Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
204 lines (141 loc) · 7.3 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

204 lines (141 loc) · 7.3 KB


Chaos Toolkit - Chaos Engineering for Everyone

Release Build GitHub issues License Python version

CommunityChangeLog


Purpose

The purpose of this library is to provide the core of the Chaos Toolkit model and functions it needs to render its services.

Features

The library provides the followings features:

  • discover capabilities from extensions Allows you to explore the support from an extension that would help you initialize an experiment against the system this extension targets

  • validate a given experiment syntax The validation looks at various keys in the experiment and raises errors whenever something doesn't look right. As a nice addition, when a probe calls a Python function with arguments, it tries to validate the given argument list matches the signature of the function to apply.

  • run your steady state before and after the method. The former as a gate to decide if the experiment can be executed. The latter to see if the system deviated from normal.

  • run probes and actions declared in an experiment It runs the steps in a experiment method sequentially, applying first steady probes, then actions and finally close probes.

    A journal, as a JSON payload, is return of the experiment run.

    The library supports running probes and actions defined as Python functions, from importable Python modules, processes and HTTP calls.

  • run experiment's rollbacks when provided

  • Load secrets from the experiments, the environ or vault

  • Provides event notification from Chaos Toolkit flow (although the actual events are published by the CLI itself, not from this library), supported events are:

    • on experiment validation: started, failed or completed
    • on discovery: started, failed or completed
    • on initialization of experiments: started, failed or completed
    • on experiment runs: started, failed or completed

    For each event, the according payload is part of the event as well as a UTC timestamp.

Install

If you are user of the Chaos Toolkit, you probably do not need to install this package yourself as it comes along with the chaostoolkit cli.

However, should you wish to integrate this library in your own Python code, please install it as usual:

$ pip install -U chaostoolkit-lib

Specific dependencies

In addition to essential dependencies, the package can install a couple of other extra dependencies for specific use-cases. They are not mandatory and the library will warn you if you try to use a feature that requires them.

Vault

If you need Vault support to read secrets from, run the following command:

$ pip install -U chaostoolkit-lib[vault]

To authenticate with Vault, you can either:

  • Use a token through the vault_token configuration key
  • Use an AppRole via the vault_role_id, vault_secret_id pair of configuration keys
  • Use a service account configured with an appropriate role via the vault_sa_role configuration key. The vault_sa_token_path, vault_k8s_mount_point, and vault_secrets_mount_point configuration keys can optionally be specified to point to a location containing a service account token, a different Kubernetes authentication method mount point, or a different secrets mount point, respectively.

JSON Path

If you need JSON Path support for tolerance probes in the hypothesis, also run the following command:

$ pip install -U chaostoolkit-lib[jsonpath]

Contribute

Contributors to this project are welcome as this is an open-source effort that seeks discussions and continuous improvement.

From a code perspective, if you wish to contribute, you will need to run a Python 3.6+ environment. Please, fork this project, write unit tests to cover the proposed changes, implement the changes, ensure they meet the formatting standards set out by black, flake8, and isort, add an entry into CHANGELOG.md, and then raise a PR to the repository for review.

Please refer to the formatting section for more information on the formatting standards.

The Chaos Toolkit projects require all contributors must sign a Developer Certificate of Origin on each commit they would like to merge into the master branch of the repository. Please, make sure you can abide by the rules of the DCO before submitting a PR.

Develop

If you wish to develop on this project, make sure to install the development dependencies. To do so, first install pdm.

$ pdm install --dev

Now, you can edit the files and they will be automatically be seen by your environment, even when running from the chaos command locally.

Test

To run the tests for the project execute the following:

$ pdm run test

Formatting and Linting

We use ruff to perform linting and code style.

Before raising a Pull Request, we recommend you run formatting against your code with:

$ pdm run format

This will automatically format any code that doesn't adhere to the formatting standards.

As some things are not picked up by the formatting, we also recommend you run:

$ pdm run lint

To ensure that any unused import statements/strings that are too long, etc. are also picked up.