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Version: 0.68.3

Starlark Instructions

This page lists out the Kurtosis instructions that are available in Starlark.

GENERAL NOTE: In Python, it is very common to name function parameters that are optional. E.g.:

def do_something(required_arg, optional_arg="default_value")

In Kurtosis Starlark, all parameters can be referenced by name regardless of whether they are required or not. We do this to allow for ease-of-reading clarity. Mandatory and optional parameters will be indicated in the comment above the field.

Similarly, all function arguments can be provided either positionally or by name. E.g. a function signature of:

def make_pizza(size, topping = "pepperoni")

Can be called in any of the following ways:

# 1. Only the required argument filled, positionally
make_pizza("16cm")

# 2. Only the required argument filled, by name
make_pizza(size = "16cm")

# 3. Both arguments filled, positionally
make_pizza("16cm", "mushroom")

# 4. Both arguments filled, mixing position and name
make_pizza("16cm", topping = "mushroom")

# 5. Both arguments filled, by name
make_pizza(size = "16cm", topping = "mushroom")

We recommend the last style (naming both positional and optional args), for reading clarity.

add_service

The add_service instruction on the plan object adds a service to the Kurtosis enclave within which the script executes.

service = plan.add_service(
# The service name of the service being created.
# The service name is a reference to the service, which can be used in the future to refer to the service.
# Service names of active services are unique per enclave.
# MANDATORY
service_name = "example-datastore-server-1",

# The configuration for this service. See the 'ServiceConfig' section of 'Starlark Types' from the sidebar for more information.
# MANDATORY
config = service_config,
)

For more info about the config argument, see ServiceConfig

info

See here for more details on files artifacts.

The add_service function returns a service object that contains service information in the form of future references that can be used later in the script. The service struct has:

  • A hostname property representing a future reference to the service's hostname.
  • An ip_address property representing a future reference to the service's IP address.
  • A ports dictionary containing future reference information about each port that the service is listening on.

The value of the ports dictionary is an object with three properties, number, transport_protocol and application_protocol (optional), which themselves are future references.

Example:

dependency = plan.add_service(
service_name = "dependency",
config = ServiceConfig(
image = "dependency",
ports = {
"http": PortSpec(number = 80),
},
),
)

dependency_http_port = dependency.ports["http"]

plan.add_service(
service_name = "dependant",
config = ServiceConfig(
env_vars = {
"DEPENDENCY_URL": "http://{}:{}".format(dependency.ip_address, dependency_http_port.number),
},
),
)

add_services

The add_services instruction on the plan object adds multiple services all at once.

The main advantage compared to calling add_service multiple times is that one call to add_services will add multiple services at once. Currently, it can process up to 4 services concurrently, therefore reducing the total time by a factor of nearly 4.

Similar to add_service, it takes a map of service names to service configuration objects as input and returns a map of service names to service objects.

all_services = plan.add_services(
# A map of service_name -> ServiceConfig for all services that needs to be added.
# See the 'ServiceConfig' section of 'Starlark Types' from the sidebar for more information on this type.
# MANDATORY
configs = {
"example-datastore-server-1": datastore_server_config_1,
"example-datastore-server-2": datastore_server_config_2,
}
)
caution

add_services will succeed if and only if all services are successfully added. If any one fails, the entire batch of services will be rolled back and the instruction will return an execution error.

The number of services being added concurrently is tunable by the --parallelism flag of the run command (see more on the run reference).

assert

The assert on the plan object instruction fails the Starlark script or package with an execution error if the assertion defined fails.

plan.assert(
# The value currently being asserted.
# MANDATORY
value = "test1",

# The assertion is the comparison operation between value and target_value.
# Valid values are "==", "!=", ">=", "<=", ">", "<" or "IN" and "NOT_IN" (if target_value is list).
# MANDATORY
assertion = "==",

# The target value that value will be compared against.
# MANDATORY
target_value = "test2",
) # This fails in runtime given that "test1" == "test2" is false

plan.assert(
# Value can also be a runtime value derived from a `get_value` call
value = response["body"],
assertion = "==",
target_value = 200,
)

exec

The exec instruction on the plan object executes commands on a given service as if they were running in a shell on the container.

caution

The previous ExecRecipe type ExecRecipe(service_name = "my_service", command = ["echo", "Hello, world"]) is also accepted but will be deprecated soon, we suggest users to use this new one where the service_name argument is passed in via the exec instruction signature instead.

