Command Line
The command line tools are at the core of a deployment. Every installation ships with the following executables:
tenzir
: runs a pipelinetenzir-node
: spawns a node
There is also the tenzir-ctl
"master" executable to invoke various commands.
This is a temporary solution that we will sunset in the future after having
migrated its functionality into tenzir
and tenzir-node
.
The executables support several configuration options:
- Command-line arguments
- Environment variables
- Configuration files
- Compile-time defaults
These options are sorted by precedence, i.e., command-line arguments override environment variables, which override configuration file settings. Compile-time defaults can only be changed by rebuilding Tenzir from source.
Let's discuss the first three options in more detail.
Command Line Arguments
The command line arguments of the executables have the following synopis:
tenzir [opts] <pipeline>
tenzir-node [opts]
tenzir-ctl [opts] cmd1 [opts1] cmd2 [opts2] ...
We have both long --long=X
and short -s X
options. Boolean options do not
require explicit specification of a value, and it suffices to write --long
and
-s
to set an option to true. For tenzir-ctl
, =
is mandatory for long
options. This differs from pipeline operator options where =
is optional.
Get help
You get short usage instructions for every command by adding the help
sub-command or providing the option --help
(which has the shorthand -h
):
tenzir-ctl help
tenzir-ctl --help
tenzir-ctl -h
The same help pattern applies to (sub-)commands:
tenzir-ctl export help
tenzir-ctl export --help
tenzir-ctl export -h
Environment Variables
In addition to the command line, Tenzir offers environment variables as an equivalent mechanism to provide options. This comes in handy when working with non-interactive deployments where the command line is hard-coded, such as in Docker containers.
An environment variable has the form KEY=VALUE
, and we discuss the format of
KEY
and VALUE
below. Tenzir processes only environment variables having the
form TENZIR_{KEY}=VALUE
. For example, TENZIR_ENDPOINT=1.2.3.4
translates to
the the command line option --endpoint=1.2.3.4
and YAML configuration
tenzir.endpoint: 1.2.3.4
.
Regarding precedence, environment variables override configuration file settings, and command line arguments override environment variables.
Keys
There exists a one-to-one mapping from configuration file keys to environment variable names. Here are two examples:
tenzir.import.batch-size
👈 configuration file keyTENZIR_IMPORT__BATCH_SIZE
👈 environment variable
A hierarchical key of the form tenzir.x.y.z
maps to the environment variable
TENZIR_X__Y__Z
. More generally, the KEY
in TENZIR_{KEY}=VALUE
adheres to
the following rules:
Double underscores map to the
.
separator of YAML dictionaries.Single underscores
_
map to a-
in the corresponding configuration file key. This is unambiguous because Tenzir does not have any options that include a literal underscore.
From the perspective of the command line, the environment variable key
TENZIR_X__Y__Z
maps to tenzir-ctl x y --z
. Here are two examples with
identical semantics:
TENZIR_IMPORT__BATCH_SIZE=42 tenzir-ctl import json < data
tenzir-ctl import --batch-size=42 json < data
To provide CAF and plugin settings, which have the form caf.x.y.z
and
plugins.name.x.y.z
in the configuration file, the environment variable must
have the form TENZIR_CAF__X__Y__Z
and TENZIR_PLUGINS__NAME__X__Y__Z
respectively.
The configuration file is an exception in this regard: tenzir.caf.
and
tenzir.plugins.
are invalid key prefixes. Instead, CAF and plugin
configuration file keys have the prefixes caf.
and plugins.
, i.e., they are
hoisted into the global scope.
Values
While all environment variables are strings on the shell, Tenzir parses them into a typed value internally. In general, parsing values from the environment follows the same syntactical rules as command line parsing.
In particular, this applies to lists. For example, TENZIR_PLUGINS="foo,bar"
is equivalent to --plugins=foo,bar
.
Tenzir ignores environment variables with an empty value because the type cannot
be inferred. For example, TENZIR_PLUGINS=
will not be considered.
Configuration files
Tenzir's configuration file is in YAML format. On startup, Tenzir attempts to read configuration files from the following places, in order:
<sysconfdir>/tenzir/tenzir.yaml
for system-wide configuration, wheresysconfdir
is the platform-specific directory for configuration files, e.g.,<install-prefix>/etc
.~/.config/tenzir/tenzir.yaml
for user-specific configuration. Tenzir respects the XDG base directory specification and its environment variables.A path to a configuration file passed via
--config=/path/to/tenzir.yaml
.
If there exist configuration files in multiple locations, options from all configuration files are merged in order, with the latter files receiving a higher precedence than former ones. For lists, merging means concatenating the list elements.
Plugin Configuration Files
In addition to tenzir/tenzir.yaml
, Tenzir loads tenzir/plugin/<plugin>.yaml
for plugin-specific configuration for a given plugin named <plugin>
. The same
rules apply as for the regular configuration file directory lookup.
Bare Mode
Sometimes, users may wish to run Tenzir without side effects, e.g., when
wrapping Tenzir in their own scripts. Run with --bare-mode
to disable looking
at all system- and user-specified configuration paths.
Plugins
Tenzir's plugin architecture allows for flexible replacement and enhancement of functionality at various pre-defined customization points. There exist dynamic plugins that ship as shared libraries and static plugins that are compiled into libtenzir.
Install plugins
Dynamic plugins are just shared libraries and can be placed at a location of
your choice. We recommend putting them into a single directory and add the path
to the tenzir.plugin-dirs
configuration option..
Static plugins do not require installation since they are compiled into Tenzir.
Load plugins
The onfiguration key tenzir.plugins
specifies the list of plugins that should
load at startup. The all
plugin name is reserved. When all
is specified
Tenzir loads all available plugins in the configured plugin directories. If no
tenzir.plugins
key is specified, Tenzir will load all
plugins by default.
To load no plugins at all, specify a tenzir.plugins
configuration key with no
plugin values, e.g. the configuration file entry plugins: []
or launch
parameter --plugins=
.
Since dynamic plugins are shared libraries, they must be loaded first into the
running Tenzir process. At startup, Tenzir looks for the tenzir.plugins
inside
the tenzir.plugin-dirs
directories configured in tenzir.yaml
. For example:
tenzir:
plugin-dirs:
- .
- /opt/foo/lib
plugins:
- example
- /opt/bar/lib/libtenzir-plugin-example.so
Before executing plugin code, Tenzir loads the specified plugins via dlopen(3)
and attempts to initialize them as plugins. Part of the initilization is passing
configuration options to the plugin. To this end, Tenzir looks for a YAML
dictionary under plugins.<name>
in the tenzir.yaml
file. For example:
# <configdir>/tenzir/tenzir.yaml
plugins:
example:
option: 42
Alternatively, you can specify a plugin/<plugin>.yaml
file. The example
configurations above and below are equivalent. This makes plugin deployments
easier, as plugins can be installed and uninstalled alongside their respective
configuration.
# <configdir>/tenzir/plugin/example.yaml
option: 42
After initialization with the configuration options, the plugin is fully operational and Tenzir will call its functions at the plugin-specific customization points.
List plugins
You can get the list of available plugins using the
show
operator:
tenzir 'show plugins'