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When Docker ends, Chef begins ~ #idi2015 Incont...

When Docker ends, Chef begins ~ #idi2015 Incontro DevOps Italia

Giovanni Toraldo

April 10, 2015
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  1. Hello! I AM GIOVANNI TORALDO Open Source enthusiast with SuperCow

    Powers PHP/Java/whatever developer writer of the OpenNebula book Lead Developer @ ClouDesire
  2. WHAT IS CLOUDESIRE? Application Marketplace ◦ Helps S/M software vendors

    ◦ For simple applications it can ▫ provision VM ▫ on multiple cloud providers ▫ monitor resources ◦ For complex applications ▫ expose REST API ◦ For everyone ▫ manage subscriptions, billing, pay- per-use, invoicing, payments
  3. DOCKER: WHAT IS IT? Enables software developers to ◦ package

    an application ◦ with all dependencies ◦ runs it everywhere unchanged
  4. DOCKER: WHAT IS THE POINT? Enables system administrators to ◦

    simplify application deployment ◦ ease scale-up & scale-down ◦ processes separation
  5. DOCKER: GLOSSARY ◦ Image: immutable snapshot of a container, push/pull

    repository ◦ Container: an instance launched from an image ◦ Volume: persistent writable area of a container ◦ Registry: repository of images (versioned via tags) ◦ Dockerfile: the descriptor from which an image is built
  6. DOCKER: HOW DO I RUN IT? ◦ GNU/Linux wget -qO-

    https://get.docker.com/ | sh ◦ Windows https://github.com/boot2docker/windows-installer/releases/latest ◦ OSX https://kitematic.com/download/ ◦ Hello world $ docker run -ti ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash
  7. DOCKER: WHAT HAPPENS UNDER THE HOOD? ◦ Pulls the ubuntu

    image from registry ◦ Creates a new container ▫ Allocates a rw filesystem ▫ Allocates a network interface (on a bridge) ▫ Sets up network (IP address, dns..) ◦ Launch a process in the container ◦ Captures and provides application output Container terminates when the process exit
  8. DOCKER: STANDARD WORKFLOW Build & push: ◦ docker build -t

    gionn/nodejs-app:1.0.0 . ▫ a tagged image is generated ◦ docker push gionn/nodejs-app:1.0.0 ▫ publish to repository Pull & run: ◦ docker pull gionn/nodejs-app:1.0.0 ▫ fetch from repository ◦ docker run gionn/nodejs-app:1.0.0 ▫ run container from this image Example gist: link
  9. DOCKER: ROUGH EDGE #1 Service in container A needs to

    talk to service in container B Docker solution: ◦ Use Container Links Reality: ◦ Works only on the same host ◦ Ordered sequence to boot-up ◦ Can’t solve cyclic dependencies
  10. DOCKER: ROUGH EDGE #2 My containerized application needs environment-dependant configurations

    Docker solution: ◦ Inject environment variables Reality: ◦ I need to fill YAML, XML, JSON complex structures
  11. DOCKER: ROUGH EDGE #3 I need to manage and upgrade

    a non-trivial number of containers on multiple hosts Docker solution: ◦ Docker Swarm Reality: ◦ currently in beta, not recommend for production
  12. DOCKER: RECAP So far so good? Docker is a piece

    of cake for wrapping together the technologies of Linux containers, multi-layered filesystems and an image build system, in an unique tool easy and fast to use.
  13. DOCKER: RECAP But what about the environment? Being a (relatively)

    young project, the ecosystem of tools is pretty scattered and inconsistent.
  14. WHO YOU GONNA CALL? Probably someone has solved this kind

    of issues far time ago, even before Docker existed? Those kind of problems are all about configuration management and automation. So use the tools already available.
  15. CHEF Chef enables you to: ◦ Version your infrastructure on

    SCM, build an artifact ◦ Apply testing, CI, CD to infrastructure ◦ Keep it aligned with your software ◦ Automation via repeatable actions (e.g. click to deploy)
  16. CHEF: THE TOOLS Everything you need in a single package:

    https://downloads.chef.io/chef-dk/ For (automated) testing https://www.vagrantup.com https://www.virtualbox.org
  17. CHEF: EVERYTHING IS IN A REPOSITORY The chef-repo is a

    standard repo layout and contains: ◦ Cookbooks ◦ Environments ◦ Data bags ◦ Roles
  18. CHEF: WHAT IS A COOKBOOK Each cookbook is coupled with

    a service (e.g. mysql). Contains: ◦ Attributes: they are like global variables (e.g. version to install) ◦ Recipes: an atomic unit of configuration ◦ Templates: patterns to generate real files, filled with data ◦ Files: static configuration
  19. CHEF RECIPES Each recipe contains behaviour expressed by resources (and

    Ruby code) user_name = ‘gionn’ user user_name do supports :manage_home => true uid 1000 gid 'users' home “/home/#{user_name}” shell '/bin/bash' password '$1$JJsvHslV$szsCjVEroftprNn4JHtDi' end
  20. CHEF COMPONENTS The remaining components: ◦ Environments: contains common attributes

    for a group of nodes ◦ Roles: contains attributes for nodes sharing a particular behaviour ◦ Data bags: general-purpose JSON data, optionally encrypted, usually to store credentials
  21. COOKBOOKS FOR EVERY NEEDS All cookbooks are usually hosted on

