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Infrastructure as Code Cookbook
Infrastructure as Code Cookbook

Infrastructure as Code Cookbook: Automate complex infrastructures

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Profile Icon Stephane Jourdan Profile Icon Pierre Pomès
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Arrow left icon
Profile Icon Stephane Jourdan Profile Icon Pierre Pomès
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€41.99
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Paperback Feb 2017 440 pages 1st Edition
eBook
€8.99 €32.99
Paperback
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Infrastructure as Code Cookbook

Chapter 1. Vagrant Development Environments

In this chapter, we will cover the following recipes:

  • Adding an Ubuntu Xenial (16.04 LTS) Vagrant box
  • Using a disposable Ubuntu Xenial (16.04) in seconds
  • Enabling VirtualBox Guest Additions in Vagrant
  • Using a disposable CentOS 7.x with VMware in seconds
  • Extending the VMware VM capabilities
  • Enabling multiprovider Vagrant environments
  • Customizing a Vagrant VM
  • Using Docker with Vagrant
  • Using Docker in Vagrant for a Ghost blog behind NGINX
  • Using Vagrant remotely with AWS EC2 and Docker
  • Simulating dynamic multiple host networking
  • Simulating a networked three-tier architecture app with Vagrant
  • Showing your work on the LAN while working with Laravel
  • Sharing access to your Vagrant environment with the world
  • Simulating Chef upgrades using Vagrant
  • Using Ansible with Vagrant to create a Docker host
  • Using Docker containers on CoreOS with Vagrant

Introduction

Vagrant is a free and open source tool by Hashicorp aimed at building a repeatable development environment inside a virtual machine, using simple Ruby code. You can then distribute this simple file with other people, team members, and external contributors, so that they immediately have a working running environment as long as they have virtualization on their laptop. It also means that you can use a Mac laptop, and with a simple command, launch a fully configured Linux environment for you to use locally. Everyone can work using the same environment, regardless of their own local machine. Vagrant is also very useful to simulate full production environments, with multiple machines and specific operating system versions. Vagrant is compatible with most hypervisors, such as VMware, VirtualBox, or Parallels, and can be largely extended using plugins.

Vagrant uses boxes to run. These boxes are just packaged virtual machines images that are available, for example, from https://atlas.hashicorp.com/boxes/search, or you can alternatively build your own using various tools.

Vagrant can be greatly extended using plugins. There're plugins for almost anything you can think about, and most of them are community supported. From specific guest operating systems to remote IaaS providers, features around sharing, caching or snapshotting, networking, testing or specifics to Chef/Puppet, a lot can be done through plugins in Vagrant.

A list of all available plugins, including all Vagrant providers is available on the Vagrant wiki here: https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/wiki/Available-Vagrant-Plugins.

More information about all integrated providers can be found on Vagrant's website: https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/providers/.

You can download a Vagrant installer for your platform from https://www.vagrantup.com/downloads.html.

Note

The Vagrant version in use for this book is Vagrant 1.8.4

Adding an Ubuntu Xenial (16.04 LTS) Vagrant box

Vagrant boxes are referred to by their names, usually following the username/boxname naming scheme. A 64-bits Precise box released by Ubuntu will be named ubuntu/precise64 while the centos/7 box will always be the latest CentOS 7 official box.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation using the free and open source Virtualbox hypervisor
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Open a terminal and type the following code:

$ vagrant box add ubuntu/xenial64
==> box: Loading metadata for box 'ubuntu/xenial64'
    box: URL: https://atlas.hashicorp.com/ubuntu/xenial64
==> box: Adding box 'ubuntu/xenial64' (v20160815.0.0) for provider: virtualbox
    box: Downloading: https://atlas.hashicorp.com/ubuntu/boxes/xenial64/versions/20160815.0.0/providers/virtualbox.box
==> box: Successfully added box 'ubuntu/xenial64' (v20160815.0.0) for 'virtualbox'!

How it works…

Vagrant knows where to look for the latest version for the requested box on the Atlas service and automatically downloads it over the Internet. All boxes are stored by default in ~/.vagrant.d/boxes.

There's more…

If you're interested in creating your own base Vagrant boxes, refer to Packer (https://www.packer.io/) and the Chef Bento project (http://chef.github.io/bento/).

Using a disposable Ubuntu Xenial (16.04) in seconds

We want to access and use an Ubuntu Xenial system (16.04 LTS) as quickly as possible.