exec_recipe = ExecRecipe(
# The actual command to execute.
# Each item corresponds to one shell argument, so ["echo", "Hello world"] behaves as if you ran "echo" "Hello world" in the shell.
# MANDATORY
command = ["echo", "Hello, world"],
)

result = plan.exec(
# The recipe that will be run until assert passes.
# Valid values are of the following types: (ExecRecipe)
# MANDATORY
recipe = exec_recipe,

# A Service name designating a service that already exists inside the enclave
# If it does not, a validation error will be thrown
# OPTIONAL
service_name = "my-service",
)

plan.print(result["output"])
plan.print(result["code"])

The instruction returns a dict whose values are future reference to the output and exit code of the command. result["output"] is a future reference to the output of the command, and result["code"] is a future reference to the exit code.

They can be chained to assert and wait:

exec_recipe = ExecRecipe(
service_name = "my_service",
command = ["echo", "Hello, world"],
)

result = plan.exec(exec_recipe)
plan.assert(result["code"], "==", 0)

plan.wait(exec_recipe, "output", "!=", "Greetings, world")

import_module

The import_module function imports the symbols from a Starlark script specified by the given locator, and requires that the calling Starlark script is part of a package.

# Import the code to namespaced object
lib = import_module("github.com/foo/bar/src/lib.star")

# Use code from the imported module
lib.some_function()
lib.some_variable

NOTE: We chose not to use the normal Starlark load primitive due to its lack of namespacing. By default, the symbols imported by load are imported to the global namespace of the script that's importing them. We preferred module imports to be namespaced, in the same way that Python does by default with its import statement.

print

print on the plan object will add an instruction to the plan to print the string. When the print instruction is executed during the Execution Phase, future references will be replaced with their execution-time values.

plan.print("Any string here")

read_file

The read_file function reads the contents of a file specified by the given locator, and requires that the Starlark script is part of a package. read_file executes at interpretation time so the file contents won't be displayed in the preview.

contents = read_file(
# The Kurtosis locator of the file to read.
# MANDATORY
src = "github.com/kurtosis-tech/datastore-army-package/README.md",
)

remove_connection

As opposed to set_connection, remove_connection removes a connection override between two subnetworks. The default connection cannot be removed; it can only be updated using set_connection.

remove_connection(
# The subnetwork connection that will be removed
# If any of those two subnetworks does not currently have services, this instruction will not do anything.
# MANDATORY
subnetworks = ("subnetwork_1", "subnetwork_2"),

)

remove_service

The remove_service instruction on the plan object removes a service from the enclave in which the instruction executes in.

plan.remove_service(
# The service name of the service to be removed.
# MANDATORY
service_name = "my_service",
)

render_templates

render_templates on the plan object combines a template and data to produce a files artifact. Files artifacts can be used with the files property in the service config of add_service, allowing for reuse of config files across services.

# Example data to slot into the template
template_data = {
"Name" : "Stranger",
"Answer": 6,
"Numbers": [1, 2, 3],
"UnixTimeStamp": 1257894000,
"LargeFloat": 1231231243.43,
"Alive": True,
}

artifact_name = plan.render_templates(
# A dictionary where:
# - Each key is a filepath that will be produced inside the output files artifact
# - Each value is the template + data required to produce the filepath
# Multiple filepaths can be specified to produce a files artifact with multiple files inside.
# MANDATORY
config = {
"/foo/bar/output.txt": struct(
# The template to render, which should be formatted in Go template format:
# https://pkg.go.dev/text/template#pkg-overview
# MANDATORY
template="Hello {{.Name}}. The sum of {{.Numbers}} is {{.Answer}}. My favorite moment in history {{.UnixTimeStamp}}. My favorite number {{.LargeFloat}}. Am I Alive? {{.Alive}}",

# The data to slot into the template, can be a struct or a dict
# The keys should exactly match the keys in the template.
# MANDATORY
data=template_data,
),
},

# The name to give the files artifact that will be produced.
# If not specified, it will be auto-generated.
# OPTIONAL
name = "my-artifact",
)

The return value is a future reference to the name of the files artifact that was generated, which can be used with the files property of the service config of the add_service command.

request

The request instruction on the plan object executes either a POST or GET HTTP request, saving its result in a future references.

