Want to get up and running as quickly as possible to see what all the fuss is about?
Use our bootstrap scripts!
Note that only Linux sprout
s and farmer
s are supported, but you can use the
CLI from macOS as well.
- Download and initialize the command line utility from our releases to your dev machine.
# replace 'linux' with darwin if you're on macOS
curl -L https://releases.grlx.dev/linux/amd64/latest/grlx > grlx && chmod +x grlx
./grlx init
You'll be asked some questions, such as which interface the farmer
is listening on, and which ports to use for communication.
Set the interface to the domain name or IP address of the farmer
.
Once configured, the CLI prints out your administrator public key, which you'll need for the next step!
It's recommended you now add grlx
somewhere in your $PATH
.
2. On your control server, you'll need to install the farmer
. This script may also be run as root
instead of using sudo.
curl -L https://bootstrap.grlx.dev/latest/farmer | sudo bash
You'll be asked several questions about the interface to listen on, which ports to use, etc. For the quick start, it's recommended to use the default ports (make sure there's no firewall in the way!). You'll be prompted for an admin public key, which you should have gotten from the prior step, and a certificate host name(s). Make sure the certificate host name matches the external-facing interface (a domain or IP address) as it will be used for TLS validation!
3. On all of your fleet nodes, you'll need to install the sprout
.
# Set FARMERINTERFACE to your farmer's domain name. FARMERBUSPORT and FARMERAPIPORT
# variables are available in case you chose to use different ports.
curl -L https://bootstrap.grlx.dev/latest/sprout | FARMERINTERFACE=localhost sudo -E bash
Once the sprout is up and running, return to the CLI.
- If all is well, you're ready to
cook
!
grlx keys accept -A
sleep 15;
grlx -T \* test ping
grlx -T \* cmd run whoami
grlx -T \* cmd run --out json -- uname -a