These tools can help you to create VMs on:
- Azure
- EC2
- OpenStack
- Docker
- Docker Compose
- Parallel SSH (on a Mac:
brew install pssh
) - the configuration scripts require this
Depending on the infrastructure that you want to use, you also need to install the Azure CLI, the AWS CLI, or terraform (for OpenStack deployment).
And if you want to generate printable cards:
- fork/clone repo
- create an infrastructure configuration in the
prepare-vms/infra
directory (using one of the example files in that directory) - create your own setting file from
settings/example.yaml
- if necessary, increase allowed open files:
ulimit -Sn 10000
- run
./workshopctl start
to create instances - run
./workshopctl deploy
to install Docker and setup environment - run
./workshopctl kube
(if you want to install and setup Kubernetes) - run
./workshopctl cards
(if you want to generate PDF for printing handouts of each users host IP's and login info) - run
./workshopctl stop
at the end of the workshop to terminate instances
The Docker Compose file here is used to build a image with all the dependencies to run the ./workshopctl
commands and optional tools. Each run of the script will check if you have those dependencies locally on your host, and will only use the container if you're missing a dependency.
$ git clone https://github.com/jpetazzo/container.training
$ cd container.training/prepare-vms
$ docker-compose build
- Initial assumptions are you're using a root account. If you'd like to use a IAM user, it will need
AmazonEC2FullAccess
andIAMReadOnlyAccess
. - Using a non-default VPC or Security Group isn't supported out of box yet, so you will have to customize
lib/commands.sh
if you want to change that. - These instances will assign the default VPC Security Group, which does not open any ports from Internet by default. So you'll need to add Inbound rules for
SSH | TCP | 22 | 0.0.0.0/0
andCustom TCP Rule | TCP | 8000 - 8002 | 0.0.0.0/0
, or run./workshopctl opensg
which opens up all ports.
You need to do this only once. (On AWS, you can create one infra
file per region.)
Make a copy of one of the example files in the infra
directory.
For instance:
cp infra/example.aws infra/aws-us-west-2
Edit your infrastructure file to customize it. You will probably need to put your cloud provider credentials, select region...
If you don't have the aws
CLI installed, you will get a warning that it's a missing dependency. If you're not using AWS you can ignore this.
Similarly, pick one of the files in settings
and copy it
to customize it.
For instance:
cp settings/example.yaml settings/myworkshop.yaml
You're all set!
workshopctl - the orchestration workshop swiss army knife
Commands:
ami Show the AMI that will be used for deployment
amis List Ubuntu AMIs in the current region
build Build the Docker image to run this program in a container
cards Generate ready-to-print cards for a group of VMs
deploy Install Docker on a bunch of running VMs
ec2quotas Check our EC2 quotas (max instances)
help Show available commands
ids List the instance IDs belonging to a given tag or token
ips List the IP addresses of the VMs for a given tag or token
kube Setup kubernetes clusters with kubeadm (must be run AFTER deploy)
kubetest Check that all notes are reporting as Ready
list List available groups in the current region
opensg Open the default security group to ALL ingress traffic
pull_images Pre-pull a bunch of Docker images
retag Apply a new tag to a group of VMs
start Start a group of VMs
status List instance status for a given group
stop Stop (terminate, shutdown, kill, remove, destroy...) instances
test Run tests (pre-flight checks) on a group of VMs
wrap Run this program in a container
- Used to manage bulk AWS instances for you without needing to use AWS cli or gui.
- Can manage multiple "tags" or groups of instances, which are tracked in
prepare-vms/tags/
- Can also create PDF/HTML for printing student info for instance IP's and login.
- The
./workshopctl
script can be executed directly. - It will run locally if all its dependencies are fulfilled; otherwise it will run in the Docker container you created with
docker-compose build
(preparevms_prepare-vms). - During
start
it will add your default local SSH key to all instances under theubuntu
user. - During
deploy
it will create thedocker
user with passwordtraining
, which is printing on the cards for students. This can be configured with thedocker_user_password
property in the settings file.
