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ZC Buildout recipes for ZODB

Project description

Recipes for working with ZODB.

Changes

2.0.0 (2014-02-12)

This release isn’t backward compatible

It uses ZODB, rather than ZODB3.

  • Added Python 3 support

  • Changed from ZODB3 to ZODB.

0.6.2 (2012-10-31)

Bugs Fixed

  • Moved ‘zope.testing’ requirement from install to test requirement.

0.6.1 (2010-05-25)

Bugs Fixed

  • Pack scripts were incorrectly generated for storages that weren’t named in their storage configurations.

0.6.0 (2009-12-03)

New Features

  • Generation of a logrotate configuration can now be disabled by providing a logrotate option with a value of “false”.

  • Added documentation of the eggs option and why it generally shouldn’t be used.

  • Improved error handling.

Bugs Fixed

  • The eggs option, when used, wasn’t handled properly.

0.5.0 (2008-11-03)

New Features

You can now specify a name option in server parts to have installed files use a different name than the section name.

Bugs Fixed

Pack crontab files weren’t removed when parts were removed or renamed.

0.4 (2008-02-18)

New Features

The server recipe now honors the deployment name option.

0.3.1 (2008-01-03)

Bugs Fixed

Shell-scripts using su weren’t generated correctly.

0.3 (2008-01-03)

New Features

  • You can now specify an email address in a packing crontab file to control where errors are sent.

  • If you install a general ZEO script, using a zdaemon part:

    [zdaemon]
    recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
    eggs = zdaemon

    you can request that shell scripts be generated that use the generic zdaemon script. This can make updating software for deployed systems easier since instance-specific scripts don’t depend on paths, like egg names, that are likely to change.

Bugs Fixed

  • ZODB3 and most of its requirements were spurious dependencies of the recipes. This caused ZODB3 to be installed using the Python used to run the buildout, which caused problems in some circumstances.

0.2.1 (2007-04-23)

Bugs Fixed

  • crontab and logrotate configuration files were being generates incorrectly.

0.2 (2007-04-17)

Added handling of %import directives.

0.1 (2007-04-13)

Initial release.

Detailed Documentation

Defining ZEO Storage Servers

The zc.zodbrecipes:server recipe can be used to define ZEO storage servers. To define a storage server, you define a part for the server and specify configuration data.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = server
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... ''')

Here we specified a minimal configuration using a “foo” storage. We can use any kind of storage we want. Here we used an import statement to import the schema definition that defined the foo section. Any imports are simply copied to the generated configuration file. When we run the buildout:

>>> from six import print_
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
Installing server.
zc.zodbrecipes:
A runzeo script couldn't be found at:
<BLANKLINE>
  '/sample-buildout/bin/runzeo'
<BLANKLINE>
You may need to generate a runzeo script using the
zc.recipe.eggs:script recipe and the ZEO egg, or you may need
to specify the location of a script using the runzeo option.
<BLANKLINE>
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.

We got a warning because the recipe expects there to be a runzeo script and we haven’t created one. This is done using the zc.recipe.egg:script recipe:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Installing zodb...
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/runzeo'.
...
Updating server.

We get 2 things. We get a directory in parts containing ZEO and zdaemon configuration files:

>>> ls('parts', 'server')
-  zdaemon.conf
-  zeo.conf

Let’s look at the configuration files:

>>> cat('parts', 'server', 'zeo.conf')
%import foo
<BLANKLINE>
<zeo>
  address 8100
  monitor-address 8101
  transaction-timeout 300
</zeo>
<BLANKLINE>
<foo>
  path /databases/Data.fs
</foo>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path STDOUT
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

We see the same data we input with the addition of an eventlog section that directs logging to standard out. In production, we’ll use zdaemon’s transacript log to capture this logging output in a file. If we wish, we can specify a log file ourselves:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
...    <eventlog>
...      <logfile>
...        path /var/log/zeo.log
...      </logfile>
...    </eventlog>
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.
>>> cat('parts', 'server', 'zeo.conf')
%import foo
<BLANKLINE>
<zeo>
  address 8100
  monitor-address 8101
  transaction-timeout 300
</zeo>
<BLANKLINE>
<foo>
  path /databases/Data.fs
</foo>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /var/log/zeo.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

But we’ll stick with the default:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.