To do that, Vagrant uses a file named Vagrantfile to describe the Vagrant infrastructure. This file is in fact pure Ruby that Vagrant reads to manage your environment. Everything related to Vagrant is done inside a block such as the following:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  # all your Vagrant configuration here
end

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

  1. Create a folder for the project:
    $ mkdir vagrant_ubuntu_xenial_1 && cd $_
  2. Using your favorite editor, create this very minimal Vagrantfile to launch an ubuntu/xenial64 box:
    Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
      config.vm.box = "ubuntu/xenial64"
    end
  3. Now you can execute Vagrant, by explicitly using the Virtualbox hypervisor:
    $ vagrant up --provider=virtualbox
  4. Within seconds, you'll have a running Ubuntu 16.04 Vagrant box on your host and you can do whatever you want with it. For example, start by logging into it via Secure Shell (SSH) by issuing the following vagrant command and use the system normally:
    $ vagrant ssh
    Welcome to Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 4.4.0-34-generic x86_64)
    […]
    ubuntu@ubuntu-xenial:~$ hostname
    ubuntu-xenial
    ubuntu@ubuntu-xenial:~$ free -m
    ubuntu@ubuntu-xenial:~$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
    
  5. When you're done with your Vagrant VM, you can simply destroy it:
    $ vagrant destroy
    ==> default: Forcing shutdown of VM...
    ==> default: Destroying VM and associated drives...
    

    Alternatively, we can just stop the Vagrant VM with the goal of restarting it later in its current state using vagrant halt:

    $ vagrant halt

How it works…

When you started Vagrant, it read the Vagrantfile, asking for a specific box to run (Ubuntu Xenial). If you previously added it, it will launch it right away through the default hypervisor (in this case, VirtualBox), or if it's a new box, download it for you automatically. It created the required virtual network interfaces, then the Ubuntu VM got a private IP address. Vagrant took care of configuring SSH by exposing an available port and inserting a default key, so you can log into it via SSH without problems.

Enabling VirtualBox Guest Additions in Vagrant

The VirtualBox Guest Additions are a set of drivers and applications to be deployed on a virtual machine to have better performance and enable features such as folder sharing. While it's possible to include the Guest Additions directly in the box, not all the boxes you'll find have it, and even when they do, they can be outdated very quickly.

The solution is to automatically deploy the VirtualBox Guest Additions on demand, through a plugin.

Note

The downside to using this plugin is that the Vagrant box may now take longer to boot, as it may need to download and install the right guest additions for the box.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • An internet connection
  • The Vagrantfile from the previous recipe

How to do it…

Follow these steps to enable VirtualBox Guest Additions in Vagrant:

  1. Install the vagrant-vbguest plugin:
    $ vagrant plugin install vagrant-vbguest
    Installing the 'vagrant-vbguest' plugin. This can take a few minutes...
    Installed the plugin 'vagrant-vbguest (0.13.0)'!
    
  2. Confirm that the plugin is installed:
    $ vagrant plugin list
    vagrant-vbguest (0.13.0)
    
  3. Start Vagrant and see that the VirtualBox Guest Additions are installed:
    $ vagrant up
    […]
    Installing Virtualbox Guest Additions 5.0.26
    […]
    Building the VirtualBox Guest Additions kernel modules
     ...done.
    Doing non-kernel setup of the Guest Additions …done.
    
  4. Now, maybe you don't want to do this every time you start you Vagrant box, because it takes time and bandwidth or because the minor difference between your host VirtualBox version and the one already installed in the Vagrant box isn't a problem for you. In this case, you can simply tell Vagrant to disable the auto-update feature right from the Vagrantfile:
    config.vbguest.auto_update = false
  5. An even better way to keep your code compatible with people without this plugin is to use this plugin configuration only if the plugin is found by Vagrant itself:
    if Vagrant.has_plugin?("vagrant-vbguest") then
        config.vbguest.auto_update = false
    end
  6. The full Vagrantfile now looks like this:
    Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
        config.vm.box = "ubuntu/xenial64"
        if Vagrant.has_plugin?("vagrant-vbguest") then
              config.vbguest.auto_update = false
        end
    end

How it works…

Vagrant plugins are automatically installed from the vendor's website, and made available globally on your system for all other Vagrant environments you'll run. Once the virtual machine is ready, the plugin will detect the operating system, decide if the Guest Additions need to be installed or not, and if they do, install the necessary tools to do that (compilers, kernel headers, and libraries), and finally download and install the corresponding Guest Additions.

There's more…

Using Vagrant plugins also extends what you can do with the Vagrant CLI. In the case of the VirtualBox Guest Addition plugin, you can do a lot of things such as status checks, manage the installation, and much more:

$ vagrant vbguest --status
[default] GuestAdditions 5.0.26 running --- OK.

The plugin can later be called through Vagrant directly; here it's triggering the Guest Additions installation in the virtual machine:

$ vagrant vbguest --do install

Using a disposable CentOS 7.x with VMware in seconds

Vagrant supports both VMware Workstation and VMware Fusion through official plugins available on the Vagrant store (https://www.vagrantup.com/vmware). Follow the indications from the official website to install the plugins.

Vagrant boxes depend on the hypervisor—a VirtualBox image won't run on VMware. You need to use dedicated images for each supervisor you choose to use. For example, Ubuntu official releases only provide VirtualBox images. If you try to create a Vagrant box with a provider while using an image built for another provider, you'll get an error.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VMware Workstation (PC) or Fusion (Mac) installation
  • A working Vagrant VMware plugin installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

The Chef Bento project provides various multiprovider images we can use. For example, let's use a CentOS 7.2 with Vagrant (bento/centos-7.2) with this simplest Vagrantfile:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
end

Start your CentOS 7.2 virtual environment and specify the hypervisor you want to run:

$ vagrant up --provider=vmware_fusion
$ vagrant ssh

You're now running a CentOS 7.2 Vagrant box using VMware!

