JSON Job Specification
This guide covers the JSON syntax for submitting jobs to Nomad. A useful command for generating valid JSON versions of HCL jobs is:
Syntax
Below is the JSON representation of the job outputted by $ nomad init
:
The example JSON could be submitted as a job using the following:
Syntax Reference
Following is a syntax reference for the possible keys that are supported and their default values if any for each type of object.
Job
The Job
object supports the following keys:
AllAtOnce
- Controls whether the scheduler can make partial placements if optimistic scheduling resulted in an oversubscribed node. This does not control whether all allocations for the job, where all would be the desired count for each task group, must be placed atomically. This should only be used for special circumstances. Defaults tofalse
.Constraints
- A list to define additional constraints where a job can be run. See the constraint reference for more details.Affinities
- A list to define placement preferences on nodes where a job can be run. See the affinity reference for more details.Spreads
- A list to define allocation spread across attributes. See the spread reference for more details.Datacenters
- A list of datacenters in the region which are eligible for task placement. This must be provided, and does not have a default.TaskGroups
- A list to define additional task groups. See the task group reference for more details.Meta
- Annotates the job with opaque metadata.Namespace
- The namespace to execute the job in, defaults to "default". Values other than default are not allowed in non-Enterprise versions of Nomad.ParameterizedJob
- Specifies the job as a parameterized job such that it can be dispatched against. TheParameterizedJob
object supports the following attributes:MetaOptional
- Specifies the set of metadata keys that may be provided when dispatching against the job as a string array.MetaRequired
- Specifies the set of metadata keys that must be provided when dispatching against the job as a string array.Payload
- Specifies the requirement of providing a payload when dispatching against the parameterized job. The options for this field are "optional", "required" and "forbidden". The default value is "optional".
Payload
- The payload may not be set when submitting a job but may appear in a dispatched job. ThePayload
will be a base64 encoded string containing the payload that the job was dispatched with. Thepayload
has a maximum size of 16 KiB.Priority
- Specifies the job priority which is used to prioritize scheduling and access to resources. Must be between 1 and 100 inclusively, and defaults to 50.Region
- The region to run the job in, defaults to "global".Type
- Specifies the job type and switches which scheduler is used. Nomad provides theservice
,system
andbatch
schedulers, and defaults toservice
. To learn more about each scheduler type visit hereUpdate
- Specifies an update strategy to be applied to all task groups within the job. When specified both at the job level and the task group level, the update blocks are merged with the task group's taking precedence. For more details on the update stanza, please see below.Periodic
-Periodic
allows the job to be scheduled at fixed times, dates or intervals. The periodic expression is always evaluated in the UTC timezone to ensure consistent evaluation when Nomad Servers span multiple time zones. ThePeriodic
object is optional and supports the following attributes:Enabled
-Enabled
determines whether the periodic job will spawn child jobs.TimeZone
- Specifies the time zone to evaluate the next launch interval against. This is useful when wanting to account for day light savings in various time zones. The time zone must be parsable by Golang's LoadLocation. The default is UTC.SpecType
-SpecType
determines how Nomad is going to interpret the periodic expression.cron
is the only supportedSpecType
currently.Spec
- A cron expression configuring the interval the job is launched at. Supports predefined expressions such as "@daily" and "@weekly" See here for full documentation of supported cron specs and the predefined expressions.- `ProhibitOverlap` - `ProhibitOverlap` can be set to true to enforce that the periodic job doesn't spawn a new instance of the job if any of the previous jobs are still running. It is defaulted to false.
An example
periodic
block:ReschedulePolicy
- Specifies a reschedule policy to be applied to all task groups within the job. When specified both at the job level and the task group level, the reschedule blocks are merged, with the task group's taking precedence. For more details onReschedulePolicy
, please see below.
Task Group
TaskGroups
is a list of TaskGroup
objects, each supports the following
attributes:
Constraints
- This is a list ofConstraint
objects. See the constraint reference for more details.Affinities
- This is a list ofAffinity
objects. See the affinity reference for more details.Spreads
- This is a list ofSpread
objects. See the spread reference for more details.Count
- Specifies the number of the task groups that should be running. Must be non-negative, defaults to one.Meta
- A key-value map that annotates the task group with opaque metadata.Migrate
- Specifies a migration strategy to be applied during node drains.HealthCheck
- One ofchecks
ortask_states
. Indicates how task health should be determined: either via Consul health checks or whether the task was able to run successfully.HealthyDeadline
- Specifies duration a task must become healthy within before it is considered unhealthy.MaxParallel
- Specifies how many allocations may be migrated at once.MinHealthyTime
- Specifies duration a task must be considered healthy before the migration is considered healthy.