For GET requests:

caution

The previous GetHttpRequestRecipe type GetHttpRequestRecipe(service_name = "my_service", port_id = "my_port", endpoint = "/endpoint?input=data", extract = {"extracted-field": ".name.id", }) is also accepted but will be deprecated soon, we suggest users to use this new one where the service_name argument is passed in via the request instruction signature instead.

get_request_recipe = GetHttpRequestRecipe(
# The port ID that is the server port for the request
# MANDATORY
port_id = "my_port",

# The endpoint for the request
# MANDATORY
endpoint = "/endpoint?input=data",

# The extract dictionary takes in key-value pairs where:
# Key is a way you refer to the extraction later on
# Value is a 'jq' string that contains logic to extract from response body
# OPTIONAL
extract = {
"extracted-field": ".name.id",
},
)
get_response = plan.request(
# The recipe that will be run until assert passes.
# Valid values are of the following types: (GetHttpRequestRecipe, PostHttpRequestRecipe)
# MANDATORY
recipe = get_request_recipe,

# A Service name designating a service that already exists inside the enclave
# If it does not, a validation error will be thrown
# OPTIONAL
service_name = "my_service",
)
plan.print(get_response["body"]) # Prints the body of the request
plan.print(get_response["code"]) # Prints the result code of the request (e.g. 200, 500)
plan.print(get_response["extract.extracted-field"]) # Prints the result of running ".name.id" query, that is saved with key "extracted-field"

For POST requests:

post_request_recipe = PostHttpRequestRecipe(
# The port ID that is the server port for the request
# MANDATORY
port_id = "my_port",

# The endpoint for the request
# MANDATORY
endpoint = "/endpoint",

# The content type header of the request (e.g. application/json, text/plain, etc)
# MANDATORY
content_type = "text/plain",

# The body of the request
# MANDATORY
body = "text body",

# The method is GET for this example
# OPTIONAL (Default: {})
extract = {},
)
post_response = plan.request(
recipe = post_request_recipe,
service_name = "my_service",
)

The instruction returns a response, which is a dict with following key-value pair; the values are a future reference

  • response["code"] - returns the future reference to the status code of the response
  • response["body"] - returns the future reference to the body of the the response
  • response["extract.some-custom-field"] - it is an optional field and returns the future reference to the value extracted from body, which is explained below.

jq's regular expressions is used to extract the information from the response body and is assigned to a custom field. The response["body"] must be a valid json object for manipulating data using extractions. A valid response["body"] can be used for extractions like so:

# Assuming response["body"] looks like {"result": {"foo": ["hello/world/welcome"]}}
post_request_recipe = PostHttpRequestRecipe(
...
extract = {
"second-element-from-list-head": '.result.foo | .[0] | split ("/") | .[1]' #
},
)
response = plan.request(
recipe = post_request_recipe,
)
# response["extract.second-element-from-list-head"] is "world"
# response["body"] is {"result": {"foo": ["hello/world/welcome"]}}
# response["code"] is 200

NOTE: In the above example, response also has a custom field extract.second-element-from-list-head and the value is world which is extracted from the response[body].

These fields can be used in conjuction with assert and wait instructions, like so:

# Following the example above, response["extract.second-element-from-list-head"] is world
response = plan.request(
recipe = post_request_recipe,
)

# Assert if the extracted field in the response is world
plan.assert(response["extract.second-element-from-list-head"], "==", "world")

# Make a post request and check if the extracted field in the response is world
plan.wait(post_request_recipe, "extract.second-element-from-list-head", "==", "world")

set_connection

Kurtosis uses a default connection to configure networking for any created subnetwork. The set_connection can be used for two purposes:

  1. Used with the subnetworks argument, it will override the default connection between the two specified subnetworks.
set_connection(
# The subnetwork connection that will be be overridden
# OPTIONAL: See 2. below
subnetworks = ("subnetwork_1", "subnetwork_2"),

# The configuration for this connection. See the 'ConnectionConfig' section of 'Starlark Types' from the sidecar for more information.
# MANDATORY
config = connection_config,
)
  1. Used with only the config argument, it will update the default connection.
caution

Doing so will immediately affect all subnetwork connections that were not previously overridden.

set_connection(
# The configuration for this connection. See the 'ConnectionConfig' section of 'Starlark Types' from the sidecar for more information.
# MANDATORY
config = connection_config,
)

See ConnectionConfig for more information on the mandatory config argument.

info

Say we are overriding a connection between two subnetworks, as shown below:


connection_config = ConnectionConfig(
packet_delay_distribution = UniformPacketDelayDistribution(
ms = 500
)
)

set_connection(
subnetworks = ("subnetworkA", "subnetworkB"),
config = connection_config
)

