Implementing actions in Juju charms
× Caution! These older versions of Juju documentation are no longer maintained and are provided for reference only. See docs.jujucharms.com for the current, supported documentation.

Actions for the Charm author

Actions are scripts, binaries, or other executables defined on a charm which may be invoked or queued remotely by the user on demand. For example, the Charm author might include a snapshot Action on a database Charm.
See here for more on Actions and their use.

The user may give arguments when invoking the action. Complex, nested arguments are possible. The charm uses a file named actions.yaml to specify the type and parameters of these arguments. On the Juju GUI, the UI for an action invocation will be automatically built based on actions.yaml.

Action Tools may be used by the author to define how Actions interact with Juju. Actions can retrieve params passed by the user, set responses in a map, or set a failure status with a message.

Defining Actions

To define the Actions available on a Charm, executables (scripts, binaries, etc.) for each Action must be included in the /actions directory in the Charm, and the name of each executable must be a top-level key in a YAML map in /actions.yaml in the Charm root:

Charm dir:

├── actions
│   ├── pause
│   ├── resume
│   └── snapshot
├── actions.yaml
...

actions.yaml defining three rudimentary Actions:

pause:
  description: Pause the database.
resume:
  description: Resume a paused database.
snapshot:
  description: Take a snapshot of the database.

Actions may be called with parameters. These parameters are specified as a child YAML map under a params key for each Action in actions.yaml. Note that Actions support JSON-Schema to enable nested schemas, and many other features.

A simple Action schema showing the use of params

snapshot:
  description: Take a snapshot of the database.
  params:
    outfile:
      type: string
      description: The filename to write to.
  required: [outfile]
  additionalProperties: false

See below for a more detailed example.

Schema Requirements

actions.yaml must be included in the charm root, and must conform to the following requirements:

  • Each Action is defined as a top-level key of a YAML map, with the same name as the script it defines.
  • The value of each Action must be a map, which should include a description key and may include a params key to define a schema. If no description is given, a default empty description will be used.
  • The value of params, if it is included, must be a YAML map. Each key under params must be a string, and must have valid JSON-Schema as its value, transformed to a YAML map. JSON-Schema may be nested to create complex schemas.
  • JSON-Schema defines special keys such as required and additionalProperties, which may be given for the whole action at the same level as description and params, or within nested schemas at the usual level.
  • At this time, the $schema and $ref keys are not supported by Juju, as they may trigger resolution of remote objects and other issues.
  • additionalProperties: false should be included at the same level as the description key if additional params passed by the user should be rejected.

Example Schema

Charm dir:

├── actions
│   ├── report
│   └── snapshot
├── actions.yaml
...

actions.yaml example

# actions.yaml

report:
  description: Make a report of the system status.
snapshot:
  description: Take a snapshot of the database.
  params:
    filename:
      type: string
      description: The name of the snapshot file.
    compression:
      type: object
      description: The type of compression to use.
      properties:
        kind:
          type: string
          enum: [gzip, bzip2, xz]
        quality:
          description: Compression quality
          type: integer
          minimum: 0
          maximum: 9
  required: [filename]
  additionalProperties: false

This schema would support a call such as:

juju action do mysql/0 snapshot filename=out.tar.gz compression.kind=gzip

Action Tools

Three tools are provided to the Action author for the Action to interact with Juju:

  • action-get retrieves the params passed when invoking the Action.
  • action-set sets values in a map to be returned after the Action finishes.
  • action-fail sets the Action status to failed when it finishes, with a message to be returned to the user. The results set by action-set are preserved.

Use juju help-tool <tool name> to see more detail on each tool.

action-get

action-get prints the value of the parameter at the given key, serialized according to the --format option. If multiple keys are passed, action-get will recurse into the param map as needed.

