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chef-marketplace Omnibus project

This project creates full-stack platform-specific packages for the chef-marketplace Chef server add-on. This add-on extends the Chef server's support for cloud marketplaces.

All The Things

  1. Configuration
  1. chef-marketplace-ctl
  1. Biscotti Sevice
  2. Reckoner Sevice
  3. Azure Solution Template
  1. Kitchen-Based Build Environment
  2. Contributing

Configuration

The chef-marketplace package supports a number of user supplied customization options. Like the majority of Chef products, the syntax is Mixlib::Config based and the file should be located at /etc/chef-marketplace/marketplace.rb

Example Marketplace Config

# Enable or disable changing the motd
motd.enable = true

# Marketplace specific support email address
support.email = '[email protected]'

# Marketplace specific documentation
documentation.url = 'http://myorg.com/docs'

# The amount of nodes the license includes
license.count '25'

# The billing type
license.type 'fixed'

# Which role the instance is supposed to play
role 'aio' # or 'server' or 'automate'

# Which Cloud Platform the instance is running on
platform 'aws' # or 'azure'

# Default user for cloud-init
user 'ec2-user'

# Prevents commands from attempting to use external services like package mirrors
# Changing this setting will disable certain features
disable_outbound_traffic true

# Configure which port the Analytics UI binds to
analytics.ssl_port = 8443

# Enable or disable the actions auto trim
analytics.trimmer.enabled = true

# How often in hours to run (1-23)
analytics.trimmer.interval = 4

# Enable or disable the reporting auto clean-up
reporting.cron.enabled = true

# Standard crontab expression
reporting.cron.expression = '*/2 * * * *'

# The latest year/month in the reporting database that you want to preserve
reporting.cron.year = 'date +%Y'
reporting.cron.month = 'date +%m'

# Enable/Disable the Reckoner billing daemon
reckoner.enabled = true

# Set the ec2 product code for the ec2 updater
reckoner.product_code = 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX'

# Enable/Disable the biscotti service
biscotti.enabled = true

# Enable/Disable the Manage marketplace sign up
manage.marketplace.sign_up.enabled = true

Deprecated Features

In the older Chef Server AIO images the chef-marketplace package utilized the chef-marketplace plugin system. It did this to ease configuring Chef Analytics and and oc-id. In this scenario the following configuration was required:

  • The role must be configured in the marketplace.rb file
  • The topology must be set to chef-marketplace in the chef-server.rb configuration file

In Chef Automate marketplace images this is not required as Chef Analytics is not included.

Example Server Config

topology 'chef-marketplace'

chef-marketplace-ctl

Setup

chef-marketplace-ctl setup is a helper command that sets up the Chef server, Manage, Reporting and Analytics with user provided configuration options.

As 0.0.8 web based setup is available for both Chef Server and Chef Analytics. While this command can still be used the web based setup is preferred.

Options

  • -u USERNAME, --username USERNAME Admin username
  • -p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD Admin password
  • -f FIRSTNAME, --firstname FIRSTNAME Admin first name
  • -l LASTNAME, --lastname LASTNAME Admin last name
  • -e EMAIL, --email EMAIL Admin email address
  • -o ORGNAME, --org ORGNAME Default organization name
  • -y, --yes Agree to all setup questions
  • --register Agree to register the node with Chef Software
  • --eula Agree to Chef Software's End User License Agreement
  • --preconfigure Preconfigure the requires services
  • --debug Output logs from executed commands to STDOUT.
  • -h, --help Display help information

Reconfigure

After package installation chef-marketplace-ctl reconfigure is run to execute the embedded configuration recipes.

Configuration Options

See the marketplace.rb configuration for a list of user configurable attributes.

Upgrade

chef-marketplace-ctl upgrade will upgrade the installed Chef server packages

Options

-y, --yes Upgrade Marketplace and all installed components for the configured role -s, --server Upgrade Chef Server (Reporting and Manage are also updated in AIO mode) -m, --marketplace Upgrade Marketplace -a, --analytics Upgrade Chef Analytics -c, --compliance Upgrade Chef Compliance -d, --automate Upgrade Chef Automate

Hostname

chef-marketplace-ctl hostname will set or return the system hostname. If the hostname is updated it will automatically reconfigure any required Chef Software packages.