    GitHub ◦ Maintained by Opscode https://github.com/opscode-cookbooks ◦ by vendors https://github.com/elastic/cookbook-elasticsearch ◦ by the community https://supermarket.chef.io Community Stats (07/04/2015) 2,120 Cookbooks ~ 62,086 Chefs
  22. DOCKER COOKBOOK https://github.com/bflad/chef-docker ◦ Install docker daemon on supported platforms

    ▫ Ubuntu/Debian ▫ RHEL/CentOS/Fedora ▫ Amazon Linux ◦ Expose attributes for fine-tuning (e.g. TLS certificates, DNS) ◦ Manage images & containers lifecycle via ad-hoc resources
  23. PROBLEM #0: IMAGE DISTRIBUTION / RUN CONTAINER docker_image 'registry:0.9.0' do

    action :pull notifies :redeploy, 'docker_container[registry]', :immediately end docker_container 'registry' do container_name 'registry' image 'registry:0.9.0' detach true port '5000:5000' volume '/srv/registry:/tmp/registry' env 'SETTINGS_FLAVOR=local' env 'SEARCH_BACKEND=sqlalchemy' action :run end
  24. PROBLEM #0: IMAGE DISTRIBUTION / RUN CONTAINER Check that docker

    has such tagged image and if not: ◦ Download that version ◦ Stop existing container (if any) ◦ Run new container ◦ Raise error if anything goes wrong
  25. PROBLEM #1: MY APPLICATION NEEDS CONFIGURATION Populate configuration files with

    proper values (and automatically restart on changes) template node['tomcat']['host'] + '/cmw.xml' do source 'tomcat/tomcat-context.xml.erb' variables( :resource_name => 'jdbc/datasource', :username => node['cloudesire']['name'], :password => node['cloudesire']['pass'] :url => node['cloudesire']['url'], ) notifies :redeploy, 'docker_container[cmw]' end
  26. PROBLEM #1: MY APPLICATION NEEDS CONFIGURATION tomcat-context.xml.erb <Context> <Resource auth="Container"

    driverClassName="org.postgresql.Driver" initialSize="<%= @node['cloudesire']['backend']['db_pool']['min'] %>" maxActive="<%= @node['cloudesire']['backend']['db_pool']['max'] %>" maxIdle="<%= @node['cloudesire']['backend']['db_pool']['idle'] %>" maxWait="<%= @node['cloudesire']['backend']['db_pool']['wait'] %>" name="<%= @resource_name %>" url="<%= @url %>" username="<%= @username %>" password="<%= @password %>" type="javax.sql.DataSource" validationQuery="select 1" testOnBorrow="true" /> </Context>
  27. PROBLEM #1: MY APPLICATION NEEDS CONFIGURATION Templates consist of: ◦

    an .ERB template ◦ a template resource declared in a recipe The template is evaluated using the variables passed directly or via the global node object.
  28. PROBLEM #1: MY APPLICATION NEEDS CONFIGURATION Inject a single file

    or entire folders dst = node['tomcat']['base'] + '/conf/Catalina/' + 'localhost/cmw.xml' docker_container 'cmw' do image image_name container_name 'cmw' detach true env LOG debug volume [ "#{node['tomcat']['host']}/cmw.xml:#{dst}", "/etc/cloudesire:/etc/cloudesire" ] end
  29. PROBLEM #1: MY APPLICATION NEEDS CONFIGURATION Docker permits defining volumes

    to be used for persistent data (e.g. database files), but may be used to inject configurations into the container at runtime. Definitevely avoid the needs of image rebuilding to adjust a setting.
  30. PROBLEM #2: CONTAINERS RUNNING ON MULTIPLE HOSTS Each node has

    its own run_list, defining which recipes should be executed (in JSON): { “run_list”: [ "cd-infrastructure::docker-cmw", "cd-infrastructure::docker-deployer", "cd-infrastructure::docker-monitor", "cd-infrastructure::docker-logger" ], “cloudesire”: { “key”: “value” } }
  31. PROBLEM #2: CONTAINERS RUNNING ON MULTIPLE HOSTS Same recipe on

    different nodes (attributes may change) node1.json { “run_list”: [ "cd-infrastructure::docker-cmw", "cd-infrastructure::docker-logger" ] } node2.json { “run_list”: [ "cd-infrastructure::docker-deployer", "cd-infrastructure::docker-monitor", "cd-infrastructure::docker-logger" ] }
  32. MAY NOT BE GOLD BUT IT’S A START FOR SURE!

    It’s easy to getting started with Chef by using kitchen-ci or plain Vagrant: ◦ Initialize a chef repo ◦ Create a new cookbook ◦ Start hacking ◦ Play on kitchen-ci or vagrant ◦ Repeat last 2
  33. KITCHEN.YML EXAMPLE $ kitchen converge driver: name: vagrant provisioner: name:

    chef_solo platforms: - name: ubuntu-1404 suites: - name: default run_list: - recipe[mycookbook::docker-whatever] attributes: { foo: "bar" }
  34. READY TO USE CHEF REPOSITORY A starting repository for aspiring

    whale cookers: https://github.com/gionn/cooking- docker
  35. DOCKER APPENDIX: GOLDEN RULES ◦ Only one process per Image

    ◦ No embedded configuration ◦ No, you don’t need SSH ◦ No, you don’t need syslog ◦ No, you won’t touch a running container to adjust a thing ◦ No, you will not use a community-contributed image without looking at what it do