Name
- The name of the task group. Must be specified.RestartPolicy
- Specifies the restart policy to be applied to tasks in this group. If omitted, a default policy for batch and non-batch jobs is used based on the job type. See the restart policy reference for more details.ReschedulePolicy
- Specifies the reschedule policy to be applied to tasks in this group. If omitted, a default policy is used for batch and service jobs. System jobs are not eligible for rescheduling. See the reschedule policy reference for more details.Scaling
- Specifies the autoscaling policy for the task group. This is primarily for supporting external autoscalers. See the scaling policy reference for more details.EphemeralDisk
- Specifies the group's ephemeral disk requirements. See the ephemeral disk reference for more details.Update
- Specifies an update strategy to be applied to all task groups within the job. When specified both at the job level and the task group level, the update blocks are merged with the task group's taking precedence. For more details on the update stanza, please see below.Tasks
- A list ofTask
object that are part of the task group.
Task
The Task
object supports the following keys:
Artifacts
-Artifacts
is a list ofArtifact
objects which define artifacts to be downloaded before the task is run. See the artifacts reference for more details.Config
- A map of key-value configuration passed into the driver to start the task. The details of configurations are specific to each driver.Constraints
- This is a list ofConstraint
objects. See the constraint reference for more details.Affinities
- This is a list ofAffinity
objects. See the affinity reference for more details.Spreads
- This is a list ofSpread
objects. See the spread reference for more details.DispatchPayload
- Configures the task to have access to dispatch payloads. TheDispatchPayload
object supports the following attributes:File
- Specifies the file name to write the content of dispatch payload to. The file is written relative to the task's local directory.
Driver
- Specifies the task driver that should be used to run the task. See the driver documentation for what is available. Examples includedocker
,qemu
,java
, andexec
.Env
- A map of key-value representing environment variables that will be passed along to the running process. Nomad variables are interpreted when set in the environment variable values. See the table of interpreted variables here.For example the below environment map will be reinterpreted:
KillSignal
- Specifies a configurable kill signal for a task, where the default is SIGINT. Note that this is only supported for drivers which accept sending signals (currentlydocker
,exec
,raw_exec
, andjava
drivers).KillTimeout
-KillTimeout
is a time duration in nanoseconds. It can be used to configure the time between signaling a task it will be killed and actually killing it. Drivers first sends a task theSIGINT
signal and then sendsSIGTERM
if the task doesn't die after theKillTimeout
duration has elapsed. The defaultKillTimeout
is 5 seconds.Leader
- Specifies whether the task is the leader task of the task group. If set to true, when the leader task completes, all other tasks within the task group will be gracefully shutdown.LogConfig
- This allows configuring log rotation for thestdout
andstderr
buffers of a Task. See the log rotation reference below for more details.Meta
- Annotates the task group with opaque metadata.Name
- The name of the task. This field is required.Resources
- Provides the resource requirements of the task. See the resources reference for more details.RestartPolicy
- Specifies the task-specific restart policy. If omitted, the restart policy from the encapsulating task group is used. If both are present, they are merged. See the restart policy reference for more details.Services
-Services
is a list ofService
objects. Nomad integrates with Consul for service discovery. AService
object represents a routable and discoverable service on the network. Nomad automatically registers when a task is started and de-registers it when the task transitions to the dead state. Click here to learn more about services. Below is the fields in theService
object:Name
: An explicit name for the Service. Nomad will replace${JOB}
,${TASKGROUP}
and${TASK}
by the name of the job, task group or task, respectively.${BASE}
expands to the equivalent of${JOB}-${TASKGROUP}-${TASK}
, and is the default name for a Service. Each service defined for a given task must have a distinct name, so if a task has multiple services only one of them can use the default name and the others must be explicitly named. Names must adhere to RFC-1123 §2.1 and are limited to alphanumeric and hyphen characters (i.e.[a-z0-9\-]
), and be less than 64 characters in length.Tags
: A list of string tags associated with this Service. String interpolation is supported in tags.Meta
: A key-value map that annotates the Consul service with user-defined metadata. String interpolation is supported in meta.CanaryTags
: A list of string tags associated with this Service while it is a canary. Once the canary is promoted, the registered tags will be updated to the set defined in theTags
field. String interpolation is supported in tags.CanaryMeta
: A key-value map that annotates this Service while it is a canary. Once the canary is promoted, the registered meta will be updated to the set defined in theMeta
field or removed if theMeta
field is not set. String interpolation is supported in meta keys and values.PortLabel
:PortLabel
is an optional string and is used to associate a port with the service. If specified, the port label must match one defined in the resources block. This could be a label of either a dynamic or a static port.AddressMode
: Specifies what address (host or driver-specific) this service should advertise. This setting is supported in Docker since Nomad 0.6 and rkt since Nomad 0.7. Valid options are:auto
- Allows the driver to determine whether the host or driver address should be used. Defaults tohost
and only implemented by Docker. If you use a Docker network plugin such as weave, Docker will automatically use its address.driver
- Use the IP specified by the driver, and the port specified in a port map. A numeric port may be specified since port maps aren't required by all network plugins. Useful for advertising SDN and overlay network addresses. Task will fail if driver network cannot be determined. Only implemented for Docker and rkt.host
- Use the host IP and port.
