Hacking API server » History » Revision 19
Revision 18 (Tom Clegg, 08/13/2014 09:46 AM) → Revision 19/20 (Tom Clegg, 08/19/2014 01:16 PM)
h1. Hacking API server {{toc}} h2. Source tree layout Everything is in @/services/api@. Key pieces to know about before going much further: |/|Usual Rails project layout| |/app/controllers/application_controller.rb|Controller superclass with most of the generic API features like CRUD, authentication| |/app/controllers/arvados/v1/|API methods other than generic CRUD (users#current, jobs#queue, ...)| |/app/models/arvados_model.rb|Default Arvados model behavior: permissions, etag, uuid| h2. Unlike a typical Rails project... * Most responses are JSON. Very few HTML views. We don't normally talk to browsers, except during authentication. * We assign UUID strings (see lib/assign_uuid.rb and app/models/arvados_model.rb) * The @Links@ table emulates a graph database a la "RDF":http://www.rdfabout.com/quickintro.xpd. Much of the interesting information in Arvados is recorded as a Link between two other entities. * For the most part, relations among objects are not expressed with the usual ActiveRelation features like belongs_to and has_many. * Permissions: see below. h2. Running in development mode First, take care of the dependencies documented at http://doc.arvados.org/install/install-api-server.html. Save something like this at @~/bin/apiserver@, make it executable, make sure ~/bin is in your path: <pre> #!/bin/sh set -e cd ~/arvados/services/api if ! [ -e self-signed.key ] then # Generate a self-signed SSL key openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -out ./self-signed.pem -keyout ./self-signed.key -days 3650 -subj /CN=localhost fi if [ -e /usr/local/rvm/bin/rvm ] then rvmexec="rvm-exec 2.1.1" else rvmexec="" fi export ARVADOS_WEBSOCKETS=true export RAILS_ENV=development $rvmexec bundle install exec $rvmexec bundle exec passenger start -p3030 --ssl --ssl-certificate self-signed.pem --ssl-certificate-key self-signed.key </pre> Notes: * Here we use passenger instead of webrick (which is what we'd get with "@rails server@") in order to serve websockets from the same process as https. (You also have the option of serving https and wss from separate processes -- see @services/api/config/application.default.yml@ -- but the simplest way is to run both in the same process by setting @ARVADOS_WEBSOCKETS=true@.) * Webrick can make its own self-signed SSL certificate, but passenger expects you to provide a certificate & key yourself. The above script generates a key/certificate pair the first time it runs, and leaves it in @services/api/self-signed.*@ to reuse next time. * @bundle install@ ensures your installed gems satisfy the requirements in Gemfile and (if you have changed it locally) update Gemfile.lock appropriately. This should do the right thing after you change Gemfile yourself, or change Gemfile/Gemfile.lock by updating/merging master. * If you're relying on rvm to provide a suitable version of Ruby, "@rvm-exec@" should do the right thing here. You can change the @2.1.1@ argument to the version you want to use (hopefully >= 2.1.1). If your system Ruby is >= 2.1.1, rvm is unnecessary. * You can kill the server by running <pre> passenger stop --pid-file ~/arvados/services/api/tmp/pids/passenger.3030.pid </pre> h2. Headaches to avoid If you make a change that affects the discovery document, you need to clear a few caches before your client will see the change. * Restart API server or: @touch tmp/restart.txt@ * Clear API server disk cache: @rake tmp:cache:clear@ * Clear SDK discovery doc cache on client side: @rm -r ~/.cache/arvados/@ Do not store symbol keys (or values) in serialized attributes. * Rails supplies @params@ as a HashWithIndifferentAccess so @params['foo']@ and @params[:foo]@ are equivalent. This is usually convenient. However, here we often copy arrays and hashes from @params@ to the database, and from there to API responses. JSON does not have HashWithIndifferentAccess (or symbols) and we want these serialized attributes to behave predictably everywhere. * API server's policy is that serialized attributes (like @properties@ on a link) always have strings instead of symbols: these attributes look the same in the database, in the API server Rails application, in the JSON response sent to clients, and in the JSON objects received from clients. * There is no validation (yet!) to check