How it works…

Vagrant is powered by plugins extending its usage and capabilities. In this case, the Vagrant plugin for VMware delegates all the virtualization features to the VMware installation, removing the need for VirtualBox.

There's more…

If VMware is your primary hypervisor, you'll soon be tired to always specify the provider in the command line. By setting the VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER environment variable to the corresponding plugin, you will never have to specify the provider again, VMware will be the default:

$ export VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER=vmware_fusion
$ vagrant up

See also

Extending the VMware VM capabilities

The hardware specifications of the Vagrant box vary from image to image as they're specified at the creation time. However, it's not fixed forever: it's just the default behavior. You can set the requirements right in the Vagrantfile, so you can keep a daily small Vagrant box and on-demand.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VMware Workstation (PC) or Fusion (Mac) installation
  • A working Vagrant VMware plugin installation
  • An internet connection
  • The Vagrantfile from the previous recipe using a bento/centos72 box

How to do it…

The VMware provider can be configured inside the following configuration blocks:

# VMware Fusion configuration
config.vm.provider "vmware_fusion" do |vmware|
  # enter all the vmware configuration here
end

# VMware Workstation configuration
config.vm.provider "vmware_workstation" do |vmware|
  # enter all the vmware configuration here
end

If the configuration is the same, you'll end up with a lot of duplicated code. Take advantage of the Ruby nature of the Vagrantfile and use a simple loop to iterate through both values:

["vmware_fusion", "vmware_workstation"].each do |vmware|
  config.vm.provider vmware do |v|
    # enter all the vmware configuration here
  end
end

Our default Bento CentOS 7.2 image has only 512 MB of RAM and one CPU. Let's double that for better performance using the vmx["numvcpus"] and vmx["memsize"] keys:

  ["vmware_fusion", "vmware_workstation"].each do |vmware|
    config.vm.provider vmware do |v|
      v.vmx["numvcpus"] = "2"
      v.vmx["memsize"] = "1024"
    end
  end

Start or restart your Vagrant machine to apply the changes:

$ vagrant up
[…]

Your box is now using two CPUs and 1 GB of RAM.

How it works…

Virtual machine configuration is the last thing done by Vagrant before starting up. Here, it just tells VMware to allocate two CPUs and 1 GB of RAM to the virtual machine it's launching the way you would have done manually from inside the software.

There's more…

Vagrant's authors may merge both plugins into one at some point in the future. The current 4.x version of the plugins is still split.

The VMX format is not very well documented by VMware. The possible keys and values can be found on most VMware Inc. documentation about VMX configuration.

Enabling multiprovider Vagrant environments

You might be running VMware on your laptop, but your coworker might not. Alternatively, you want people to have the choice, or you simply want both environments to work! We'll see how to build a single Vagrantfile to support them all.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • A working VMware Workstation (PC) or Fusion (Mac) installation
  • A working Vagrant VMware plugin installation
  • An internet connection
  • The Vagrantfile from the previous recipe using a bento/centos72 box

How to do it…

Some Vagrant boxes are available for multiple hypervisors, such as the CentOS 7 Bento box we previously used. This way, we can simply choose which one to use.

Let's start with our previous Vagrantfile including customizations for VMware:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
  ["vmware_fusion", "vmware_workstation"].each do |vmware|
    config.vm.provider vmware do |v|
      v.vmx["numvcpus"] = "2"
      v.vmx["memsize"] = "1024"
    end
  end
end

How would we add the same configuration on VirtualBox as we have on VMware? Here's how to customize VirtualBox similarly in the Vagrantfile:

  config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
    vb.memory = "1024"
    vb.cpus = "2"
  end

Add this to your current Vagrantfile, reload and you'll get the requested resources from your hypervisor, be it VMware or VirtualBox.

It's nice, but we're still repeating ourselves with the values, leading to possible errors, omissions, or mistakes in the future. Let's take advantage once again of the Ruby nature of our Vagrantfile and declare some meaningful variables at the top of our file:

vm_memory = 1024
vm_cpus = 2

Now replace the four values by their variable names and you're done: you're centrally managing characteristics of the Vagrant environment you're using and distributing, whatever hypervisor you're using.

How it works…

The simple fact that the Vagrantfile is a pure Ruby file helps creating powerful and dynamic configuration, by simply setting variables that we use later for all the providers.

Customizing a Vagrant VM

Vagrant supports many configuration options through the Vagrantfile. Here are the most useful ones for daily use.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation (with a hypervisor)
  • An Internet connection
  • The Vagrantfile from the previous recipe using a bento/centos72 box

How to do it…

Here are some possible customizations for your Vagrant Virtual Machine.