Checks
:Checks
is an array of check objects. A check object defines a health check associated with the service. Nomad supports thescript
,http
andtcp
Consul Checks. Script checks are not supported for the qemu driver since the Nomad client doesn't have access to the file system of a task using the Qemu driver.AddressMode
: Same asAddressMode
onService
. Unlike services, checks do not have anauto
address mode as there's no way for Nomad to know which is the best address to use for checks. Consul needs access to the address for any HTTP or TCP checks. Added in Nomad 0.7.1. UnlikePortLabel
, this setting is not inherited from theService
.PortLabel
: Specifies the label of the port on which the check will be performed. Note this is the label of the port and not the port number unlessAddressMode: "driver"
. The port label must match one defined in the Network stanza. If a port value was declared on theService
, this will inherit from that value if not supplied. If supplied, this value takes precedence over theService.PortLabel
value. This is useful for services which operate on multiple ports.http
andtcp
checks require a port whilescript
checks do not. Checks will use the host IP and ports by default. In Nomad 0.7.1 or later numeric ports may be used ifAddressMode: "driver"
is set on the check.Header
: Headers for HTTP checks. Should be an object where the values are an array of values. Headers will be written once for each value.Interval
: This indicates the frequency of the health checks that Consul will perform.Timeout
: This indicates how long Consul will wait for a health check query to succeed.Method
: The HTTP method to use for HTTP checks. Defaults to GET.Path
: The path of the HTTP endpoint which Consul will query to query the health of a service if the type of the check ishttp
. Nomad will add the IP of the service and the port, users are only required to add the relative URL of the health check endpoint. Absolute paths are not allowed.Protocol
: This indicates the protocol for the HTTP checks. Valid options arehttp
andhttps
. We default it tohttp
.Command
: This is the command that the Nomad client runs for doing script based health check.Args
: Additional arguments to thecommand
for script based health checks.
TLSSkipVerify
: If true, Consul will not attempt to verify the certificate when performing HTTPS checks. Requires Consul >= 0.7.2.CheckRestart
:CheckRestart
is an object which enables restarting of tasks based upon Consul health checks.Limit
: The number of unhealthy checks allowed before the service is restarted. Defaults to0
which disables health-based restarts.Grace
: The duration to wait after a task starts or restarts before counting unhealthy checks count against the limit. Defaults to "1s".IgnoreWarnings
: Treat checks that are warning as passing. Defaults to false which means warnings are considered unhealthy.
ShutdownDelay
- Specifies the duration to wait when killing a task between removing it from Consul and sending it a shutdown signal. Ideally services would fail healthchecks once they receive a shutdown signal. AlternativelyShutdownDelay
may be set to give in flight requests time to complete before shutting down.Templates
- Specifies the set ofTemplate
objects to render for the task. Templates can be used to inject both static and dynamic configuration with data populated from environment variables, Consul and Vault.User
- Set the user that will run the task. It defaults to the same user the Nomad client is being run as. This can only be set on Linux platforms.
Resources
The Resources
object supports the following keys:
CPU
- The CPU required in MHz.MemoryMB
- The memory required in MB.Networks
- A list of network objects.Devices
- A list of device objects.
The Network object supports the following keys:
MBits
- The number of MBits in bandwidth required.
