proxysql_scheduler – Adds or removes schedules from proxysql admin interface.¶
New in version 2.3.
Synopsis¶
- The proxysql_scheduler module adds or removes schedules using the proxysql admin interface.
Requirements¶
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- PyMySQL (Python 2.7 and Python 3.X), or
- MySQLdb (Python 2.x)
Parameters¶
Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments |
---|---|---|
active
-
|
Default: "yes"
|
A schedule with active set to
False will be tracked in the database, but will be never loaded in the in-memory data structures. |
arg1
-
|
Argument that can be passed to the job.
|
|
arg2
-
|
Argument that can be passed to the job.
|
|
arg3
-
|
Argument that can be passed to the job.
|
|
arg4
-
|
Argument that can be passed to the job.
|
|
arg5
-
|
Argument that can be passed to the job.
|
|
comment
-
|
Text field that can be used for any purposed defined by the user.
|
|
config_file
-
|
Default: ""
|
Specify a config file from which login_user and login_password are to be read.
|
filename
-
/ required
|
Full path of the executable to be executed.
|
|
force_delete
-
|
Default: "no"
|
By default we avoid deleting more than one schedule in a single batch, however if you need this behaviour and you're not concerned about the schedules deleted, you can set force_delete to
True . |
interval_ms
-
|
Default: 10000
|
How often (in millisecond) the job will be started. The minimum value for interval_ms is 100 milliseconds.
|
load_to_runtime
boolean
|
|
Dynamically load config to runtime memory.
|
login_host
-
|
Default: "127.0.0.1"
|
The host used to connect to ProxySQL admin interface.
|
login_password
-
|
The password used to authenticate to ProxySQL admin interface.
|
|
login_port
-
|
Default: 6032
|
The port used to connect to ProxySQL admin interface.
|
login_user
-
|
The username used to authenticate to ProxySQL admin interface.
|
|
save_to_disk
boolean
|
|
Save config to sqlite db on disk to persist the configuration.
|
state
-
|
|
When
present - adds the schedule, when absent - removes the schedule. |
Examples¶
---
# This example adds a schedule, it saves the scheduler config to disk, but
# avoids loading the scheduler config to runtime (this might be because
# several servers are being added and the user wants to push the config to
# runtime in a single batch using the M(proxysql_manage_config) module). It
# uses supplied credentials to connect to the proxysql admin interface.
- proxysql_scheduler:
login_user: 'admin'
login_password: 'admin'
interval_ms: 1000
filename: "/opt/maintenance.py"
state: present
load_to_runtime: False
# This example removes a schedule, saves the scheduler config to disk, and
# dynamically loads the scheduler config to runtime. It uses credentials
# in a supplied config file to connect to the proxysql admin interface.
- proxysql_scheduler:
config_file: '~/proxysql.cnf'
filename: "/opt/old_script.py"
state: absent
Return Values¶
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key | Returned | Description |
---|---|---|
stdout
dictionary
|
On create/update will return the newly modified schedule, on delete it will return the deleted record. |
The schedule modified or removed from proxysql
Sample:
{'changed': True, 'filename': '/opt/test.py', 'msg': 'Added schedule to scheduler', 'schedules': [{'active': '1', 'arg1': None, 'arg2': None, 'arg3': None, 'arg4': None, 'arg5': None, 'comment': '', 'filename': '/opt/test.py', 'id': '1', 'interval_ms': '10000'}], 'state': 'present'}
|
Status¶
- This module is guaranteed to have no backward incompatible interface changes going forward. [stableinterface]
- This module is maintained by the Ansible Community. [community]
Authors¶
- Ben Mildren (@bmildren)
Hint
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