Set the hostname

If you want to specify the VM name right from Vagrant, just add the following:

config.vm.hostname = "vagrant-lab-1"

This will also add an entry with the hostname to the /etc/host file.

Disable new box version check at startup

You may be using a slow internet connection, or you know you do want to use your current installed box, or maybe you're in a hurry and just want to get the job done; you can just remove the option to check for a new version of the box at startup by adding the following:

config.vm.box_check_update = false

Use a specific box version

If you know you want to use a specific version of the box (maybe for debugging purposes or compliance) and not the latest, you can simply declare it as follows:

config.vm.box_version = "2.2.9"

Display an informational message to the user

A useful feature is to display some basic but relevant information to the user launching the Vagrant box, such as usage or connection information. Don't forget to escape the special characters. As it's Ruby, you can access all available variables, so the message can be even more dynamic and useful to the user:

config.vm.post_up_message = "Use \"vagrant ssh\" to log into the box. This VM uses #{vm_cpus} CPUs and #{vm_memory}MB of RAM."

Specify a minimum Vagrant version

Vagrant is updated quite often, and new features are added regularly. A good practice, if you use a feature that is known to work only after a specific version, is to declare it in the Vagrantfile, so people with an older version know they have to update:

Vagrant.require_version ">= 1.8.0"

Using Docker with Vagrant

Development environments can often be mixed, using both virtual machines and Docker containers. While virtual machines include everything needed to run a full operating system like memory, CPU, a kernel and all required libraries, a container is much more lightweight and can share all this with its host, while keeping a good isolation through special kernel features named cgroups. Docker containers helps developers use, share and ship a bundle including everything needed to run their application. Here, we'll show how to use Vagrant to start containers. Since Docker usage is a little different between Linux hosts and other platforms, the reference used here is the native Docker platform—Linux.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation (no hypervisor needed)
  • A working Docker installation and basic Docker knowledge
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

We'll see how to use, access, and manipulate an NGINX container in Vagrant using Docker as a provider.

Using NGINX Docker container through Vagrant

Let's start with the simplest Vagrantfile possible, using the nginx:stable container with the Docker Vagrant provider:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.hostname = "vagrant-docker-1"
  config.vm.post_up_message = "HTTP access: http://localhost/"
  config.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "nginx:stable"
  end
end

Simply start it up with the following code:

$ vagrant up --provider=docker
Bringing machine 'default' up with 'docker' provider...
==> default: Creating the container...
[…]
==> default: HTTP access: http://localhost/

Let's remove the need to specify the provider on the command line by setting a simple Ruby environment access code at the top of the Vagrantfile:

ENV['VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER'] = 'docker'

Now you can distribute your Vagrantfile and not worry about people forgetting to explicitly specify the Docker provider.

Exposing Docker ports in Vagrant

Okay, the previous example wasn't terribly useful as we didn't expose any ports. Let's tell Vagrant to expose the Docker container HTTP (TCP/80) port to our host's HTTP (TCP/80) port:

  config.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "nginx:stable"
      docker.ports = ['80:80']
  end

Restart the Vagrant and verify you can access your NGINX container:

$ curl http://localhost/

Sharing folders with Docker through Vagrant

What about sharing a local folder so you can code on your laptop and see the result processed by the Vagrant environment? The default NGINX configuration reads files from /usr/share/nginx/html. Let's put our own index.html in there.

Create a simple src/index.html file, containing some text:

$ mkdir src; echo "<h1>Hello from Docker via Vagrant<h1>" > src/index.html

Add the Docker volume configuration to our Docker provider block in Vagrant:

  config.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "nginx:stable"
      docker.ports = ['80:80']
      docker.volumes = ["#{Dir.pwd}/src:/usr/share/nginx/html"]
  end

Note

#{Dir.pwd} is the Ruby for finding the current directory, so you don't hardcode paths, making it highly distributable.

Restart the Vagrant environment and see the result:

$ curl http://localhost
<h1>Hello from Docker via Vagrant<h1>

Note

On SELinux-enabled systems you may need to do some configuration that's beyond the scope of this book. We encourage you to secure your Docker systems using SELinux, but to disable SELinux just type the following:

$ sudo setenforce 0

There's more…

You can choose not to use your local or default Docker installation, but instead use a dedicated VM, maybe to reflect production or a specific OS (such as CoreOS). In this case, you can specify a dedicated Vagrantfile as follows:

config.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
docker.vagrant_vagrantfile = "docker_host/Vagrantfile"
end

Using Docker in Vagrant for a Ghost blog behind NGINX

Vagrant in Docker can be used more usefully to simulate traditional setups such as an application behind a load balancer or a reverse proxy. We've already set up NGINX, so what about using it as a front reverse proxy with a blog engine such as Ghost behind it? We'll end up by showing how to do something similar with docker-compose.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation (no hypervisor needed)
  • A working Docker installation and basic Docker knowledge
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