If serviceA is in subnetworkA and serviceB is in subnetworkB, the effective latency for a TCP request between serviceA and serviceB will be 1000ms = 500ms x 2. This is because the latency is applied to both the request (serviceA -> serviceB) and the response (serviceB -> serviceA)

store_service_files

store_service_files on the plan object copies files or directories from an existing service in the enclave into a files artifact. This is useful when work produced on one container is needed elsewhere.

artifact_name = plan.store_service_files(
# The service name of a preexisting service from which the file will be copied.
# MANDATORY
service_name = "example-service-name",

# The path on the service's container that will be copied into a files artifact.
# MANDATORY
src = "/tmp/foo",

# The name to give the files artifact that will be produced.
# If not specified, it will be auto-generated.
# OPTIONAL
name = "my-favorite-artifact-name",
)

The return value is a future reference to the name of the files artifact that was generated, which can be used with the files property of the service config of the add_service command.

update_service

The update_service instruction updates an existing service without restarting it. For now, only the service subnetwork can be updated live. In this case, the service will be moved to the corresponding subnetwork.

update_service(
# A Service name designating a service that already exists inside the enclave
# If it does not, a validation error will be thrown
# MANDATORY
service_name = "example-datastore-server-1",

# The changes to apply to this service. See the 'UpdateServiceConfig' section of 'Starlark Types' from the sidecar for more information.
# MANDATORY
config = update_service_config,
)

See UpdateServiceConfig for more information on the mandatory config argument.

upload_files

upload_files on the plan object packages the files specified by the locator into a files artifact that gets stored inside the enclave. This is particularly useful when a static file needs to be loaded to a service container.

artifact_name = plan.upload_files(
# The file to upload into a files a files artifact
# Must be a Kurtosis locator.
# MANDATORY
src = "github.com/foo/bar/static/example.txt",

# The name to give the files artifact that will be produced.
# If not specified, it will be auto-generated.
# OPTIONAL
name = "my-artifact",
)

The return value is a future reference to the name of the files artifact that was generated, which can be used with the files property of the service config of the add_service command.

wait

The wait instruction on the plan object fails the Starlark script or package with an execution error if the assertion does not succeed in a given period of time.

To learn more about the accepted recipe types, please checkout ExecRecipe, GetHttpRequestRecipe or PostHttpRequestRecipe.

If it succedes, it returns a future references with the last recipe run.

caution

The previous GetHttpRequestRecipe type GetHttpRequestRecipe(service_name = "my_service", port_id = "my_port", endpoint = "/endpoint?input=data", extract = {"extracted-field": ".name.id", }) is also accepted but will be deprecated soon, we suggest users to use this new one where the service_name argument is passed in via the wait instruction signature instead.

# This fails in runtime if response["code"] != 200 for each request in a 5 minute time span
response = plan.wait(
# The recipe that will be run until assert passes.
# Valid values are of the following types: (ExecRecipe, GetHttpRequestRecipe, PostHttpRequestRecipe)
# MANDATORY
recipe = recipe,

# Wait will use the response's field to do the asssertions. To learn more about available fields,
# that can be used for assertions, please refer to exec and request instructions.
# MANDATORY
field = "code",

# The assertion is the comparison operation between value and target_value.
# Valid values are "==", "!=", ">=", "<=", ">", "<" or "IN" and "NOT_IN" (if target_value is list).
# MANDATORY
assertion = "==",

# The target value that value will be compared against.
# MANDATORY
target_value = 200,

# The interval value is the initial interval suggestion for the command to wait between calls
# It follows a exponential backoff process, where the i-th backoff interval is rand(0.5, 1.5)*interval*2^i
# Follows Go "time.Duration" format https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration
# OPTIONAL (Default: "500ms")
interval = "1s",

# The timeout value is the maximum time that the command waits for the assertion to be true
# Follows Go "time.Duration" format https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration
# OPTIONAL (Default: "15m")
timeout = "5m",

# A Service name designating a service that already exists inside the enclave
# If it does not, a validation error will be thrown
# OPTIONAL
service_name = "example-datastore-server-1",
)
# If this point of the code is reached, the assertion has passed therefore the print statement will print "200"
plan.print(response["code"])

Starlark Standard Libraries

The following Starlark libraries that ship with the starlark-go are included in Kurtosis Starlark by default

  1. The Starlark time is a collection of time-related functions
  2. The Starlark json module allows you encode, decode and indent JSON
  3. The Starlark struct builtin allows you to create structs like the one used in add_service