210 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
210 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Usage
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=====
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The expected use case is as follows:
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Let's say you have a Linux machine "myserver" and you want to setup
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these software systems on it:
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* `Postfix <https://www.postfix.org/>`_
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* `PostgreSQL <https://www.postgresql.org/>`_
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* `collectd <https://www.collectd.org/>`_
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Create a folder to contain the ``fabfile.py`` etc. Let's also assume
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you will have other machines to setup, and you want to commit all this
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to source control.
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Recommended project structure is like:
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.. code-block:: none
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myproject
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└── machines
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└── myserver
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├── fabfile.py
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├── files
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│ └── etc
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│ ├── collectd
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│ │ └── collectd.conf
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│ └── postfix
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│ └── main.cf
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└── Vagrantfile
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More details on these below.
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.. _fabfile-example:
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``fabfile.py``
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--------------
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This is a "typical" fabfile, to the extent there is such a thing.
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This file contains Fabric "tasks" which may be executed on the target
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machine via SSH. For more on that concept see
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:ref:`invoke:defining-and-running-task-functions`.
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In this example we define "bootstrap" tasks for the setup, but that is
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merely a personal convention. You can define tasks however you need::
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"""
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Fabric script for myserver
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"""
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from fabric import task
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from wuttamess import apt, sync
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# nb. this is used below, for file sync
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root = sync.make_root('files')
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@task
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def bootstrap_all(c):
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"""
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Bootstrap all aspects of the server
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"""
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bootstrap_base(c)
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bootstrap_postgresql(c)
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bootstrap_collectd(c)
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@task
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def bootstrap_base(c):
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"""
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Bootstrap the base system
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"""
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apt.dist_upgrade(c)
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# postfix
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apt.install(c, 'postfix')
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if sync.check_isync(c, root, 'etc/postfix'):
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c.run('systemctl restart postfix')
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@task
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def bootstrap_postgresql(c):
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"""
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Bootstrap the PostgreSQL service
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"""
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apt.install(c, 'postgresql', 'libpq-dev')
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@task
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def bootstrap_collectd(c):
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"""
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Bootstrap the collectd service
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"""
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apt.install(c, 'collectd')
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if sync.check_isync(c, root, 'etc/collectd'):
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c.run('systemctl restart collectd')
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Above you can see how WuttaMess is actually used; it simply provides
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convenience functions which can be called from a Fabric task.
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But `Fabric <https://www.fabfile.org>`_ (and `fabsync
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<https://fabsync.ignorare.dev/>`_ for file sync operations) are doing
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the heavy lifting. The goal for WuttaMess is to further abstract
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common operations and keep the task logic as "clean" as possible.
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See also these functions which are used above:
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* :func:`wuttamess.apt.dist_upgrade()`
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* :func:`wuttamess.apt.install()`
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* :func:`wuttamess.sync.make_root()`
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* :func:`wuttamess.sync.check_isync()`
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``files``
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---------
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This folder contains all files which must be synced to the target
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machine as part of setup. As shown in the example above, the
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``files`` structure should "mirror" the target machine file system.
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The :func:`~wuttamess.sync.check_isync()` function may be called with
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a "subpath" to sync just a portion of the file system. It returns
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``True`` if any files were modified, so we can check for that and
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avoid restarting services if nothing changed.
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Note that in global module scope, we create the "root" object for use
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with file sync. This is then passed to the various sync functions.
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This uses the ``fabsync`` library under the hood; for more on how that
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works see :doc:`fabsync:index`.
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``Vagrantfile``
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---------------
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This file is optional but may be useful for testing deployment on a
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local VM using `Vagrant <https://www.vagrantup.com/>`_. For example:
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.. code-block:: ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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# live machine runs Debian 12 "bookworm"
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config.vm.box = "debian/bookworm64"
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end
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For more info see docs for `Vagrantfile
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<https://developer.hashicorp.com/vagrant/docs/vagrantfile>`_.
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.. _running-tasks:
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Running Tasks via CLI
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---------------------
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With the above setup, first make sure you are in the right working
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directory (wherever ``fabfile.py`` lives):
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.. code-block:: sh
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cd myproject/machines/myserver
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Then run whichever tasks you need, specifying the connection info for
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target machine like so:
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.. code-block:: sh
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fab -e -H root@myserver.example.com bootstrap-all
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Fabric uses SSH to connect to the target machine
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(myserver.example.com) and runs the specified task on that machine.
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Testing with a Vagrant VM will likely require a more "complicated"
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command line. See output from ``vagrant ssh-config`` for details
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specific to your VM, but the command may be something like:
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.. code-block:: sh
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fab -e -H root@192.168.121.42 -i .vagrant/machines/default/libvirt/private_key bootstrap-all
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Troubleshooting SSH
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-------------------
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In some cases troubleshooting the SSH connection can be tricky. A rule of
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thumb is to first make sure it works without Fabric.
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Try a basic connection with the same args using SSH only:
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.. code-block:: sh
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ssh root@myserver.example.com
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Or for a Vagrant VM:
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.. code-block:: sh
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ssh root@192.168.121.42 -i .vagrant/machines/default/libvirt/private_key
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You may want to edit your ``~/.ssh/config`` file as needed. However
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this usually is done for "normal" machines only, not for Vagrant VM.
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Once that works, then the ``fab`` command *should* also work using the
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same args...
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