The previous example allows only one container to be launched simultaneously, which is sad considering the power of Docker. Let's define multiple containers and start by creating a front container (our previous NGINX):

  config.vm.define "front" do |front|
    front.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "nginx:stable"
      docker.ports = ['80:80']
      docker.volumes = ["#{Dir.pwd}/src:/usr/share/nginx/html"]
    end
  end

Now how about creating an application container, maybe a blog engine such as Ghost? Ghost publishes a ready-to-use container on the Docker Hub, so let's use that (version 0.9.0 at the time of writing) and expose on TCP/8080 the application container listening on TCP/2368:

  config.vm.define "app" do |app|
    app.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "ghost:0.9.0"
      docker.ports = ['8080:2368']
    end
  end

Check if you can access the blog on http://localhost:8080 and NGINX on http://localhost:

$ curl -IL http://localhost:8080
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
X-Powered-By: Express
[…]

$ curl -IL http://localhost
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx/1.10.1

Now let's use NGINX for what it's for—serving the application. Configuring NGINX as a reverse proxy is beyond the scope of this book, so just use the following simple configuration for the nginx.conf file at the root of your working folder:

server {
  listen 80;
  location / {
    proxy_set_header   X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
    proxy_set_header   Host      $http_host;
    proxy_pass         http://app:2368;
  }
}

Change the configuration of the front container in Vagrant to use this configuration, remove the old index.html as we're not using it anymore, and link this container to the app container:

  config.vm.define "front" do |front|
    front.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.image = "nginx:stable"
      docker.ports = ['80:80']
      docker.volumes = ["#{Dir.pwd}/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf"]
      docker.link("app:app")
    end
  end

Linking the app container makes it available to the front container, so now there's no need to expose the Ghost blog container directly, let's make it simpler and more secure behind the reverse proxy:

  config.vm.define "app" do |app|
    app.vm.provider "docker" do |docker|
      docker.name = "app"
      docker.image = "ghost:0.9.0"
    end
  end

We're close! But this setup will eventually fail for a simple reason: our systems are too fast, and Vagrant parallelizes the startup of virtual machines by default, and also does this for containers. Containers start so fast that the app container may not be ready for NGINX when it's started. To ensure sequential startup, use the VAGRANT_NO_PARALLEL environment variable at the top of the Vagrantfile:

ENV['VAGRANT_NO_PARALLEL'] = 'true'

Now you can browse to http://localhost/admin and start using your Ghost blog in a container, behind a NGINX reverse proxy container, with the whole thing managed by Vagrant!

There's more…

You can access the containers logs directly using Vagrant:

$ vagrant docker-logs --follow
==> app: > ghost@0.9.0 start /usr/src/ghost
==> app: > node index
==> app: Migrations: Creating tables...
[…]
==> front: 172.17.0.1 - - [21/Aug/2016:10:55:08 +0000] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 1547 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Fedora; Linux x86_64; rv:48.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/48.0" "-"
==> app: GET / 200 113.120 ms - -
[…]

A Docker Compose equivalent

Docker Compose is a tool to orchestrate multiple containers and manage Docker features from a single YAML file. So if you're more familiar with Docker Compose, or if you'd like to do something similar with this tool, here's what the code would look like in the docker-compose.yml file:

version: '2'
services:
  front:
    image: nginx:stable
    volumes:
      - "./nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf"
    restart: always
    ports:
      - "80:80"
    depends_on:
      - app
    links:
      - app
  app:
    image: ghost:0.9.0
    restart: always

Note

Remember that with Vagrant, you can mix virtual machines and Docker containers, while you can't with docker-compose.

Using Vagrant remotely with AWS EC2 and Docker

Another powerful usage of Vagrant can be with remote IaaS resources such as Amazon EC2. Amazon Web Services Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and similar Infrastructure-as-a-Service providers like Google Cloud, Azure or Digital Ocean, to name a few, are selling virtual machines with varying compute power and network bandwidth for a fee. You don't always have all the necessary CPU and memory you need on your laptop, or you need to have some specific computing power for a task, or you just want to replicate part of an existing production environment: here's how you can leverage the power of Vagrant using Amazon EC2.

Here, we'll deploy a Ghost blog with an NGINX reverse proxy, all on Docker, using an Ubuntu Xenial 16.04 on AWS EC2! This is to simulate a real deployment of an application, so you can see if it is working in real conditions.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation (no hypervisor needed)
  • An Amazon EC2 account (or create one for free at https://aws.amazon.com/ if you don't have one already), with valid Access Keys, a keypair named iac-lab, a security group named iac-lab allowing at least HTTP ports, and SSH access.
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Begin by installing the plugin:

$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-aws

A requirement of this plugin is the presence of a dummy Vagrant box that does nothing:

$ vagrant box add dummy https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant-aws/raw/master/dummy.box

Remember how we configured the Docker provider in the previous recipes? This is no different:

config.vm.provider :aws do |aws, override|
  # AWS Configuration
  override.vm.box = "dummy"
end

Then, defining an application VM will consist of specifying which provider it's using (AWS in our case), the Amazon Machine Image (AMI) (Ubuntu 16.04 LTS in our case), and a provisioning script that we creatively named script.sh.