for this. When @script/crunch-dispatch.rb@ invokes @arv-run-pipeline-instance@ and @crunch-job@, it uses the version of arvados-cli specified in @Gemfile.lock@. Use @bundle update arvados-cli@ to update @Gemfile.lock@ to use the latest versions. h2. Features h3. Authentication Involves * UserSessionsController (in app/controllers/, not .../arvados/v1): this is an exceptional case where we actually talk to a browser. h3. Permissions Object-level permissions, aka ownership and sharing * Writing ** Models have their own idea of create/update permissions. Controllers don't worry about this. ** * ArvadosModel updates/enforces modified_by_* and owner_uuid * Reading ** Lookups are not (yet) permission-restricted in the default scope, i.e., when calling Model.where(foo: 'bar'). ** though. Controllers need to *use @Model.readable_by(current_user)@ when appropriate.* use Model.readable_by(user). ** The other most important permission method is *@User#groups_i_can(verb)@*. For example, @user_object.groups_i_can(:write)@ returns an array of UUIDs of groups (including projects and other kinds of groups) where @user_object@ has @write@ permission. (For example, @readable_by@ uses this to determine which values of owner_uuid and permission link tail_uuid could establish permission on a given database record for the user in question.) * ApplicationController uses an around_filter that verifies the supplied api_token and makes current_user available everywhere. If you need to override create/update permissions, use @act_as_system_user do ... end@. * Unusual cases: KeepDisks and Collections can be looked up by inactive users (otherwise they wouldn't be able to read & clickthrough user agreements). Controller-level permissions * ApplicationController#require_auth_scope_all checks token scopes: currently, unless otherwise specified by a subclass controller, nothing is allowed unless scopes includes "all". * ApplicationController has an admin_required filter available (not used by default) h3. Error handling * "Look up object by uuid, and send 404 if not found" is enabled by default, except for index/create actions. h3. Routing * API routes are in the @:arvados@ → @:v1@ namespace. * Routes like @/jobs/queue@ have to come before @resources :jobs@ (otherwise @/jobs/queue@ will match @jobs#get(id=queue)@ first). (Better, we should rearrange these to use @resources :jobs do ...@ like in Workbench.) * We use the standard Rails routes like @/jobs/:id@ but then we move params[:id] to params[:uuid] in our before_filters. h3. Tests * Run tests with @rvm-exec 2.1.1 bundle exec rake test@ * If prompted, migrate your test database by running @RAILS_ENV=test rvm-exec 2.1.1 bundle exec rake db:migrate@ * As above, you can leave out @rvm-exec 2.1.1@ if your system Ruby version is suitable. But don't leave out @bundle exec@. * Run just the unit tests with @[...] rake test:units@ (or @test:functionals@ or @test:integration@). * Run just a single test class (file) by specifying the file, like @[...] rake TEST=test/unit/owner_test.rb@ (save time in your "did that fix the failing test?" phase!) * Functional tests need to authenticate themselves with @authorize_with :active@ (where @:active@ refers to an ApiClientAuthorization fixture) * There is a deficit of tests, especially unit tests. This is a bug! It doesn't mean we don't want to test things. h3. Discovery document * Mostly, but not yet completely, generated by introspection (descendants of ArvadosModel are inspected at run time). But some controllers/actions are skipped, and some actions are renamed (e.g., Rails calls it "show" but everyone else calls it "get"). * Handled by Arvados::V1::SchemaController#index (used to be in #discovery_document before #1750). See @config/routes.rb@ * Must be available to anonymous clients. * Has no tests! We test it by trying all of our SDKs against it. h2. Development patterns h3. Add a model In shell: * @rails g model FizzBuzz@ In @app/models/fizzbuzz.rb@: * Change base class from @ActiveRecord::Base@ to @ArvadosModel@. * Add some more standard behavior. <pre><code class="ruby"> include HasUuid include KindAndEtag include CommonApiTemplate </code></pre> In @db/migrate/{timestamp}_create_fizzbuzzes.rb@: * Add the generic attribute columns. * Run @t.timestamps@ and add (at least!) a @:uuid@ index. <pre><code class="ruby"> class CreateFizzBuzz < ActiveRecord::Migration def change