4. How to configure mfdata metwork module ?

4.1. General

There are several ways to configure a metwork module (or a plugin).

It mainly depends:

  • if you want to configure a metwork module (mfserv, mfbase, mfdata…) or a custom plugin

  • if you are still developing

  • if you are deploying in production

All these ways are not incompatible but in what follows, you will find our recommendations for each use case.

Please read everything from the beginning to be sure to really understand the configuration process.

4.1.1. How to configure a metwork module (mfserv, mfbase, mfdata…) during development process ?

4.1.1.1. Find the module configuration file config.ini

You will find the module configuration file in ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini path.

If you are developing with a standard metwork installation using a standard metwork user like mfserv, mfdata…, ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME} is the home directory of the current user. So, if you are developing with mfserv user, you will find the module configuration file in ~/config/config.ini.

Please make sure that your configuration file is not a symbolic link. In that particular case, you are in “production mode” (refer to the corresponding section).

4.1.1.2. Understand the inheritance process

The beginning of the file is something like that:

# THIS FILE OVERRIDES /opt/metwork-mfserv-master/config/config.ini CONFIGURATION FILE
# DON'T CHANGE ANYTHING IN /opt/metwork-mfserv-master/config/config.ini FILE
# DON'T REMOVE THE INCLUDE_config.ini LINE BELLOW
# => YOU CAN JUST SET THE KEY YOU WANT TO OVERRIDE BY REMOVING COMMENT
#    BEFORE THE KEY NAME AND BY CHANGING ITS VALUE HERE
[INCLUDE_config.ini]

[...]

So this file overrides ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini (${MODULE_HOME} is in /opt in a standard metwork installation).

**never change anything in ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini** (because this file is silently overriden after each metwork upgrade)

So, you have to do your modifications in ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini file (probably hosted in /home).

Note that, by default, all keys are commented. In that case, default values are read in ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini.

4.1.1.3. Override a key

To override a configuration option, select the corresponding key, uncomment it and change its value.

For example, to override the listening port of nginx daemon for mfserv module:

  • edit ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini as the user you use to run mfserv module

  • find [nginx] section

  • uncomment port=... key below

  • change the value (for example 8080)

4.1.1.5. Understand what is overriden during module upgrades

During a metwork module upgrade :

  • the default values file ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini (most of the time in opt) is silently overriden

  • the custom values file ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini (most of the time in home) is overriden by a new default one only if there is no change in it

So, if you changed some keys in ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini, your change will never be overriden by a metwork upgrade.

But the upgrade add a new configuration option, the new configuration option will be (of course) visible in ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini but not in your ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini (because we prefer to keep your changes). It’s not a problem in itself but you can miss some configuration options.

So, when you do some metwork ugprades on a customized system, you should sometimes do a kind of diff/merge between ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini and ${MODULE_HOME}/config/config.ini.

But again: if you don’t do this, it won’t break anything. But you can just miss some new configuration features.

4.1.2. How to configure plugins during development process ?

If you are working on a plugin named foo which need extra configuration variables, add a section to ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini named [plugin_foo]. For example, for a mfserv plugin:

# [...]
# At the end of ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini

[plugin_foo]
key1=value1
key2=value2
key3=value3

After restarting your terminal to force a profile loading, you will get some new environement variables:

$ env |grep "^MFSERV_PLUGIN_FOO_"
MFSERV_PLUGIN_FOO_KEY1=value1
MFSERV_PLUGIN_FOO_KEY2=value2
MFSERV_PLUGIN_FOO_KEY3=value3

Then, in your plugin code, use them to get the corresponding value. For example:

import os
[...]
KEY1_VALUE = os.environ.get("MFSERV_PLUGIN_FOO_KEY1", "default_value")

We recommend you to use good default values in your code (default_value in the above example) to be sure that your plugin will work even if configuration is not set.

Another tip if you don’t want to hardcode the plugin name in your code, you can use the environment variable MFSERV_CURRENT_PLUGIN_NAME automatically defined by metwork.

For continue with the same example:

import os
[...]
CURRENT_PLUGIN_NAME = os.environ['MFSERV_CURRENT_PLUGIN_NAME']
KEY1_VALUE = os.environ.get("MFSERV_PLUGIN_%s_KEY1" % CURRENT_PLUGIN_NAME.upper(),
                            "default_value")

4.1.3. How to configure a metwork module (mfserv, mfbase, mfdata…) during production deployment process ?

Of course, you can use the same way described above but we recommend another way for production deployment.

With the following way, you just need to use the root account and your don’t have to know anything about metwork users.

As you can deploy your released plugins just by putting them in /etc/metwork.config.d/{metwork_module_in_lowercase}/external_plugins/ directory and restarting the module (service metwork restart), you can also configure the module in this directory by putting your changes in /etc/metwork.config.d/{metwork_module_in_lowercase}/config.ini file.

For example, to change the listening port of nginx for mfserv module, just create the /etc/metwork.config.d/mfserv/config.ini file with following content:

# This file overrides default values available in /opt/metwork-mfserv/config/config.ini
# DO NOT REMOVE THE FOLLOWING LINE
[INCLUDE_config.ini]

# Overridden values
[nginx]
port=8080

The file must be readable by metwork users.

When this file is created and when you (re)load the mfserv profile, the file ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini is silently replaced by a symbolic link: ${MODULE_RUNTIME_HOME}/config/config.ini -> /etc/metwork.config.d/mfserv/config.ini.

After that, you have to configure your module through this /etc file.

4.1.4. How to configure plugins during production deployment process ?

Exactly in the same way as for a module. Add your custom plugin section at the end of /etc/metwork.config.d/mfserv/config.ini. to continue with the previous examples:

# This file overrides default values available in /opt/metwork-mfserv/config/config.ini
# DO NOT REMOVE THE FOLLOWING LINE
[INCLUDE_config.ini]

# Overridden values (module wide)
[nginx]
port=8080

# Overriden values (for plugins)
[plugin_foo]
key1=value1
key2=value2
key3=value3

As previously said, a good plugin should use good default values in its code to avoid to crash if custom values are not set at all.

Currently, there no way to override a step configuration parameter in a [step_....] section of a config.ini plugin configuration file. However, it will be available in a next version of Metwork.