- Run
./workshopctl start --infra infra/aws-us-east-2 --settings/myworkshop.yaml --count 60
to create 60 EC2 instances- Your local SSH key will be synced to instances under
ubuntu
user - AWS instances will be created and tagged based on date, and IP's stored in
prepare-vms/tags/
- Your local SSH key will be synced to instances under
- Run
./workshopctl deploy TAG
to runlib/postprep.py
via parallel-ssh- If it errors or times out, you should be able to rerun
- Requires good connection to run all the parallel SSH connections, up to 100 parallel (ProTip: create dedicated management instance in same AWS region where you run all these utils from)
- Run
./workshopctl pull_images TAG
to pre-pull a bunch of Docker images to the instances - Run
./workshopctl cards TAG
generates PDF/HTML files to print and cut and hand out to students - Have a great workshop
- Run
./workshopctl stop TAG
to terminate instances.
- Install the Azure CLI and authenticate with a valid account (
az login
) - Customize
azuredeploy.parameters.json
- Required:
- Provide the SSH public key you plan to use for instance configuration
- Optional:
- Choose a name for the workshop (default is "workshop")
- Choose the number of instances (default is 3)
- Customize the desired instance size (default is Standard_D1_v2)
- Required:
- Launch instances with your chosen resource group name and your preferred region; the examples are "workshop" and "eastus":
az group create --name workshop --location eastus
az group deployment create --resource-group workshop --template-file azuredeploy.json --parameters @azuredeploy.parameters.json
The az group deployment create
command can take several minutes and will only say - Running ..
until it completes, unless you increase the verbosity with --verbose
or --debug
.
To display the IPs of the instances you've launched:
az vm list-ip-addresses --resource-group workshop --output table
If you want to put the IPs into prepare-vms/tags/<tag>/ips.txt
for a tag of "myworkshop":
- If you haven't yet installed
jq
and/or created your event's tags directory inprepare-vms
:
brew install jq
mkdir -p tags/myworkshop
- And then generate the IP list:
az vm list-ip-addresses --resource-group workshop --output json | jq -r '.[].virtualMachine.network.publicIpAddresses[].ipAddress' > tags/myworkshop/ips.txt
After the workshop is over, remove the instances:
az group delete --resource-group workshop
- Copy
infra/example.generic
toinfra/generic
- Run
./workshopctl start --infra infra/generic --settings settings/...yaml
- Note the
prepare-vms/tags/TAG/
path that has been auto-created. - Launch instances via your preferred method. You'll need to get the instance IPs and be able to SSH into them.
- Edit the file
prepare-vms/tags/TAG/ips.txt
, it should list the IP addresses of the VMs (one per line, without any comments or other info) - Continue deployment of cluster configuration with
./workshopctl deploy TAG
- Optionally, configure Kubernetes clusters of the size in the settings: workshopctl kube
TAG
- Optionally, test your Kubernetes clusters. They may take a little time to become ready: workshopctl kubetest
TAG
- Generate cards to print and hand out: workshopctl cards
TAG
- Print the cards file: prepare-vms/tags/
TAG
/ips.html
When the start
command is run, your local RSA SSH public key will be added to your AWS EC2 keychain.
To see which local key will be uploaded, run ssh-add -l | grep RSA
.
The VMs will be started, with an automatically generated tag (timestamp + your username).
Your SSH key will be added to the authorized_keys
of the ubuntu user.
Following the creation of the VMs, a text file will be created containing a list of their IPs.
Instances can be deployed manually using the deploy
command:
$ ./workshopctl deploy TAG
The postprep.py
file will be copied via parallel-ssh to all of the VMs and executed.
$ ./workshopctl pull_images TAG
$ ./workshopctl cards TAG
If you want to generate both HTML and PDF cards, install wkhtmltopdf; without that installed, only HTML cards will be generated.
If you don't have wkhtmltopdf
installed, you will get a warning that it is a missing dependency. If you plan to just print the HTML cards, you can ignore this.
$ ./workshopctl list infra/some-infra-file
$ ./workshopctl listall
$ ./workshopctl tags
$ ./workshopctl stop TAG
- Don't write to bash history in system() in postprep
- compose, etc version inconsistent (int vs str)