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Workload Structure

Keywords

The following words have special meaning in templated workloads:


Description

zero or one description fields:

The first line of the description represents the summary of the description in summary views. Otherwise, the whole value is used.

yaml:

description: |
  summary of this workload
  and more details

json:


{
  "description": "summary of this workload\nand more details\n"
}

ops:


[]

Scenarios

zero or one scenarios fields, containing one of the following forms

The way that you create macro-level workloads from individual stages is called named scenarios in NB. These are basically command line templates which can be invoked automatically by calling their name out on your command line. More details on their usage are in the workload construction guide. We're focused merely on the structural rules here.

single un-named step

yaml:

scenarios:
  default: run driver=diag cycles=10

json:


{
  "scenarios": {
    "default": "run driver=diag cycles=10"
  }
}

ops:


[]

multiple named steps

yaml:

scenarios:
  default:
    step1: run alias=first driver=diag cycles=10
    step2: run alias=second driver=diag cycles=10

json:


{
  "scenarios": {
    "default": {
      "step1": "run alias=first driver=diag cycles=10",
      "step2": "run alias=second driver=diag cycles=10"
    }
  }
}

ops:


[]

list of un-named steps

yaml:

scenarios:
  default:
    - run alias=first driver=diag cycles=10
    - run alias=second driver=diag cycles=10

json:


{
  "scenarios": {
    "default": [
      "run alias=first driver=diag cycles=10",
      "run alias=second driver=diag cycles=10"
    ]
  }
}

ops:


[]

silent locked step parameters

For scenario steps which should not be overridable by user parameters on the command line, a double equals is used to lock the values for a given step without informing the user that their provided value was ignored. This can be useful in cases where there are multiple steps and some parameters should only be changeable for some steps.

yaml:

# The user is not allowed to change the value for the alias parameter, and attempting to do so
# will cause an error to be thrown and the scenario halted.
scenarios:
  default: run alias==first driver=diag cycles=10

json:


{
  "scenarios": {
    "default": "run alias==first driver=diag cycles=10"
  }
}

ops:


[]

verbose locked step parameters

For scenario steps which should not be overridable by user parameters on the command line, a triple equals is used to indicate that changing these parameters is not allowed. If a user tries to override a verbose locked parameter, an error is thrown and the scenario is not allowed to run. This can be useful when you want to clearly indicate that a parameter must remain as it is.

yaml:

# The user is not allowed to change the value for the alias parameter, and attempting to do so
# will cause an error to be thrown and the scenario halted.
scenarios:
  default: run alias===first driver=diag cycles=10

json:


{
  "scenarios": {
    "default": "run alias===first driver=diag cycles=10"
  }
}

ops:


[]

Bindings

zero or one bindings fields, containing a map of named bindings recipes

Bindings are the functions which synthesize data for your operations. They are specified in recipes which are just function chains from the provided libraries.

yaml:

bindings:
  cycle: Identity();
  name: NumberNameToString();

json:


{
  "bindings": {
    "cycle": "Identity();",
    "name": "NumberNameToString();"
  }
}

ops:


[]

Params

zero of one params fields, containing a map of parameter names to values

Params are modifiers to your operations. They specify important details which are not part of the operation's command or payload, like consistency level, or timeout settings.

yaml:

params:
  param1: pvalue1
  param2: pvalue2

json:


{
  "params": {
    "param1": "pvalue1",
    "param2": "pvalue2"
  }
}

ops:


[]

Tags

zero or one tags fields, containing a map of tag names and values

Tags are how you mark your operations for special inclusion into tests. They are basically naming metadata that lets you filter what type of operations you actually use. Further details on tags are in the workload construction guide.

yaml:

tags:
  block: main

json:


{
  "tags": {
    "block": "main"
  }
}

ops:


[]

Blocks

Blocks are used to logically partition a workload for the purposes of grouping, configuring or executing subsets and op sequences. Blocks can contain any of the defined elements above. Every op template within a block automatically gets a tag with the name 'block' and the value of the block name. This makes it easy to select a whole block at a time with a tag filter like tags=block:"schema.*".

Blocks are not recursive. You may not put a block inside another block.

named blocks as a map of property maps

yaml:

blocks:
  namedblock1:
    ops:
      op1: select * from bar.table;
      op2:
        type: batch
        stmt: insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);

json:


{
  "blocks": {
    "namedblock1": {
      "ops": {
        "op1": "select * from bar.table;",
        "op2": {
          "type": "batch",
          "stmt": "insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

ops:


[
  {
    "name": "op1",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "select * from bar.table;"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "op1",
      "block": "namedblock1",
      "op": "op1"
    }
  },
  {
    "name": "op2",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);",
      "type": "batch"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "op2",
      "block": "namedblock1",
      "op": "op2"
    }
  }
]

lists of blocks as a list of property maps

When blocks are defined as a list of entries, each entry is a map.

yaml:

blocks:
  - ops:
      op1: select * from bar.table;
      op2:
        type: batch
        stmt: insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);
  - name: this_is_block_2
    ops:
      op3: select * from foo.table;

json:


{
  "blocks": [
    {
      "ops": {
        "op1": "select * from bar.table;",
        "op2": {
          "type": "batch",
          "stmt": "insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);"
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "name": "this_is_block_2",
      "ops": {
        "op3": "select * from foo.table;"
      }
    }
  ]
}

ops:


[
  {
    "name": "op1",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "select * from bar.table;"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "op1",
      "block": "block1",
      "op": "op1"
    }
  },
  {
    "name": "op2",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "insert into bar.table (a,b,c) values (1,2,3);",
      "type": "batch"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "op2",
      "block": "block1",
      "op": "op2"
    }
  },
  {
    "name": "op3",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "select * from foo.table;"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "op3",
      "block": "this_is_block_2",
      "op": "op3"
    }
  }
]

Names

All documents, blocks, and ops within a workload can have an assigned name. When map and list forms are both supported for entries, the map form provides the name. When list forms are used, an additional field named name can be used.

yaml:

blocks:
  - name: myblock
    op: "test op"

json:


{
  "blocks": [
    {
      "name": "myblock",
      "op": "test op"
    }
  ]
}

ops:


[
  {
    "name": "stmt1",
    "op": {
      "stmt": "test op"
    },
    "tags": {
      "name": "stmt1",
      "block": "myblock",
      "op": "stmt1"
    }
  }
]

--

Putting things together

This document is focused on the basic properties that can be added to a templated workload. To see how they are combined together, see Op Templates Basics.

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