Let’s look at the zdaemon log file:

>>> cat('parts', 'server', 'zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon on
  directory /sample-buildout/parts/server
  program /sample-buildout/bin/runzeo -C /sample-buildout/parts/server/zeo.conf
  socket-name /sample-buildout/parts/server/zdaemon.sock
  transcript /sample-buildout/parts/server/zeo.log
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/parts/server/zeo.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

We run the runzeo script with the zeo.conf file. Log and run-time files are places in the server part directory. We use a transcript log to provide the ZEO server log. I like to use the transacriot log because it captures program output, such as start-up exceptions that aren’t captured in a program’s logs.

And we get a control script generated in our bin directory:

>>> cat('bin', 'server')  # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE +ELLIPSIS
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [...]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import zdaemon.zdctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zdaemon.zdctl.main([
        '-C', '/sample-buildout/parts/server/zdaemon.conf',
        ]+sys.argv[1:]
        ))

This is a zdaemon script. We can use this to control the ZEO server process.

Specifying additional eggs

You can specify additional eggs to be installed for use by the zdaemon script:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... eggs = zope.event
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.

We can see the zope.event egg present in the control script generated in our bin directory:

>>> cat('bin', 'server')  # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE +ELLIPSIS
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [...]
<BLANKLINE>
import zdaemon.zdctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zdaemon.zdctl.main([
        '-C', '/sample-buildout/parts/server/zdaemon.conf',
        ]+sys.argv[1:]
        ))
NB: This is a zdaemon script. If your ZEO server needs additional eggs, such as

to provide additional storage types or log handlers, they should appear in [zodb] section in the above example, NOT the [server] section!

Unix Deployment support

The server recipe works with the zc.recipe.deployment. In particular, if a deployment option is specified, it names a part or section that defines the following uptions:

crontab-directory

A directory for crontab files.

etc-directory

A directory for configuration files.

log-directory

A directory for log files.

logrotate-directory

A directory for logrotate configuration files.

rc-directory

A directory for run-control scripts.

run-directory

A directory for run-time files.

user

The user the server process should run as

Let’s create some directories and add a deployment section to our buildout:

>>> for d in 'cron', 'etc', 'log', 'rotate', 'rc', 'run':
...     mkdir(d)
...     globals()[d] = join(sample_buildout, d)
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
...
... [demo]
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/rc/demo-server'.

Now, the parts directory and the control script will be gone:

>>> import os
>>> os.path.exists(join('parts', 'server'))
False
>>> os.path.exists(join('bin', 'server'))
False

Instead, the control script will be in the rc directory:

>>> cat('rc', 'demo-server')  # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE +ELLIPSIS
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.4
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [...]
<BLANKLINE>
import zdaemon.zdctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(zdaemon.zdctl.main([
        '-C', '/sample-buildout/etc/server-zdaemon.conf',
        ]+sys.argv[1:]
        ))

The run-control script name now combines the deployment name and the script name.

and the configuration files will be in the etc directory:

>>> ls('etc')
-  server-zdaemon.conf
-  server-zeo.conf

Log rotation

If a deployment is used, we’ll also get a logrotate configuration file:

>>> cat('rotate', 'demo-server')
/sample-buildout/log/server-zeo.log {
  rotate 5
  weekly
  postrotate
    /sample-buildout/rc/demo-server -C /sample-buildout/etc/server-zdaemon.conf reopen_transcript
  endscript
}

This will rotate the zeo log file once a week.

If we look at the zdaemon configuration file, we can see that it reflects the deployment locations:

>>> cat('etc', 'server-zdaemon.conf')
<runner>
  daemon on
  directory /sample-buildout/run
  program /sample-buildout/bin/runzeo -C /sample-buildout/etc/server-zeo.conf
  socket-name /sample-buildout/run/server-zdaemon.sock
  transcript /sample-buildout/log/server-zeo.log
  user bob
</runner>
<BLANKLINE>
<eventlog>
  <logfile>
    path /sample-buildout/log/server-zeo.log
  </logfile>
</eventlog>

Note that different file names are used. Since a deployment may be (and usually is) shared by multiple parts, files are prefixed with their part names. Also note that the deployment user is set in the zdaemon configuration.

If you want to manage your own log rotation, you can place “logrotate = false” in your deployment section to prevent the logrotate config being generated:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
...
... [demo]
... logrotate = false
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/rc/demo-server'.

The logrotate config is not there, but the rc script still is:

>>> ls('rotate')
>>> ls('rc')
-  demo-server

If it’s more convenient, this can be placed in the [server] section instead:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
... logrotate = false
...
... [demo]
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout), end='')
Updating zodb.
Updating server.