Nomad can allocate two types of ports to a task - Dynamic and Static/Reserved
ports. A network object allows the user to specify a list of DynamicPorts
and
ReservedPorts
. Each object supports the following attributes:
Value
- The port number for static ports. If the port is dynamic, then this attribute is ignored.Label
- The label to annotate a port so that it can be referred in the service discovery block or environment variables.
The Device object supports the following keys:
Name
- Specifies the device required. The following inputs are valid:<device_type>
: If a single value is given, it is assumed to be the device type, such as "gpu", or "fpga".<vendor>/<device_type>
: If two values are given separated by a/
, the given device type will be selected, constraining on the provided vendor. Examples include "nvidia/gpu" or "amd/gpu".<vendor>/<device_type>/<model>
: If three values are given separated by a/
, the given device type will be selected, constraining on the provided vendor, and model name. Examples include "nvidia/gpu/1080ti" or "nvidia/gpu/2080ti".
Count
- The count of devices being requested per task. Defaults to 1.Constraints
- A list to define constraints on which device can satisfy the request. See the constraint reference for more details.Affinities
- A list to define preferences for which device should be chosen. See the affinity reference for more details.
Ephemeral Disk
The EphemeralDisk
object supports the following keys:
Migrate
- Specifies that the Nomad client should make a best-effort attempt to migrate the data from a remote machine if placement cannot be made on the original node. During data migration, the task will block starting until the data migration has completed. Value is a boolean and the default is false.SizeMB
- Specifies the size of the ephemeral disk in MB. Default is 300.Sticky
- Specifies that Nomad should make a best-effort attempt to place the updated allocation on the same machine. This will move thelocal/
andalloc/data
directories to the new allocation. Value is a boolean and the default is false.
Reschedule Policy
The ReschedulePolicy
object supports the following keys:
Attempts
-Attempts
is the number of reschedule attempts allowed in anInterval
.Interval
-Interval
is a time duration that is specified in nanoseconds. TheInterval
is a sliding window within which at mostAttempts
number of reschedule attempts are permitted.Delay
- A duration to wait before attempting rescheduling. It is specified in nanoseconds.DelayFunction
- Specifies the function that is used to calculate subsequent reschedule delays. The initial delay is specified by theDelay
parameter. Allowed values forDelayFunction
are listed below:constant
- The delay between reschedule attempts stays at theDelay
value.exponential
- The delay between reschedule attempts doubles.fibonacci
- The delay between reschedule attempts is calculated by adding the two most recent delays applied. For example ifDelay
is set to 5 seconds, the next five reschedule attempts will be delayed by 5 seconds, 5 seconds, 10 seconds, 15 seconds, and 25 seconds respectively.
MaxDelay
-MaxDelay
is an upper bound on the delay beyond which it will not increase. This parameter is used whenDelayFunction
isexponential
orfibonacci
, and is ignored whenconstant
delay is used.Unlimited
-Unlimited
enables unlimited reschedule attempts. If this is set to true theAttempts
andInterval
fields are not used.
Restart Policy
The RestartPolicy
object supports the following keys:
Attempts
-Attempts
is the number of restarts allowed in anInterval
.Interval
-Interval
is a time duration that is specified in nanoseconds. TheInterval
begins when the first task starts and ensures that onlyAttempts
number of restarts happens within it. If more thanAttempts
number of failures happen, behavior is controlled byMode
.Delay
- A duration to wait before restarting a task. It is specified in nanoseconds. A random jitter of up to 25% is added to the delay.Mode
-Mode
is given as a string and controls the behavior when the task fails more thanAttempts
times in anInterval
. Possible values are listed below:
Update
Specifies the task group update strategy. When omitted, rolling updates are
disabled. The update stanza can be specified at the job or task group level.
When specified at the job, the update stanza is inherited by all task groups.
When specified in both the job and in a task group, the stanzas are merged with
the task group's taking precedence. The Update
object supports the following
attributes:
MaxParallel
-MaxParallel
is given as an integer value and specifies the number of tasks that can be updated at the same time.HealthCheck
- Specifies the mechanism in which allocations health is determined. The potential values are:"checks" - Specifies that the allocation should be considered healthy when all of its tasks are running and their associated checks are healthy, and unhealthy if any of the tasks fail or not all checks become healthy. This is a superset of "task_states" mode.
"task_states" - Specifies that the allocation should be considered healthy when all its tasks are running and unhealthy if tasks fail.