Options

None, when passing a string to the command it will attempt to configure the host's FQDN to the string that is passed. If nothing is passed it will return the current FQDN.

Trim Actions DB

chef-marketplace-ctl trim-actions-db will trim the actions database to prevent accidental over-filling of the disk. This command is run on regular intervals via cron.

Options

  • -s, --size The desired size of the Analytics database configured role
  • -l, --log The location of the trimmer log file
  • -i, --interval How often the trimmer is running

Register Node

chef-marketplace-ctl register-node will register the Marketplace node with Chef Software to enable support. This command is automatically run during the setup command or via the WebUI during the Chef Compliance setup.

Options

  • -f, --first The support contacts first name
  • -l, --last The support contacts last name
  • -e, --email The support contacts email address
  • -o, --organization The name of the organization the contact represents
  • -s, --server The address of the marketplace registration API

Prepare For Publishing

chef-marketplace-ctl prepare-for-publishing Will setup the node for Marketplace publishing. This ensures all cloud-init and ssh packages are installed and configured. It also removes all default ssh keys, chef package config, default state, and shell history.

Test

chef-marketplace-ctl test Perform's unit and functional tests to validate a successful package installation and working build. This is run in our development continuous delivery pipeline to ensure the package works as expected.

Debugging

Thesetup subcommand has a --debug option which can be used to get detailed output from all the commands run during the preconfigure process. This can be added to the Azure ARM template or AWS CloudFormation template as needed.

Azure

Logs from the ARM template script can be found here: /var/log/azure/Microsoft.OSTCExtensions.CustomScriptForLinux/1.5.2.2/extension.log

The script itself can be found here: /var/lib/waagent/Microsoft.OSTCExtensions.CustomScriptForLinux-1.5.2.2/download/0/

Adding debug option

To add the --debug flag, you will need to modify the command executed here: https://github.com/chef-partners/omnibus-marketplace/blob/master/arm-templates/automate/automate_setup.rb#L45

AWS

We currently have to offerings in AWS which operate slightly differenly in the manner in which they are provisioned. The BYOL version uses CloudFormation, while the Metered offering includes a pre-baked init script. With the CloudFormation template, you can make the change and test with no other modifications or actions required.

However, since the metered version has the scriped baked into the AMI, both a new version of the chef-marketplace and a new AMI build will be required to be able to use the change.

Adding the debug option
BYOL

To add the --debug flag, you will need to modify the CloudFormation template similar to the example below:

--- a/cloudformation/marketplace_byol.yml
+++ b/cloudformation/marketplace_byol.yml
@@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ Resources:
             - !If
               - HasLicenseUrl
               - !Sub >-
-                chef-marketplace-ctl setup --preconfigure --license-url ${LicenseUrl}
+                chef-marketplace-ctl setup --preconfigure --license-url ${LicenseUrl} --debug 2>&1 >/var/log/cfn-userdata.log
               - chef-marketplace-ctl setup --preconfigure

It may also be helpful to change the cfn-signal command to always return 0 rather than $? if your instance is getting terminated due to a failure.

Warning: The output will contain sensitive information such as private keys. Do not keep this flag enabled for production deployments.

Metered

To add the --debug flag to a metered AMI, modify the preconfigure command here:

https://github.com/chef-partners/omnibus-marketplace/blob/master/files/chef-marketplace-cookbooks/chef-marketplace/templates/default/chef-marketplace-cloud-init-setup.erb

The following is an example of the required change:

--- a/files/chef-marketplace-cookbooks/chef-marketplace/templates/default/chef-marketplace-cloud-init-setup.erb
+++ b/files/chef-marketplace-cookbooks/chef-marketplace/templates/default/chef-marketplace-cloud-init-setup.erb
@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ export HOME="/root"
 
 mkdir -p /var/opt/chef-marketplace/
 touch /var/opt/chef-marketplace/cloud_init_running
-chef-marketplace-ctl setup --preconfigure && touch /var/opt/chef-marketplace/preconfigured
+chef-marketplace-ctl setup --preconfigure --debug 2>&1 >>/var/log/userdata.log && \
+touch /var/opt/chef-marketplace/preconfigured

Biscotti Sevice

TODO: Add documentation regarding the biscotti martketplace service.