You can find other AMI IDs at http://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/locator/ec2/:

config.vm.define "srv-1" do |config|
    config.vm.provider :aws do |aws|
      aws.ami = "ami-c06b1eb3"
    end
    config.vm.provision :shell, :path => "script.sh"
end

So what is the AWS-related information we need to fill in so Vagrant can launch servers on AWS?

We need the AWS Access Keys, preferably from environment variables so you don't hardcode them in your Vagrantfile:

aws.access_key_id = ENV['AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID']
aws.secret_access_key = ENV['AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY']

Indicate the region and availability zone where you want the instance to start:

aws.region = "eu-west-1"
aws.availability_zone = "eu-west-1a"

Include the instance type; here, we've chosen the one included in the AWS free tier plan so it won't cost you a dime with a new account:

aws.instance_type = "t2.micro"

Indicate in which security group this instance will live (it's up to you to adapt the requirements to your needs):

aws.security_groups = ['iac-lab']

Specify the AWS keypair name, and override the default SSH username and keys:

aws.keypair_name = "iac-lab"
override.ssh.username = "ubuntu"
override.ssh.private_key_path = "./keys/iac-lab.pem"

Under some circumstances, you can experience a bug with NFS while using Vagrant and AWS EC2, so I choose to disable this feature:

override.nfs.functional = false

Finally, it's a good practice to tag the instances, so you can later find out where they come from:

aws.tags = {
  'Name'   => 'Vagrant'
}

Add a simple shell script that will install Docker and docker-compose, then execute the docker-compose file:

#!/bin/sh
# install Docker
curl -sSL https://get.docker.com/ | sh
# add ubuntu user to docker group
sudo usermod -aG docker ubuntu
# install docker-compose
curl -L https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.8.0/docker-compose-`uname -s`-`uname -m` > /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
# execute the docker compose file
cd /vagrant
docker-compose up -d

Include both NGINX configuration and docker-compose.yml files from the previous recipe and you're good to go:

$ vagrant up
Bringing machine 'srv-1' up with 'aws' provider...
[…]
==> srv-1: Launching an instance with the following settings...
==> srv-1:  -- Type: t2.micro
==> srv-1:  -- AMI: ami-c06b1eb3
==> srv-1:  -- Region: eu-west-1
[…]
==> srv-1: Waiting for SSH to become available...
==> srv-1: Machine is booted and ready for use!
[…]
==> srv-1:  docker version
[…]
==> srv-1: Server:
==> srv-1:  Version:      1.12.1
[…]
==> srv-1: Creating vagrant_app_1
==> srv-1: Creating vagrant_front_1

Open your browser at http://a.b.c.d/ (using the EC2 instance public IP) and you'll see your Ghost blog behind an NGINX reverse proxy, using Docker containers, using Vagrant on Amazon EC2.

A common usage for such a setup is for the developer to test the application in close to real production conditions, maybe to show a new feature to a remote product owner, replicate a bug seen only in this setup, or at some point in the CI. Once Docker containers have been built, smoke test them on EC2 before going any further.

Simulating dynamic multiple host networking

Vagrant is also very useful when used to simulate multiple hosts in a network. This way you can have full systems able to talk to each other in the same private network and easily test connectivity between systems.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Here's how we would create one CentOS 7.2 machine with 512 MB of RAM and one CPU, in a private network with a fixed IP 192.168.50.11, and a simple shell output:

vm_memory = 512
vm_cpus = 1

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|

  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"

  config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
    vb.memory = vm_memory
    vb.cpus = vm_cpus
  end

   config.vm.define "srv-1" do |config|
     config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "ip addr | grep \"inet\" | awk '{print $2}'"
     config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.50.11", virtualbox__intnet: "true"
   end
end

To add a new machine to this network, we could simply duplicate the srv-1 machine definition, as in the following code:

config.vm.define "srv-2" do |config|
     config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "ip addr | grep \"inet\" | awk '{print $2}'"
     config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.50.12", virtualbox__intnet: "true"
end

That's not very DRY, so let's take advantage of the Ruby nature of the Vagrantfile to create a loop that will dynamically and simply create as many virtual machines as we want.

First, declare a variable with the amount of virtual machines we want (2):

vm_num = 2

Then iterate through that value, so it can generate values for an IP and for a hostname:

(1..vm_num).each do |n|
    # a lan lab in the 192.168.50.0/24 range
    lan_ip = "192.168.50.#{n+10}"
    config.vm.define "srv-#{n}" do |config|
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "ip addr | grep \"inet\" | awk '{print $2}'"
      config.vm.network "private_network", ip: lan_ip, virtualbox__intnet: "true"
    end
  end

This will create two virtual machines (srv-1 at 192.168.50.11 and srv-2 at 192.168.50.12) on the same internal network, so they can talk to each other.

Now you can simply change the value of vm_num and you'll easily spawn new virtual machines in seconds.