The logrotate config is not there, but the rc script still is:

>>> ls('rotate')
>>> ls('rc')
-  demo-server

Packing cron job

We can request definition of a cron job to pack the databases by specifying a pack option. This option takes 5 to 7 values. The first 5 values are the time and date fields defined by Unix crontab files. The sixth field is the number of days in the past to pack to and defaults to 1.

Let’s add a pack option:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
... pack = 1 1 * * 0 3
...
... [demo]
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -D'), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/rc/demo-server'.

Now, we’ll get a crontab file:

>>> cat(cron, 'pack-demo-server')
1 1 * * 0 bob /sample-buildout/bin/zeopack -p 8100 -S 1 -d 3

In this example, we’ll pack the databases every Sunday at 1:01 to 3 days.

We can add an email address to the pack option. If we do, then a MAILTO variable will be added to the cron file:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
... pack = 1 1 * * 0 3 jim@zope.com
...
... [demo]
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -D'), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing server.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/rc/demo-server'.
>>> cat(cron, 'pack-demo-server')
MAILTO=jim@zope.com
1 1 * * 0 bob /sample-buildout/bin/zeopack -p 8100 -S 1 -d 3

This causes email to be sent to the given address, rather than to the user specified in the crontab file.

shell start scripts

By default, the startup scripts are generated Python scripts that use the zdaemon module. Sometimes, this is inconvenient. In particular, when deploying software, generated Python scripts may break after a software update because they contain pasths to software eggs. We can request shell scripts that invoke a generic zdaemon script. The shell script only depends on the path to the zdaemon script, which generally doesn’t change when updating softawre.

To request a shell script, add a shell-script option with a true value. We also need to cause a zdaemon script to be generated:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb zdaemon server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [zdaemon]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = zdaemon
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
... pack = 1 1 * * 0 3 jim@zope.com
... shell-script = true
...
... [demo]
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -D'), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Installing zdaemon.
Generated script '/sample-buildout/bin/zdaemon'.
Installing server.
zc.zodbrecipes: Generated shell script '/sample-buildout/rc/demo-server'.
>>> cat('rc', 'demo-server')
#!/bin/sh
su bob -c \
  "/sample-buildout/bin/zdaemon -C '/sample-buildout/etc/server-zdaemon.conf' $*"

Names

Names can be specified for deployments and for individual server parts. These names determine names of files generated.

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb zdaemon server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [zdaemon]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = zdaemon
...
... [server]
... name = Server
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    <zeo>
...       address 8100
...       monitor-address 8101
...       transaction-timeout 300
...    </zeo>
...    %%import foo
...    <foo>
...       path /databases/Data.fs
...    </foo>
... deployment = demo
... pack = 1 1 * * 0 3 jim@zope.com
... shell-script = true
...
... [demo]
... name = Demo
... crontab-directory = %(cron)s
... etc-directory = %(etc)s
... log-directory = %(log)s
... logrotate-directory = %(rotate)s
... rc-directory = %(rc)s
... run-directory = %(run)s
... user = bob
... ''' % globals())
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -D'), end='')
Uninstalling server.
Updating zodb.
Updating zdaemon.
Installing server.
zc.zodbrecipes: Generated shell script '/sample-buildout/rc/Demo-Server'.
>>> ls(cron)
-  pack-Demo-Server
>>> ls(etc)
-  Server-zdaemon.conf
-  Server-zeo.conf
>>> ls(rotate)
-  Demo-Server
>>> ls(rc)
-  Demo-Server

Feedback when you make mistakes

If you make a mistake in your zeo.conf, some errors will result in a simple, informative message being returned:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf =
...    nothing useful
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -q'), end='')
Couldn't clean up '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.
While:
  Installing server.
Error: No zeo section was defined.

If your zeo.conf has a syntax error, you’ll get shown the problematic text and the message from the error:

>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... '''
... [buildout]
... parts = zodb server
...
... [zodb]
... recipe = zc.recipe.egg:script
... eggs = ZEO
...
... [server]
... recipe = zc.zodbrecipes:server
... zeo.conf = <bad
... ''')
>>> print_(system(buildout+' -q'), end='')
Couldn't clean up '/sample-buildout/bin/server'.
While:
  Installing server.
Error: malformed section start (line 1) in:
<bad
<BLANKLINE>

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