linux-system-roles.kernel_settings
Kernel Settings Role
This role is used to modify kernel settings. For example, on Linux, settings
in /proc/sys (using sysctl), /sys/fs, and some other settings. It uses
tuned for its default provider on Enterprise Linux and derivatives (RHEL and
CentOS) and Fedora.
tunedhomepage - https://github.com/redhat-performance/tuned
Requirements
See below
Collection requirements
If you want to manage rpm-ostree systems with this role, you will need to
install additional collections. Please run the following command line to
install the collection.
ansible-galaxy collection install -vv -r meta/collection-requirements.yml
Role Variables
The values for some of the various kernel_settings_GROUP parameters are a
list of dict objects. Each dict has the following keys:
name- Usually Required - The name the setting, or the name of a file under/sysfor thesysfsgroup.nameis omitted when usingreplaced.value- Usually Required - The value for the setting.valueis omitted when usingstateorprevious. Values must not be YAML bool type. One situation where this might be a problem is usingvalue: onor other YAMLbooltyped value. You must quote these values, or otherwise pass them as a value ofstrtype e.g.value: "on".state- Optional - the valueabsentmeans to remove a setting with namenamefrom a group -namemust be providedprevious- Optional - the only value isreplaced- this is used to specify that the previous values in a group should be replaced with the given values.
kernel_settings_sysctl
A list of settings to be applied using sysctl.
The settings are given in the format described above. Note that the settings
are additive - by default, each setting is added to the existing settings, or
replaces the setting of the same name if it already exists. If you want to
remove a specific setting, use state: absent instead of giving a value. If
you want to remove all of the existing sysctl settings and replace them with
the given settings, specify previous: replaced as one of the values in the
list. If you want to remove all of the sysctl settings, use the dict value
{"state": "empty"}, instead of a list, as the only value for the parameter.
See below for examples.
kernel_settings_sysfs
A list of settings to be applied to /sys. The
settings are given in the format described above. Note that the settings are
additive - by default, each setting is added to the existing settings, or
replaces the setting of the same name if it already exists. If you want to
remove a specific setting, use state: absent instead of giving a value. If
you want to remove all of the existing sysfs settings and replace them with
the given settings, specify previous: replaced as one of the values in the
list. If you want to remove all of the sysfs settings, use the dict value
{"state": "empty"}, instead of a list, as the only value for the parameter.
See below for examples.
kernel_settings_systemd_cpu_affinity
To set the value, specify a string in
the format specified by
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-system.conf.html#CPUAffinity=
If you want to remove the setting, use the dict value {"state": "absent"},
instead of a string, as the value for the parameter.
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages
To set the value, specify one of the
following string values: always madvise never. This is the memory
subsystem transparent hugepages value. If you want to remove the setting, use
the dict value {"state": "absent"}, instead of a string, as the value for
the parameter.
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages_defrag
To set the value, specify one
of the following string values: always defer defer+madvise madvise
never. This is the memory subsystem transparent hugepages fragmentation
handling value. The actual supported values may be different depending on your
OS. If you want to remove the setting, use the dict value
{"state": "absent"}, instead of a string, as the value for the parameter.
kernel_settings_purge
default false - If true, then the existing
configuration will be completely wiped out and replaced with your given
kernel_settings_GROUP settings.
kernel_settings_reboot_ok
default false - If true, then if the role
detects that something was changed that requires a reboot to take effect, the
role will reboot the managed host. If false, it is up to you to determine
when to reboot the managed host. The role will return the variable
kernel_settings_reboot_required (see below) with a value of true to indicate
that some change has occurred which needs a reboot to take effect.
kernel_settings_transactional_update_reboot_ok
This variable is used to handle reboots required by transactional updates.
If a transactional update requires a reboot, the role will proceed with the
reboot if kernel_settings_transactional_update_reboot_ok is set to true. If set
to false, the role will notify the user that a reboot is required, allowing
for custom handling of the reboot requirement. If this variable is not set,
the role will fail to ensure the reboot requirement is not overlooked.
Variables Exported by the Role
The role will export the following variables:
kernel_settings_reboot_required - default false - if true, this means a
change has occurred which will require rebooting the managed host in order to
take effect. If you want the role to
reboot the managed host, set kernel_settings_reboot_ok: true, otherwise, you
will need to handle rebooting the machine.