"manual" - Specifies that Nomad should not automatically determine health and that the operator will specify allocation health using the HTTP API.
MinHealthyTime
- Specifies the minimum time the allocation must be in the healthy state before it is marked as healthy and unblocks further allocations from being updated.HealthyDeadline
- Specifies the deadline in which the allocation must be marked as healthy after which the allocation is automatically transitioned to unhealthy.ProgressDeadline
- Specifies the deadline in which an allocation must be marked as healthy. The deadline begins when the first allocation for the deployment is created and is reset whenever an allocation as part of the deployment transitions to a healthy state. If no allocation transitions to the healthy state before the progress deadline, the deployment is marked as failed. If theprogress_deadline
is set to0
, the first allocation to be marked as unhealthy causes the deployment to fail.AutoRevert
- Specifies if the job should auto-revert to the last stable job on deployment failure. A job is marked as stable if all the allocations as part of its deployment were marked healthy.Canary
- Specifies that changes to the job that would result in destructive updates should create the specified number of canaries without stopping any previous allocations. Once the operator determines the canaries are healthy, they can be promoted which unblocks a rolling update of the remaining allocations at a rate ofmax_parallel
.AutoPromote
- Specifies if the job should automatically promote to the new deployment if all canaries become healthy.Stagger
- Specifies the delay between migrating allocations off nodes marked for draining.
An example Update
block:
Constraint
The Constraint
object supports the following keys:
LTarget
- Specifies the attribute to examine for the constraint. See the table of attributes here.RTarget
- Specifies the value to compare the attribute against. This can be a literal value, another attribute or a regular expression if theOperator
is in "regexp" mode.Operand
- Specifies the test to be performed on the two targets. It takes on the following values:regexp
- Allows theRTarget
to be a regular expression to be matched.set_contains
- Allows theRTarget
to be a comma separated list of values that should be contained in the LTarget's value.distinct_hosts
- If set, the scheduler will not co-locate any task groups on the same machine. This can be specified as a job constraint which applies the constraint to all task groups in the job, or as a task group constraint which scopes the effect to just that group. The constraint may not be specified at the task level.Placing the constraint at both the job level and at the task group level is redundant since when placed at the job level, the constraint will be applied to all task groups. When specified,
LTarget
andRTarget
should be omitted.distinct_property
- If set, the scheduler selects nodes that have a distinct value of the specified property. TheRTarget
specifies how many allocations are allowed to share the value of a property. TheRTarget
must be 1 or greater and if omitted, defaults to 1. This can be specified as a job constraint which applies the constraint to all task groups in the job, or as a task group constraint which scopes the effect to just that group. The constraint may not be specified at the task level.Placing the constraint at both the job level and at the task group level is redundant since when placed at the job level, the constraint will be applied to all task groups. When specified,
LTarget
should be the property that should be distinct andRTarget
should be omitted.Comparison Operators -
=
,==
,is
,!=
,not
,>
,>=
,<
,<=
. The ordering is compared lexically.
Affinity
Affinities allow operators to express placement preferences. More details on how they work are described in affinities
The Affinity
object supports the following keys:
LTarget
- Specifies the attribute to examine for the affinity. See the table of attributes here.RTarget
- Specifies the value to compare the attribute against. This can be a literal value, another attribute or a regular expression if theOperator
is in "regexp" mode.Operand
- Specifies the test to be performed on the two targets. It takes on the following values:regexp
- Allows theRTarget
to be a regular expression to be matched.set_contains_all
- Allows theRTarget
to be a comma separated list of values that should be contained in the LTarget's value.set_contains_any
- Allows theRTarget
to be a comma separated list of values any of which should be contained in the LTarget's value.Comparison Operators -
=
,==
,is
,!=
,not
,>
,>=
,<
,<=
. The ordering is compared lexically.
Weight
- A non zero weight, valid values are from -100 to 100. Used to express relative preference when there is more than one affinity.
Log Rotation
The LogConfig
object configures the log rotation policy for a task's stdout
and
stderr
. The LogConfig
object supports the following attributes:
MaxFiles
- The maximum number of rotated files Nomad will retain forstdout
andstderr
, each tracked individually.MaxFileSizeMB
- The size of each rotated file. The size is specified inMB
.
If the amount of disk resource requested for the task is less than the total amount of disk space needed to retain the rotated set of files, Nomad will return a validation error when a job is submitted.
