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Hazetug provisions and bootstraps hosts in Linode and DigitalOcean using Knife

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Hazetug

Cloud provisioner and bootstraper which simplifies node creation and configuration deployment. Hazetug uses simple YAML task file which describes the configuration to setup.

Provisioning is handled by haze core which is based on fog cloud library. A plenty of different cloud computes available in fog (AWS, Rackspace, BareMetalCloud and many more) helps to extend hazetug with the new "hazes" quite simple.

Bootstrapping is done by "tugs", hazetug supports only a few tugs just for Chef now.

Supported cloud computes

  • Linode
  • DigitalOcean

Supported bootstrap methods

  • knife - chef knife bootstrap method.
  • solo - same as knife bootstrap, but it also uses berkshelf to package and upload cookbooks to a provisioned node, thus makes it possible usage of chef-solo.

Task file options

Cloud Computes specific options

Option Description
name Name of a host to provision. Random names are possible using %rand(x)% macro.
location Location in a cloud compute, namely data center.
flavor Flavor of a provisioned host. Flavors are recognized by memory, use: 512mb, 4gb, etc to choose the proper one.
image Distribution or image which is used for provisioning. Examples: ubuntu-12.04-x32, arch-linux-2014.14. If OS architecture is not specified then x64 is assumed.

SSH Specific

Option Description Default value
ssh_user User used during provisioning and bootstrapping for connecting via ssh. root
ssh_password Password for a provisioned node. Evaluated randomly for some computes.
ssh_port Port used for ssh connection. 22
host_key_verify Verifies host key, set to true to enable verification. false

Knife tug

Option Description Default value
chef_validation_key Validation key used to authenticate new nodes in the Chef Server. validation.pem
chef_environment Chef Environment used during bootstrap
chef_server_url URL of the Chef Serer.

Solo tug

Option Description Default value
chef_environment Chef Environment used during bootstrap
attributes Hash of attributes prepared for chef-solo run. (It's merged with the run_list). {}
berksfile Path to Berksfile. ./Berksfile

Configuration

Variables priority

Hazetug uses 3-level priority for flexible variable choosing. Priority in the ascending order is the following: variable from the global section -> variable set via command option -> variable in the bootstrap list entity. All variables are merged using this 3-level priority.

Tug bootstrap templates

Knife and solo tugs use ruby ERB bootstrap template file which is basically a shell script performing initial bootstrap phase. Namely performing OS update and system package installation, bootstrapping ruby and chef.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'hazetug'
# use master until version grater than 1.23.0 is released
gem 'fog', git: 'https://github.com/fog/fog.git'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install hazetug

Usage

1. Create ~/.hazetug configuration file

Create ~/.hazetug configuration file, with the content like:

default:
  linode_api_key: YOUR_LINODE_API_KEY
  linode_ssh_keys:
    - ~/.ssh/linode.pem (Change with your path, it also might be missing)
  digitalocean_api_key: DIGITALOCEAN_API_KEY
  digitalocean_client_id: DIGITALOCEAN_CLIENT_ID
  digitalocean_ssh_keys:
    - ~/.ssh/digitalocean.pem (Change with your path)

2. Define task

Hazetug YAML task file consists of two sections global and bootstrap. Global section sets default variables used by hazetug and bootstrap section is basically a list of nodes to be provisioned and to be bootstrapped. Each bootstrap entity includes haze specification (name, location, flavor and image) as well as it defines node specific variables.

Let's have a look at a sample task file:

chef_server_url: 'https://mychefserver.uri'
chef_environment: staging
chef_version: 11.14.6
ruby_version: ruby-2.1.2
ssh_password: my-password-on-api-nodes
bootstrap:
  - name: api-testbox-%rand(6)%
    number:   2
    location: london
    flavor:   2gb
    image:    ubuntu-14.04-x64
    run_list: ["role[api]"]

This simple configuration is supposed to bring 6 nodes in the Cloud and bootstrap the with knife tug.

Also it's worth mentioning the variables priority look into the Variables Priority section.

3. Create bootstrap template file

Use one of the bootstrap templates provided in the examples directory or create yours.

4. Run hazetug

bundle exec hazetug digitalocean bootstrap knife -b bootstrap.erb task.yaml

Command line and invocation

Tug with chef-client and chef-solo (knife bootstrap)

Let's first have a look at command line help, issue the following command: hazetug help digitalocean bootstrap knife, and this will show you:

NAME
    bootstrap - Provisions and bootstraps server

SYNOPSIS
    hazetug [global options] digitalocean bootstrap [command options] knife <task.yaml>
    hazetug [global options] digitalocean bootstrap [command options] solo <task.yaml>

COMMAND OPTIONS
    -v, --variables=arg   - Set variable or comma-seperated list of variables (var1_1=hello) (default: none)
    -n, --number=arg      - Set number of created nodes, value from yaml is honored (default: 1)
    -c, --concurrency=arg - Set concurrency value, i.e. number of hosts bootstraped simultaneously (default: 1)
    -b, --bootstrap=arg   - Set path to knife bootstrap.erb file (default: bootstrap.erb)

COMMANDS
    knife - Bootstraps server using Knife in client mode
    solo  - Bootstraps server using Knife in solo mode

Concurrency and number are used to control hazetug provision and bootstrap flow. When we create 20 identical nodes we might want to process say it 4 nodes simultaneously, so we will use -n 20 -c 4 on the command line.

Variables are useful to define some parameter for hazetug, providing a variable on command line will redefine the corresponding variable in global section. So it's useful to specify something like: -v chef_version=11.16.0.rc.0,ruby_version=2.1.2.

Variables available in bootstrap template

Variables are merged and passed by tug into bootstrap template, use hasetug[:variable] to look up a value. For a example to get chef_version or node location it will be easy as this:

<%= hazetug[:chef_version] %>
<%= hazetug[:location] %>

While all the variables you've specified on command line and inside YAML task file are being merged and are available there are other dynamic values which might be useful as well:

  • compute_name
  • public_ip_address
  • private_ip_address
  • ssh_password

knife and solo tugs difference

They both use knife bootstrap, but knife is supposed to run chef-client while solo to run chef-solo. Also they use a little bit different options look at the Task file options section. For more information on the bootstrap process have a look into examples directory.

More details about solo tug should be also given here. An important difference that solo tug is assisted by berkshelf to create and upload cookbooks package that makes possible chef-solo invocation. In the examples there's the line starting chef-solo: chef-solo -j /etc/chef/first-boot.json -r <%= hazetug[:cookbooks_file] %>

Another note is about run_list and attributes, just mention that run_list is merged into attributes and available as hazetug[:attributes_json] inside the bootstrap template.

Invocation examples

  • Provisioning and bootstrapping 5 nodes, each 3 of them will be processed simultaneously:

    bundle exec hazetug digitalocean bootstrap knife -n 5 -c 3 -b api.erb api-task.yaml

  • Redefining validation_key and chef_version:

    bundle hazetug digitalocean bootstrap knife -v validation_key=/tmp/validation.pem,chef_version=11.12.4 api.erb api-task.yaml

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( http://github.com/dennybaa/hazetug/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

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Hazetug provisions and bootstraps hosts in Linode and DigitalOcean using Knife

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