ansible/inventory/host_vars/openqa-a64-worker03.iad2.fedoraproject.org

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---
freezes: false
# eth0 is disabled/nothing
# eth1 is active network
# eth2 is disabled/nothing
ansible_ifcfg_infra_net_devices: ['eth1']
gw: 10.3.174.254
dns: 10.3.163.33
eth1_ip: 10.3.174.63
eth1_nm: 255.255.255.0
datacenter: iad2
fas_client_groups: sysadmin-qa,sysadmin-main,sysadmin-noc,fi-apprentice,sysadmin-veteran
nrpe_procs_warn: 250
nrpe_procs_crit: 300
sudoers: "{{ private }}/files/sudo/qavirt-sudoers"
# openQA tap worker hosts (like this one) do stuff with ifcfg that base
# doesn't understand. terrible, terrible stuff. seriously - it doesn't
# handle the openvswitch config well. so let's tell it to just configure
# the regular interfaces (which on this system is eth0-eth2) for us,
# disabling all but the one we want to use (eth0), and leave everything
# else alone. We use a variable definition here so the firewall config
# (in the openqa_tap_workers group_vars) can reuse it.
openqa_tap_iface: eth1
ansible_ifcfg_allowlist: ['eth0', '{{ openqa_tap_iface }}', 'eth2']
ansible_ifcfg_disabled: ['eth0', 'eth2']
# this is an IAD box, use IAD host
openqa_hostname: openqa-stg01.iad2.fedoraproject.org
# this is a powerful machine, can handle more openQA workers
openqa_workers: 15
# firewall ports for server->worker websockets connections
# this port is 'QEMUPORT plus 1'
# QEMUPORT is:
# $ENV{QEMUPORT} = ($options{instance}) * 10 + 20002;
# so for worker 1 it's 20012, for worker 2 it's 20022, etc etc
tcp_ports: ['20013', '20023', '20033', '20043', '20053', '20063', '20073', '20083']
# has an HW RNG, so let's have rngd
openqa_rngd: True