There's more…

We can optionally go even further, using the following cloning and networking features.

Speed up deployments with linked clones

Linked clones is a feature that enables new VMs to be created based on an initial existing disk image, without the need to duplicate everything. Each VM stores only its delta state, allowing very fast virtual machines boot times.

As we're launching many machines, you can optionally enable linked clones to speed things up:

config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
    vb.memory = vm_memory
    vb.cpus = vm_cpus
    vb.linked_clone = true
end

Using named NAT networks

VirtualBox has the option to let you define your own networks for further reference or reuse. Configure them under Preferences | Network | NAT Networks. Luckily, Vagrant can work with those named NAT networks too. To test the feature, you can create in VirtualBox a network (like iac-lab) and assign it the network 192.168.50.0/24.

Just change the network configuration from the preceding Vagrantfile to launch the VMs in this specific network:

config.vm.network "private_network", ip: lan_ip, virtualbox__intnet: "iac-lab"

Simulating a networked three-tier architecture app with Vagrant

Vagrant is a great tool to help simulate systems in isolated networks, allowing us to easily mock architectures found in production. The idea behind the multiple tiers is to separate the logic and execution of the various elements of the application, and not centralize everything in one place. A common pattern is to get a first layer that gets the common user requests, a second layer that does the application job, and a third layer that stores and retrieves data, usually from a database.

In this simulation, we'll have the traditional three tiers, each running CentOS 7 virtual machines on their own isolated network:

  • Front: NGINX reverse proxy
  • App: a Node.js app running on two nodes
  • Database: Redis

Virtual Machine Name

front_lan IP

app_lan IP

db_lan IP

front-1

10.10.0.11/24

10.20.0.101/24

N/A

app-1

N/A

10.20.0.11/24

10.30.0.101/24

app-2

N/A

10.20.0.12/24

10/30.0.102/24

db-1

N/A

N/A

10.30.0.11/24

You will access the reverse proxy (NGINX), which alone can contact the application server (Node.js), which is the only one to be able to connect to the database.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Follow these steps for simulating a networked three-tier architecture app with Vagrant.

Tier 3 – the database

The database lives in a db_lan private network with the IP 10.30.0.11/24.

This application will use a simple Redis installation. Installing and configuring Redis is beyond the scope of this book, so we'll keep it as simple as possible (install it, configure it to listen on the LAN port instead of 127.0.0.1, and start it):

  config.vm.define "db-1" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "db-1"
    config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "10.30.0.11", virtualbox__intnet: "db_lan"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y epel-release"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y redis"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo sed -i 's/bind 127.0.0.1/bind 127.0.0.1 10.30.0.11/' /etc/redis.conf"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl enable redis"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl start redis"
  end

Tier 2: the application servers

This tier is where our application lives, backed by an application (web) server. The application can connect to the database tier, and will be available to the end user through tier 1 proxy servers. This is usually where all the logic is done (by the application).

The Node.js application

This will be simulated with the simplest Node.js code I could produce to demonstrate the usage, displaying the server hostname (the filename is app.js).

First, it creates a connection to the Redis server on the db_lan network:

#!/usr/bin/env node
var os = require("os");
var redis = require('redis');
var client = redis.createClient(6379, '10.30.0.11');
client.on('connect', function() {
    console.log('connected to redis on '+os.hostname()+' 10.30.0.11:6379');
});

Then if it goes well, it creates an HTTP server listening on :8080, displaying the server's hostname:

var http = require('http');
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
  res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain'});
  res.end('Running on '+os.hostname()+'\n');
}).listen(8080);
console.log('HTTP server listening on :8080');

Start the app, the simplest of the systemd service file (systemd unit files are out of the scope of this book):

[Unit]
Description=Node App
After=network.target

[Service]
ExecStart=/srv/nodeapp/app.js
Restart=always
User=vagrant
Group=vagrant
Environment=PATH=/usr/bin
Environment=NODE_ENV=production
WorkingDirectory=/srv/nodeapp
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Let's iterate through the deployment of a number of application servers (in this case: two) to serve the app. Once again, deploying Node.js applications is out of the scope of this book, so I kept it as simple as possible—simple directories and permissions creation and systemd unit deployment. In production, this would probably be done through a configuration management tool such as Chef or Ansible and maybe coupled with a proper deployment tool:

# Tier 2: a scalable number of application servers
vm_app_num = 2
  (1..vm_app_num).each do |n|
    app_lan_ip = "10.20.0.#{n+10}"
    db_lan_ip = "10.30.0.#{n+100}"
    config.vm.define "app-#{n}" do |config|
      config.vm.hostname = "app-#{n}"
      config.vm.network "private_network", ip: app_lan_ip, virtualbox__intnet: "app_lan"
      config.vm.network "private_network", ip: db_lan_ip, virtualbox__intnet: "db_lan"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y epel-release"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y nodejs npm"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo mkdir /srv/nodeapp"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo cp /vagrant/app.js /src/nodeapp"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo chown -R vagrant.vagrant /srv/"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo chmod +x /srv/nodeapp/app.js"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "cd /srv/nodeapp; npm install redis"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo cp /vagrant/nodeapp.service /etc/systemd/system"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl daemon-reload"
      config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl start nodeapp"
    end
  end

