Control Node
🚀 Continuous Delivery and Orchestration as code for Elixir
Installation
def deps do
[
{:control_node, "~> 0.2.0"}
]
endTL;DR
control_node is an Elixir library which offers APIs that allow you to build
your own deployment and orchestration workflows. For a given a release tar of an
Elixir/Erlang project control_node offers APIs to store and manage release tar
via local registry and also deploy these release tar to remote hosts (via SSH) and
monitor service nodes.
Pre-requisites
In order to use control_node you must ensure the following,
- You are deploying to virtual machines or bare metal servers. Control node should have SSH access all these host machines where the releases will run.
- Your Erlang/Elixir project when started should run the EPMD (it runs by default if you don't change the config)
Features
- [x] Support multiple namespaces for a release
- [x] Rollout releases to hosts via SSH
- [x] Native node monitoring and restart on failover
- [ ] Native service monitoring/health check
- [ ] Support namespace environment variable configuration
- [ ] Hot upgrade your release config
- [ ] Dynamically scale up/down your release instances
- [ ] Rollback releases
Quick example
This library ships with an example service_app under example/ folder. You can try out this library
by trying to deploy the release using the following steps,
Clone the repo
$ git clone https://github.com/beamX/control-node
$ cd control-code/Start an SSH server locally where the release will be deployed,
$ docker-compose up -dStart iex and define ServiceApp module which will offer API to deploy service_app,
$ iex -S mix
Erlang/OTP 23 [erts-11.0] [source] [64-bit] [smp:8:8] [ds:8:8:10] [async-threads:1] [hipe]
Interactive Elixir (1.10.4) - press Ctrl+C to exit (type h() ENTER for help)
iex(1)> :net_kernel.start([:control_node_test, :shortnames])
iex(control_node_test@hostname)2> defmodule ServiceApp do
use ControlNode.Release,
spec: %ControlNode.Release.Spec{name: :service_app, base_path: "/app/service_app"}
endDeclare a host_spec which will hold the details of which host the release can be deployed to
iex(control_node_test@hostname)3> host_spec = %ControlNode.Host.SSH{
host: "localhost",
port: 2222,
user: "linuxserver.io",
private_key_dir: Path.join([File.cwd!(), "test/fixture", "host-vm/.ssh"])
}Declare a namespace_spec which define the namespace for a given release. Notice that the
namespace allows specifying a list of hosts and registry.
A registry module offers API to retrieve the release tar and here we use a Local registry
which will retrieve the release tar from the filesystem.
iex(control_node_test@hostname)4> namespace_spec = %ControlNode.Namespace.Spec{
tag: :testing,
hosts: [host_spec],
registry_spec: %ControlNode.Registry.Local{path: Path.join(File.cwd!(), "example")},
deployment_type: :incremental_replace,
release_cookie: :"YFWZXAOJGTABHNGIT6KVAC2X6TEHA6WCIRDKSLFD6JZWRC4YHMMA===="
}Now we deploy the release to a given namespace_spec i.e. the release we be started on on
all the hosts specified in the namespace. Notice that once the deployment is finished
control_node_test@hostname automatically connects to release nodes,
iex(control_node_test@hostname)5> ServiceApp.start_link(namespace_spec)
iex(control_node_test@hostname)6> ServiceApp.deploy(:testing, "0.1.0")
iex(control_node_test@hostname)7> Node.list()SSH server config to enable tunneling
In order to ensure that Control Node can connect to release node the SSH servers running the release should allow tunneling,
...
AllowTcpForwarding yes
...Limitation
- SSH client only supports
ed25519keys - Only short names for nodes are allowed ie.
sevice_app@hostnameis support and notsevice_app@host1.server.com - Nodes of a given release (deployed to different) should have different
hostname for eg. if node 1 has node name
service_app@host1then another node ofservice_appshould have a different node name.