Reckoner Sevice

TODO: Add documentation regarding the reckoner martketplace service.

Azure Solution Template

With the Chef Automate Azure Marketplace offering we decided to take a simpler approach to the marketplace offering and limit the scope to a single Azure Solution Template for provisioning and configuring a BYOL Chef Automate virtual machine in the Azure cloud. We use the image artifact that is created and publised via the marketplace_image repository as our base image reference in the solution template. Prior Chef Server AIO Marketplace releases were images only.

Using the template

There are several options for using the Solution Template. If you want to test or use what is publicly available in the marketplace, login to the Azure portal and search the Marketplace for Chef Automate. If you're using Chef's primary subscription you may also see Chef Automate (Staged) which is the latest staged offer that we're working to publish. To launch it, fill out all required options, agree to the purchase agreement and launch it. After the ARM deployment has completed you'll need to access the setup page, complete the setup and download the stater kit. The deployment outputs should include the chefAutomateURL that you'll need to complete the setup.

Outputs            :
Name             Type    Value
---------------  ------  ---------------------------------------------------------------
fqdn             String  automatetestvm.eastus.cloudapp.azure.com
sshCommand       String  ssh [email protected]
chefAutomateURL  String  https://automatetestvm.eastus.cloudapp.azure.com/biscotti/setup

You can manually launch the latest template via Make:

make arm-test

or via the Azure CLI with:

azure login
azure group create -n "yournewresourcegroup" -l "East US"
azure group deployment create \
  -f ./arm-templates/automate/mainTemplate.json \
  -e ./arm-templates/automate/mainTemplateParameters.json \
  -g yournewresourcegroup

Developing the template

The Azure Marketplace Solution Template comprises of a UI definition, a corresponding Azure Resource Manager(ARM) template, and any included ARM sub-templates, extension scripts, and files.

The UI definition file is comprised of Marketplace UI Elements which will define the UI experience in the Marketplace. Anything that is user defined and required in the ARM templates will need to be exported via the definition outputs which must correspond to the parameter inputs in the ARM template.

Testing changes

The sub-template import model in Azure requires that all templates that are conditionally used be available as a web resource. Therefore, when making modifications you'll always want to push your template and UI changes to a feature branch and update the the baseUrl parameter in arm-templates/automate/mainTemplateParameters.json to be your new feature branch.

You may to create the deployment group before you can test any changes. To do this run, azure group create -n automatearmtest -l eastus or az group create --name automatearmtest -l "East US" depending on the Azure CLI version you are using.

Use make arm-validate to validate the ARM template via the ARM API and verify that the the UI definition schema validates against the JSON schema. You must fix any errors here in order to publish.

Use make-ui-test-href to generate an Azure Portal href that you can paste into your browsers address bar to open your UI Definition in the Azure Portal. This is useful because you can iterate on a UI definition quickly without requiring a staged Solution Template. It's also conveninent as it doesn't initiate an ARM template launch so you don't have to create resources when working on UI. It also displays the outputs of the UI defition in your browsers Javascript console when you use the launch button. You can use that to verify the output of the UI definition match the ARM template parameters.

Use make arm-run-test-matrix to run the full test matrix to ensure there are no regressions. This can take a few hours.

Configuring the Azure Instance type

In some cases you will find a need to configure a specific Azure instance type. This can be done by setting the value for vmSize in arm-templates/automate/mainTemplateParameters.json.

Launching a Single Instance

To create a single Azure instance for testing, you can run the command: make arm-test. This VM instance can be found in the Azure account under the resource group automatearmtest.

The SSH username and password can be found in the adminUsername and adminPassword parameters of the arm-templates/automate/mainTemplateParameters.json file.

Publishing the template

In order to publish the template all work on the feature branch must be merged to master. After this has happened you will need to create a Solution Template archive with the UI definition, the main ARM template and all nested sub-templates and extensions that the ARM template requires.

Stage published template

Use make arm-publish to validate the template and create a zip file.

  1. Login to the Azure Cloud Partner Portal
  2. Go the "All offers" section.
  3. Choose "Chef Automate" from the list of offers. Note the ARM Solution Template is a different offer than the VM image.
  4. From the "Chef Automate" offer, click on the "SKUs" section and select the "allinone" sku.
  5. Scroll to the bottom of "Package Details" and click "New Package."
  6. Provide a version for the ARM template and click "Upload." Select the zip file artifact generated by make arm-publish.
  7. Click "Save."
  8. Click "Publish."