In the above example we have asked Nomad to retain 3 rotated files for both
stderr
and stdout
and size of each file is 10 MB. The minimum disk space that
would be required for the task would be 60 MB.
Artifact
Nomad downloads artifacts using
go-getter
. The go-getter
library
allows downloading of artifacts from various sources using a URL as the input
source. The key-value pairs given in the options
block map directly to
parameters appended to the supplied source
URL. These are then used by
go-getter
to appropriately download the artifact. go-getter
also has a CLI
tool to validate its URL and can be used to check if the Nomad artifact
is
valid.
Nomad allows downloading http
, https
, and S3
artifacts. If these artifacts
are archives (zip, tar.gz, bz2, etc.), these will be unarchived before the task
is started.
The Artifact
object supports the following keys:
GetterSource
- The path to the artifact to download.RelativeDest
- An optional path to download the artifact into relative to the root of the task's directory. If omitted, it will default tolocal/
.GetterOptions
- Amap[string]string
block of options forgo-getter
. Full documentation of supported options are available here. An example is given below:
An example of downloading and unzipping an archive is as simple as:
S3 examples
S3 has several different types of addressing and more detail can be found here
S3 region specific endpoints can be found here
Path based style:
or to override automatic detection in the URL, use the S3-specific syntax
Virtual hosted based style
Template
The Template
block instantiates an instance of a template renderer. This
creates a convenient way to ship configuration files that are populated from
environment variables, Consul data, Vault secrets, or just general
configurations within a Nomad task.
Nomad utilizes a tool called Consul Template. Since Nomad v0.5.3, the template can reference Nomad's runtime environment variables. For a full list of the API template functions, please refer to the Consul Template README.
Template
object supports following attributes:
ChangeMode
- Specifies the behavior Nomad should take if the rendered template changes. The default value is"restart"
. The possible values are:ChangeSignal
- Specifies the signal to send to the task as a string like "SIGUSR1" or "SIGINT". This option is required if theChangeMode
issignal
.DestPath
- Specifies the location where the resulting template should be rendered, relative to the task directory.EmbeddedTmpl
- Specifies the raw template to execute. One ofSourcePath
orEmbeddedTmpl
must be specified, but not both. This is useful for smaller templates, but we recommend usingSourcePath
for larger templates.Envvars
- Specifies the template should be read back as environment variables for the task.LeftDelim
- Specifies the left delimiter to use in the template. The default is "{{" for some templates, it may be easier to use a different delimiter that does not conflict with the output file itself.Perms
- Specifies the rendered template's permissions. File permissions are given as octal of the Unix file permissionsrwxrwxrwx
.RightDelim
- Specifies the right delimiter to use in the template. The default is "}}" for some templates, it may be easier to use a different delimiter that does not conflict with the output file itself.SourcePath
- Specifies the path to the template to be rendered.SourcePath
is mutually exclusive withEmbeddedTmpl
attribute. The source can be fetched using anArtifact
resource. The template must exist on the machine prior to starting the task; it is not possible to reference a template inside of a Docker container, for example.Splay
- Specifies a random amount of time to wait between 0 ms and the given splay value before invoking the change mode. Should be specified in nanoseconds.
Spread
Spread allow operators to target specific percentages of allocations based on any node attribute or metadata. More details on how they work are described in spread.
The Spread
object supports the following keys:
Attribute
- Specifies the attribute to examine for the spread. See the table of attributes for examples.SpreadTarget
- Specifies a list of attribute values and percentages. This is an optional field, when left empty Nomad will evenly spread allocations across values of the attribute.Weight
- A non zero weight, valid values are from -100 to 100. Used to express relative preference when there is more than one spread or affinity.
Scaling
Scaling policies allow operators to attach autoscaling configuration to a task group. This information can be queried by external autoscalers.
The Scaling
object supports the following keys:
Min
- The minimum allowable count for the task group. This is optional; if absent, the default is theCount
specified in the task group. Attempts to set the task groupCount
belowMin
will result in a 400 error during job registration.Max
- The maximum allowable count for the task group. This is required if a scaling policy is provided. This must be larger thanMin
. Attempts to set the task groupCount
aboveMax
wil result in a 400 error during job registration.Enabled
- An optional boolean (default:true
). This indicates to the autoscaler that this scaling policy should be ignored. It is intended to allow autoscaling to be temporarily disabled for a task group.Policy
- An optional JSON block. This is opaque to Nomad; see the documentation for the external autoscaler (e.g., nomad-autoscaler).