Examples of Settings Usage
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- name: fs.epoll.max_user_watches
value: 785592
- name: fs.file-max
value: 379724
kernel_settings_sysfs:
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/pti_enabled
value: 0
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/retp_enabled
value: 0
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/ibrs_enabled
value: 0
kernel_settings_systemd_cpu_affinity: "1,3,5,7"
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages: madvise
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages_defrag: defer
NOTE that the list valued settings are additive. That is, they are
applied in addition to any current settings. For example, if you already
had
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- name: kernel.threads-max
value: 29968
- name: vm.max_map_count
value: 65530
then after applying the above, you would have
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- name: kernel.threads-max
value: 29968
- name: vm.max_map_count
value: 65530
- name: fs.epoll.max_user_watches
value: 785592
- name: fs.file-max
value: 379724
This allows multiple higher level roles or playbooks to use this role to
provide the kernel settings specific to that component. For example, if you
are installing a web server and a database server on the same machine, and
they both require setting kernel parameters, the kernel_settings role allows
you to set them both.
If you specify multiple settings with the same name in a section, the last one will be used.
If you want to replace all of the settings in a section with your supplied
values, use previous: replaced as a single, preferably first element in the
list of settings. This indicates that the previous settings in the system
should be replaced with the given settings. For example:
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- previous: replaced
- name: kernel.threads-max
value: 30000
- name: vm.max_map_count
value: 50000
This will have the effect of removing all of the existing settings for
kernel_settings_sysctl, and adding the specified settings.
If you want to remove a single setting, specify state: absent in the
individual setting, instead of a value:
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- name: kernel.threads-max
value: 30000
- name: vm.max_map_count
state: absent
This will remove the vm.max_map_count setting from the
kernel_settings_sysctl settings. If you want to remove all of the settings
from a group, specify state: empty as a dict instead of a list:
kernel_settings_sysctl:
state: empty
This will have the effect of removing all of the kernel_settings_sysctl
settings.
Use {"state":"absent"} to remove a scalar valued parameter. For example, to
remove all of kernel_settings_systemd_cpu_affinity,
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages, and
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages_defrag settings, use this:
kernel_settings_systemd_cpu_affinity:
state: absent
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages:
state: absent
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages_defrag:
state: absent
Example Playbook
- name: Manage kernel settings
hosts: all
vars:
kernel_settings_sysctl:
- name: fs.epoll.max_user_watches
value: 785592
- name: fs.file-max
value: 379724
- name: kernel.threads-max
state: absent
kernel_settings_sysfs:
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/pti_enabled
value: 0
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/retp_enabled
value: 0
- name: /sys/kernel/debug/x86/ibrs_enabled
value: 0
kernel_settings_systemd_cpu_affinity: "1,3,5,7"
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages: madvise
kernel_settings_transparent_hugepages_defrag: defer
roles:
- linux-system-roles.kernel_settings
Warnings
The kernel_settings role will cause other sysctl settings to be applied when
using the tuned implementation, which is the default. This can happen when you
manually edit /etc/sysctl.d/ files, or if the sysctl.d files are installed
by some system package. For example, on Fedora, installing the libreswan
package provides /etc/sysctl.d/50-libreswan.conf. Using the kernel_settings
role will cause this file to be reloaded and reapplied. If this behavior is not
desired, you will need to edit the tuned configuration on the managed hosts in
/etc/tuned/tuned-main.conf and set reapply_sysctl=0.
The settings you apply with the kernel_settings role may conflict with other
settings. For example, if you manually run the sysctl command, or manually
edit /etc/sysctl.d/ files, or if the sysctl.d files are installed by some
system package, they may set the same values you are setting with the
kernel_settings role. For sysctl settings, the precedence goes like this:
sysctlfiles have highest precedence -/etc/sysctl.confand/etc/sysctl.d/*will override everythingkernel_settingsrole settings have the next highest precedence- settings set manually using the
sysctlcommand have the lowest precedence
For all other settings such as sysfs, the settings from kernel_settings role
have the highest precedence.
rpm-ostree
See README-ostree.md
License
Some parts related to tuned are GPLv2+. These are noted in the headers
of the files. Everything else is MIT, except where noted. See the file
LICENSE for more information.
Author Information
Rich Megginson (richm on github, rmeggins at my company)