create_table :fizzbuzzes do |t| t.string :uuid, :null => false t.string :owner_uuid, :null => false t.string :modified_by_client_uuid t.string :modified_by_user_uuid t.datetime :modified_at t.text :properties t.timestamps end add_index :humans, :uuid, :unique => true end end </code></pre> Apply the migration: * @rake db:migrate@ * @RAILS_ENV=test rake db:migrate@ (to migrate your test database too) * Inspect the resulting @db/schema.rb@ and include it in your commit. * Don't forget to @git add@ the new migration and model files. h3. Add an attribute to a model * Generate migration as usual <pre> rails g migration AddBazQuxToFooBar baz_qux:column_type_goes_here </pre> * Consider adding null constraints and a default value to the @add_column@ statement in the migration in @db/migrate/timestamp_add_baz_qux_to_foo_bar.rb@: <pre><code class="ruby">, null: false, default: false</code></pre> * Consider adding an index * You probably want to add it to the API response template(s) so clients can see it: @app/models/model_name.rb@ → @api_accessible :user ...@ * Sometimes it's only visible to privileged users; see @ping_secret@ in @app/models/keep_disk.rb@ * If it's a serialized attribute, add @serialize :the_attribute_name, Hash@ to the model. Always specify Hash or Array! * Run @rake db:migrate@ and inspect your @db/schema.rb@ and include the new @schema.rb@ in the *same commit* as your @db/migrate/*.rb@ migration script. * Run @rake tmp:cache:clear@ and @touch tmp/restart.txt@ in your dev apiserver, to force it to generate a new REST discovery document. h3. Add a controller * @rails g controller Arvados::V1::FizzBuzzes@ * Avoid adding top-level controllers like @app/controllers/fizz_buzzes_controller.rb@. * Avoid adding top-level routes. Everything should be in @namespace :arvados@ → @namespace :v1@ except oddballs like login/logout actions. h3. Add a controller action Add a route in @config/routes.rb@. * Choose an appropriate HTTP method: GET has no side effects. POST creates something. PUT replaces/updates something. * Use the block form: <pre><code class="ruby"> resources :fizz_buzzes do # If the action operates on an object, i.e., a uuid is required, # this generates a route /arvados/v1/fizz_buzzes/{uuid}/blurfl post 'blurfl', on: :member # If not, this generates a route /arvados/v1/fizz_buzzes/flurbl get 'flurbl', on: :collection end </code></pre> In @app/controllers/arvados/v1/fizz_buzzes_controller.rb@: * Add a method to the controller class. * Skip the "find_object" before_filters if it's a collection action. * Specify required/optional parameters using a class method @_action_requires_parameters@. <pre><code class="ruby"> skip_before_filter :find_object_by_uuid, only: [:flurbl] skip_before_filter :render_404_if_no_object, only: [:flurbl] def blurfl @object.do_whatever_blurfl_does! show end def self._flurbl_requires_parameters { qux: { type: 'integer', required: true, description: 'First flurbl qux must match this qux.' } } end def flurbl @object = model_class.where('qux = ?', params[:qux]).first show end </code></pre> h3. Add a configuration parameter * Add it to @config/application.default.yml@ with a sensible default value. (Don't fall back to default values at time of use, or define defaults in other places!) * If there is no sensible default value, like @secret_token@: specify @~@ (i.e., nil) in @application.default.yml@ *and* put a default value in the @test@ section of @config/application.yml.example@ that will make tests pass. * If there is a sensible default value for development/test but not for production, like return address for notification email messages, specify the test/dev default in the @common@ section @application.default.yml@ but specify @~@ (nil) in the @production@ section. This prevents someone from installing or *updating a production server* with defaults that don't make sense in production! * Use @Rails.configuration.config_setting_name@ to retrieve the configured value. There is no need to check whether it is nil or missing: in those cases, "rake config:check" would have failed and the application would have refused to start. h3. Add a test fixture Generate last part of uuid from command line: <pre><code class="ruby">ruby -e 'puts rand(2**512).to_s(36)[0..14]' j0wqrlny07k1u12</code></pre> Generate uuid from @rails console@: <pre><code class="ruby">Group.generate_uuid => "xyzzy-j7d0g-8nw4r6gnnkixw1i" </code></pre>