppet would need to be duplicated in each child container. As Puppet is used to configure a majority of the services in TripleO having it in the base container makes most sense. And yes, if there are security patches for Puppet/Ruby those might result in a bunch of containers getting pushed. But let Docker layers take care of this I think... Don't try to solve things by constructing your own custom mounts and volumes to work around the issue. > 2) For a generic security (Day 2, maintenance) case, when > puppet/ruby/systemd/name-it gets a CVE fixed, the base layer has to > be > updated and all layers on top - to be rebuild, and all of those > layers, > to be re-fetched for cloud hosts and all containers to be > restarted... > And all of that because of some fixes that have nothing to OpenStack. > By > the remote edge sites as well, remember of "tens of thousands", high > latency and limited bandwith?.. > 3) TripleO CI updates (including puppet*) packages in containers, not > in > a common base layer of those. So each a CI job has to update puppet* > and > its dependencies - ruby/systemd as well. Reducing numbers of packages > to > update for each container makes sense for CI as well. > > Implementation related: > > WIP patches [0],[1] for early review, uses a config "pod" approach, > does > not require to maintain a two sets of config vs runtime images. > Future > work: a) cronie requires systemd, we'd want to fix that also off the > base layer. b) rework to podman pods for docker-puppet.py instead of > --volumes-from a side car container (can't be backported for Queens > then, which is still nice to have a support for the Edge DCN case, > at > least downstream only perhaps). > > Some questions raised on IRC: > > Q: is having a service be able to configure itself really need to > involve a separate pod? > A: Highly likely yes, removing not-runtime things is a good idea and > pods is an established PaaS paradigm already. That will require some > changes in the architecture though (see the topic with WIP patches). I'm a little confused on this one. Are you suggesting that we have 2 containers for each service? One with Puppet and one without? That is certainly possible, but to pull it off would likely require you to have things built like this: |base container| --> |service container| --> |service container w/ Puppet installed| The end result would be Puppet being duplicated in a layer for each services "config image". Very inefficient. Again, I'm ansering this assumping we aren't violating our container constraints and best practices where each container has the binaries its needs to do its own