Armada API

Armada exposes an API via Google Remote Procedure Call(gRPC) or REST.

gRPC methods

The Armada API is defined in the /pkg/api folder, with *.proto files as the source for all generated code.

The /pkg/api folder also contains generated clients, and together with helper methods from /pkg/client, enables you to call the Armada API from go code. For examples, see the armadactl code.

The following API subset defined in /pkg/api is intended for public use.

api.Submit

Read the api.Submit definition.

api.Event

Read the api.Event definition.

Internal-only methods

There are additional API methods defined in proto specifications, which are used by Armada executor and not intended to be used by external users. This API can change in any version.

REST API

The REST API only exposes the public part of the gRPC API and it is implemented using grpc-gateway.

Swagger JSON specification is also served by Armada under my.armada.deployment/api/swagger.json.

Authentication

Both gRPC and REST API support the same set of authentication methods. In the case of gRPC, all authentication methods use an authorization key in gRPC metadata. The REST API uses a standard HTTP authorisation header (which is translated by grpc-gateway to authorization metadata).

To set up different server authentication schemes, see the Helm chart documentation.

No authentication

For testing, Armada can be configured to accept no authentication. In this case, all operations use an anonymous user.

OpenID Authentication

When the server is configured with OpenID, the Armada API accepts the authorisation header or metadata in the form Bearer {oauth_token}.

Basic Authentication

For basic authentication, the Armada API accepts the standard authorisation header or metadata in the form basic {base64(user:password)}.

Kerberos authentication

For Kerberos authentication, the Armada API accepts the same authorisation metadata for gRPC as standard Kerberos HTTP SPNEGO authorisation headers. The API responds with a WWW-Authenticate header or metadata.

Permissions

Armada will determine which actions you are able to perform, based on your user’s permissions. These are defined as global or on a per-queue basis.

Global permissions

Learn more about global Armada permissions.

Queue-specific permissions

The following queue-specific permission verbs control what actions can be taken per individual queues:

Learn more about permission verbs.

User permissions

The following table shows which permissions are required for a user to access each API endpoint (either directly or via a group). Note that queue-specific permission require a user to be bound to a global permission as well (shown as tuples in the table).

Endpoint Global Permissions Queue Permissions
SubmitJobs submit_any_jobs submit
CancelJobs cancel_any_jobs cancel
ReprioritizeJobs reprioritize_any_jobs reprioritize
CreateQueue create_queue  
UpdateQueue create_queue  
DeleteQueue delete_queue  
GetQueue    
GetQueueInfo watch_all_events watch
GetJobSetEvents watch_all_events watch