Greg Szabo f1e2f0a1f6 | 8 years ago | |
---|---|---|
.. | ||
cluster | 8 years ago | |
.gitignore | 8 years ago | |
README.md | 8 years ago | |
main.tf | 8 years ago |
This is a generic Terraform configuration that sets up DigitalOcean droplets.
DO_API_TOKEN="<The API token received from DigitalOcean>"
curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: Bearer $DO_API_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/account/keys"
If this is your first time using terraform, you have to initialize it by running the below command. (Note: initialization can be run multiple times)
terraform init
After initialization it's good measure to create a new Terraform environment for the droplets so they are always managed together.
TESTNET_NAME="testnet-servers"
terraform env new "$TESTNET_NAME"
Note this terraform env
command is only available in terraform v0.9
and up.
The below command will create 4 nodes in DigitalOcean. They will be named testnet-servers-node0
to testnet-servers-node3
and they will be tagged as testnet-servers
.
DO_API_TOKEN="<The API token received from DigitalOcean>"
SSH_IDS="[ \"<The SSH ID received from the curl call above.>\" ]"
terraform apply -var TESTNET_NAME="testnet-servers" -var servers=4 -var DO_API_TOKEN="$DO_API_TOKEN" -var ssh_keys="$SSH_IDS"
Note: ssh_keys
is a list of strings. You can add multiple keys. For example: ["1234567","9876543"]
.
Alternatively you can use the default settings. The number of default servers is 4 and the testnet name is tf-testnet1
. Variables can also be defined as environment variables instead of the command-line. Environment variables that start with TF_VAR_
will be translated into the Terraform configuration. For example the number of servers can be overriden by setting the TF_VAR_servers
variable.
TF_VAR_DO_API_TOKEN="<The API token received from DigitalOcean>"
TF_VAR_TESTNET_NAME="testnet-servers"
terraform-apply
DigitalOcean uses the root user by default on its droplets. This is fine as long as SSH keys are used. However some people still would like to disable root and use an alternative user to connect to the droplets - then sudo
from there.
Terraform can do this but it requires SSH agent running on the machine where terraform is run, with one of the SSH keys of the droplets added to the agent. (This will be neede for ansible too, so it's worth setting it up here. Check out the ansible page for more information.)
After setting up the SSH key, run terraform apply
with -var noroot=true
to create your droplets. Terraform will create a user called ec2-user
and move the SSH keys over, this way disabling SSH login for root. It also adds the ec2-user
to the sudoers file, so after logging in as ec2-user you can sudo
to root
.
DigitalOcean announced firewalls but the current version of Terraform (0.9.8 as of this writing) does not support it yet. Fortunately it is quite easy to set it up through the web interface (and not that bad through the RESTful API either). When adding droplets to a firewall rule, you can add tags. All droplets in a testnet are tagged with the testnet name so it's enough to define the testnet name in the firewall rule. It is not necessary to add the nodes one-by-one. Also, the firewall rule "remembers" the testnet name tag so if you change the servers but keep the name, the firewall rules will still apply.
After setting up the nodes, head over to the ansible folder to set up tendermint and basecoin.