After the staging has completed (can be several hours to several days) you will need to test the template.

Test the staged template

Testing the staged template involves testing both the all UI permutations and a minimum of 30 ARM template launches.

Near complete testing of UI elements is currently possible in 3 passes. The goal here is to validate all branching options in the template (storage types, regions, SSH auth, existing resource re-use, etc.) For all three passes below you'll need to locate the staged template in the Azure Marketplace and run through each scenario while ensuring that you complete the setup and validate a working Chef Automate install.

Pass #1 (defaults)
  • Use defaults where possible
  • Use SSH Password auth
  • Don't upload a delivery.license file
Pass #2 (re-use)
  • Delete resources that won't be re-used from pass #1:
    • The virtual machine
    • The network interface
    • The network security group
  • Re-use existing resources from Pass #1 for all resource types that support it:
    • The public IP address
    • The storage account
    • The diagnostic storage account
    • The virtual network
Pass #3 (non-defaults)
  • Use non default options wherever possible:
    • The virtual machine name
    • The username
    • Use SSH Public Key auth
    • Use a region that is not East US
    • Use a VM size that is not Standard_D2_v2
    • Use a premium storage account for disks
    • Use a different subnet
    • Upload a delivery.license file

If all three of these scenarios complete without error you should be reasonably confident that the UI definition and ARM template work as expected. Now you'll need to run the test matrix. This process will run the master branch version of the ARM template (which should be the version staged) 30+ times to verify that it works as expected in several permutations. Currently it verifies usability in all regions, using new resources, reusing existing resources and using different storage types. If your changes create a new permutation it is advised to add a secenario to the automate test matrix to ensure that it is verified.

Use make arm-run-test-matrix to run the tests. If the tests succeed a zip artifact containing the logs of each run will be output. You'll need to provide the log archive to Microsoft when you request publishing to production.

Though each scenario cleans up after itself you should make sure to manually delete any lingering test resouces and/or resource groups.

Kitchen-based Build Environment

Every Omnibus project ships will a project-specific Berksfile that will allow you to build your omnibus projects on all of the projects listed in the .kitchen.yml. You can add/remove additional platforms as needed by changing the list found in the .kitchen.yml platforms YAML stanza.

This build environment is designed to get you up-and-running quickly. However, there is nothing that restricts you to building on other platforms. Simply use the omnibus cookbook to setup your desired platform and execute the build steps listed above.

The default build environment requires Test Kitchen and VirtualBox for local development. Test Kitchen also exposes the ability to provision instances using various cloud providers like AWS, DigitalOcean, or OpenStack. For more information, please see the Test Kitchen documentation.

Once you have tweaked your .kitchen.yml (or .kitchen.local.yml) to your liking, you can bring up an individual build environment using the kitchen command.

For a complete list of all commands and platforms, run kitchen list or kitchen help.

$ bin/kitchen converge centos-6.6

Then login to the instance and build the project

$ bundle exec kitchen login centos-6.6
[vagrant@centos...] $ cd chef-marketplace
[vagrant@centos...] $ bundle install --binstubs
[vagrant@centos...] $ bin/omnibus build chef-marketplace

The platform/architecture type of the package created will match the platform where the build project command is invoked. For example, running this command on a MacBook Pro will generate a Mac OS X package. After the build completes packages will be available in the pkg/ folder.

You can clean up all temporary files generated during the build process with the clean command:

$ bin/omnibus clean chef-marketplace

Adding the --purge purge option removes ALL files generated during the build including the project install directory (/opt/chef-marketplace) and the package cache directory (/var/cache/omnibus/pkg):

$ bin/omnibus clean chef-marketplace --purge

Full help for the Omnibus command line interface can be accessed with the help command:

$ bin/omnibus help

Contributing

Please submit a GitHub issue with any problems you encounter.

Contributions are always welcome! If you'd like to send up any fixes or changes:

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/chef-partners/omnibus-marketplace/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Test your changes (cd omnibus-marketplace && bundle install && bundle exec rake spec)
  4. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  5. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  6. Create a new Pull Request