3.9 KiB
Cluster Config
Status: Stage 2A read-only preview.
Cluster config is the future control-plane configuration surface for a whole
OmniGraph deployment. In this stage, OmniGraph can validate a local
cluster.yaml folder, produce a deterministic read-only plan, and inspect the
local JSON state ledger. It does not apply changes, open graph roots, scan live
cluster state, start servers, or write graph resources.
Commands
omnigraph cluster validate --config ./company-brain
omnigraph cluster plan --config ./company-brain --json
omnigraph cluster status --config ./company-brain --json
--config points at a directory, not a file. The directory must contain
cluster.yaml. When omitted, it defaults to the current directory.
Supported cluster.yaml
Stage 2A accepts only the read-only resource subset:
version: 1
metadata:
name: company-brain
state:
backend: cluster
lock: true
graphs:
knowledge:
schema: ./knowledge.pg
queries:
find_experts:
file: ./knowledge.gq
policies:
base:
file: ./base.policy.yaml
applies_to: [knowledge]
metadata.name is a display label. state.backend may be omitted or set to
cluster; external state backends are reserved for a later stage. state.lock
defaults to true. When enabled, cluster plan briefly acquires
<config-dir>/__cluster/lock.json while it reads state, then removes it before
returning. cluster status never acquires the lock; it only reports whether one
is present.
Validation
cluster validate checks:
cluster.yamlsyntax and supported fields- duplicate YAML keys
- schema, query, and policy file existence
- schema parsing and catalog construction
- stored-query parsing and query-name matching
- stored-query type-checking against the desired schema
- policy
applies_tograph references
Fields reserved for later phases, such as pipelines, embeddings, ui,
aliases, and bindings, fail with a typed diagnostic instead of being
silently ignored.
Planning
cluster plan first performs validation, then reads local JSON state from:
<config-dir>/__cluster/state.json
If the file is missing, the state is treated as empty and every desired resource is planned as a create. If present, the file must use this shape:
{
"version": 1,
"state_revision": 0,
"applied_revision": {
"config_digest": "...",
"resources": {
"graph.knowledge": { "digest": "..." },
"schema.knowledge": { "digest": "..." },
"query.knowledge.find_experts": { "digest": "..." },
"policy.base": { "digest": "..." }
}
},
"resource_statuses": {
"graph.knowledge": {
"status": "applied",
"conditions": [],
"message": "optional status detail"
}
},
"approval_records": {},
"recovery_records": {},
"observations": {}
}
state_revision, resource_statuses, approval_records, recovery_records,
and observations are optional so older Stage 1 state fixtures keep working.
Missing state_revision is treated as 0. Resource status values are
pending, planned, applying, applied, drifted, blocked, or error.
Plan output compares desired resource digests against state resource digests
and reports create, update, and delete changes. It also reports the state
CAS (sha256:<digest>) and state revision. state_observations.locked means an
existing lock file was observed; a successful plan instead reports
lock_acquired: true and an acquired_lock_id, then releases the lock before
returning. The command never writes state.json; apply, refresh, import, and
live drift scans are later-stage work.
Status
cluster status reads the same local JSON state ledger and prints what the
ledger says is deployed. It does not validate referenced schema/query/policy
files and does not inspect live graphs. Missing state.json succeeds with a
warning; invalid state JSON or an unsupported state version fails.