blob: 1f8f7dbd87aa537d076a11a37e06b7c7a0727dcb [file] [log] [blame]
:title: Tenant Configuration
.. _tenant-config:
Tenant Configuration
====================
After *zuul.conf* is configured, Zuul component servers will be able
to start, but a tenant configuration is required in order for Zuul to
perform any actions. The tenant configuration file specifies upon
which projects Zuul should operate. These repositories are
grouped into tenants. The configuration of each tenant is separate
from the rest (no pipelines, jobs, etc are shared between them).
A project may appear in more than one tenant; this may be useful if
you wish to use common job definitions across multiple tenants.
The tenant configuration file is specified by the *tenant_config*
setting in the *scheduler* section of *zuul.yaml*. It is a YAML file
which, like other Zuul configuration files, is a list of configuration
objects, though only one type of object is supported, *tenant*.
Tenant
------
A tenant is a collection of projects which share a Zuul
configuration. An example tenant definition is::
- tenant:
name: my-tenant
max-nodes-per-job: 5
source:
gerrit:
config-projects:
- common-config
- shared-jobs:
include: job
untrusted-projects:
- zuul-jobs:
shadow: common-config
- project1
- project2
The following attributes are supported:
**name** (required)
The name of the tenant. This may appear in URLs, paths, and
monitoring fields, and so should be restricted to URL friendly
characters (ASCII letters, numbers, hyphen and underscore) and you
should avoid changing it unless necessary.
**max-nodes-per-job** (optional)
The maximum number of nodes a job can request, default to 5.
A '-1' value removes the limit.
**source** (required)
A dictionary of sources to consult for projects. A tenant may
contain projects from multiple sources; each of those sources must
be listed here, along with the projects it supports. The name of a
:ref:`connection<connections>` is used as the dictionary key
(e.g. `gerrit` in the example above), and the value is a further
dictionary containing the keys below.
**config-projects**
A list of projects to be treated as config projects in this
tenant. The jobs in a config project are trusted, which means
they run with extra privileges, do not have their configuration
dynamically loaded for proposed changes, and zuul.yaml files are
only searched for in the master branch.
**untrusted-projects**
A list of projects to be treated as untrusted in this tenant. An
untrusted project is the typical project operated on by Zuul.
Their jobs run in a more restrictive environment, they may not
define pipelines, their configuration dynamically changes in
response to proposed changes, Zuul will read configuration files
in all of their branches.
Each of the projects listed may be either a simple string value, or
it may be a dictionary with the following keys:
**include**
Normally Zuul will load all of the configuration classes
appropriate for the type of project (config or untrusted) in
question. However, if you only want to load some items, the
*include* attribute can be used to specify that *only* the
specified classes should be loaded. Supplied as a string, or a
list of strings.
**exclude**
A list of configuration classes that should not be loaded.
**shadow**
A list of projects which this project is permitted to shadow.
Normally, only one project in Zuul may contain definitions for a
given job. If a project earlier in the configuration defines a
job which a later project redefines, the later definition is
considered an error and is not permitted. The "shadow" attribute
of a project indicates that job definitions in this project which
conflict with the named projects should be ignored, and those in
the named project should be used instead. The named projects must
still appear earlier in the configuration. In the example above,
if a job definition appears in both the "common-config" and
"zuul-jobs" projects, the definition in "common-config" will be
used.
The order of the projects listed in a tenant is important. A job
which is defined in one project may not be redefined in another
project; therefore, once a job appears in one project, a project
listed later will be unable to define a job with that name.
Further, some aspects of project configuration (such as the merge
mode) may only be set on the first appearance of a project
definition.
Zuul loads the configuration from all *config-projects* in the order
listed, followed by all *trusted-projects* in order.