For example, if an action named snapshot was defined on a mysql charm, and was invoked by the user as follows:

juju action do mysql/0 snapshot outfile="foo"

then the snapshot could use action-get to retrieve the filename as follows:

#!/bin/bash
# An Action named "snapshot"

action-get outfile
# "foo" will be printed

action-set

action-set permits the Action to set results in a map to be returned at completion of the Action.

Example:

#!/bin/bash
# An Action named "report"

action-set result-map.time-completed="$(date)" result-map.message="Hello world!"
action-set outcome="success"

Results for this Action

juju action fetch <some action ID>

# ...
message: "" # No error message.
results:
  result-map:
    time-completed: <some date>
    message: Hello world!
  outcome: success
status: completed

Note that there are some restrictions on the names you can give to action keys: they must start and end with lowercase alphanumeric characters, and only contain lowercase alphanumeric characters, the hyphen "-" or full stop"." characters.

action-fail

action-fail causes the Action to finish as failed after completion. This might be used to indicate a full disk if a database dump was attempted, or perhaps to indicate that a remote service was unable to be resolved. The results set by action-set before or after failure are retained, and an Action fail status cannot be unset.

Example:

# An Action named "sayhello"
command=$(action-get command)

action-set received.value="$command"

if [ "$command" != "hello" ];
  then
    action-fail "I only know one command."
    action-set received.known="no"
  else
    action-set received.known="yes"
fi

action-set timestamp="$(date)"
juju action do <unit> sayhello command="greetme"
# ...

Results

message: I only know one command.
results:
  received:
    known: no
    value: greetme
  timestamp: Thu Jan 15 13:28:25 EST 2015
status: failed

Params Transformation

This section specifies the transformation from params to JSON-Schema. This is meant as a clarifying aid to creating more complex schemas and should not be necessary for most Actions. If that is what the reader seeks, read on!

The params key of an action in actions.yaml defines a YAML map which is transformed to JSON-Schema as follows:

# actions.yaml
<string A>:
  [description: <string AB>]
  [params:
    <string PAA>:
      <YAML map YAA>
    <string PAB>:
      <YAML map YAB>]
  [string C]: X
  [string D]: Y
  [string ...]: Z
<string B>:
  ...

will define an Action for <A> (and <B>, <C>, and so on) with JSON-Schema:

{
  "description": "<AB>",
  "title": "<A>",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "<PAA>": {YAA as JSON},
    "<PAB>": {YAB as JSON}
  },
  "required": ["filename"],
  "<C>": X,
  "<D>": Y,
  ...
}

which is valid JSON-Schema.

Simple YAML transform example

For example, a simple schema such as:

# actions.yaml
snapshot:
  description: Take a snapshot of the database.
  params:
    outfile:
      type: string

will be transformed to an Action with JSON-Schema:

{
  "description": "Take a snapshot of the database.",
  "title": "snapshot",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "outfile": {
      "type": "string"
    }
  }
}

More complex YAML transform example

The first example given at the top of this document would transform as follows:

# actions.yaml
report:
snapshot:
  description: Take a snapshot of the database.
  params:
    filename:
      type: string
      description: The name of the snapshot file.
    compression:
      type: object
      description: The type of compression to use.
      properties:
        kind:
          type: string
          enum: [gzip, bzip2, xz]
        quality:
          description: Compression quality
          type: integer
          minimum: 0
          maximum: 9
  required: [filename]
  additionalProperties: false

becomes two Actions, with respective JSON-Schema:

report:

{
  "description": "No description",
  "title": "report",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {}
}

snapshot:

{
  "description": "Take a snapshot of the database.",
  "title": "snapshot",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "filename": {
      "type": "string",
      "description": "The name of the snapshot file."
    },
    "compression": {
      "type": "object",
      "description": "The type of compression to use.",
      "properties": {
        "kind": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": ["gzip", "bzip2", "xz"]
        },
        "description": {
          "type": "integer",
          "description": "Compression quality",
          "minimum": 0,
          "maximum": 9
        }
      }
    }
  },
  "required": ["filename"],
  "additionalProperties": "false"
}