Tier 1: the NGINX reverse proxy

Tier 1 is represented here by an NGINX reverse proxy configuration on CentOS 7, as simple as it could be for this demo. Configuring an NGINX reverse proxy with a pool of servers is out of the scope of this book:

events {
  worker_connections 1024;
}
http {
  upstream app {
    server 10.20.0.11:8080 max_fails=1 fail_timeout=1s;
    server 10.20.0.12:8080 max_fails=1 fail_timeout=1s;
  }
  server {
    listen 80;
    server_name  _;
    location / {
      proxy_set_header   X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
      proxy_set_header   Host      $http_host;
      proxy_pass         http://app;
    }
  }
}

Now let's create the reverse proxy VM that will serve http://localhost:8080 through the pool of application servers. This VM listens on 10.10.0.11/24 on its own LAN (front_lan), and on 10.20.0.101/24 on the application servers' LAN (app_lan):

  # Tier 1: an NGINX reverse proxy VM, available on http://localhost:8080
  config.vm.define "front-1" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "front-1"
    config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "10.10.0.11", virtualbox__intnet: "front_lan"
    config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "10.20.0.101", virtualbox__intnet: "app_lan"
    config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 80, host: 8080
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y epel-release"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo yum install -q -y nginx"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo cp /vagrant/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/nginx.conf"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl enable nginx"
    config.vm.provision :shell, :inline => "sudo systemctl start nginx"
  end

Start this up (vagrant up) and navigate to http://localhost:8080, where the app displays the application server hostname so you can confirm that the load balancing across networks is working (while application servers can talk to the Redis backend).

Showing your work on the LAN while working with Laravel

You're working on your application using Laravel, the free and open source PHP framework (https://laravel.com/), and you'd like to showcase your work to your colleagues. Using a Vagrant development environment can help keep your work machine clean and allow you to use your usual tools and editors while using an infrastructure close to production.

In this example, we'll deploy a CentOS 7 server, with NGINX, PHP-FPM, and MariaDB, all the PHP dependencies, and install Composer. You can build from this example and others in this book to create an environment that mimics production (three-tier, multiple machines, and other characteristics).

This environment will be available for access to all your coworkers on your network, and the code will be accessible to you locally.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox or VMware installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Let's start with the simplest Vagrant environment we know:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
  config.vm.define "srv-1" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "srv-1"
  end
end

A sample NGINX configuration for Laravel

Configuring NGINX for Laravel is out of the scope for this book, but for reference, here's a simple NGINX configuration that will work well for us, listening on HTTP, serving files located on /srv/app/public, and using PHP-FPM (the file name is nginx.conf):

events {
  worker_connections 1024;
}
http {
  sendfile off;
  server {
    listen 80;
    server_name  _;
    root /srv/app/public ;
    try_files $uri $uri/ /index.php?q=$uri&$args;
    index index.php;
    location / {
      try_files $uri $uri/ /index.php?$query_string;
    }
    location ~ \.php$ {
      try_files $uri /index.php =404;
      fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(/.+)$;
      fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:9000;
      fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
      fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name;
      include fastcgi_params;
    }
  }
}

Simple shell provisioning

We'll create a provisioning script that we'll name as provision.sh, which contains all the steps we need to have a fully working Laravel environment. The details are out of the scope of this book, but here are the steps:

  1. We want Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL):
    sudo yum install -q -y epel-release
    
  2. We want PHP-FPM:
    sudo yum install -q -y php-fpm
    
  3. We want PHP-FPM to run as the Vagrant user so we have the rights:
    sudo sed -i 's/user = apache/user = vagrant/' /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf
    
  4. Install a bunch of PHP dependencies:
    sudo yum install -q -y php-pdo php-mcrypt php-mysql php-cli php-mbstring php-dom
    
  5. Install Composer:
    curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
    sudo mv composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
    sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/composer
    
  6. Install and ship a good enough NGINX configuration:
    sudo yum install -q -y nginx
    sudo cp /vagrant/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
    
  7. Install MariaDB Server:
    sudo yum install -q -y mariadb-server
    
  8. Start all the services:
    sudo systemctl enable php-fpm
    sudo systemctl start php-fpm
    sudo systemctl enable nginx
    sudo systemctl start nginx
    sudo systemctl enable mariadb
    sudo systemctl start mariadb
    

Enable provisioning

To enable provisioning using our script, add the following code in the VM definition block:

config.vm.provision :shell, :path => "provision.sh"

Shared folder

To share the src folder between your host and the Vagrant VM under /srv/app, you can add the following code:

config.vm.synced_folder "src/", "/srv/app"

Public LAN Networking

The last thing we need to do now is to add a network interface to our Vagrant virtual machine, that will be on the real LAN, so our coworkers will access it easily through the network:

config.vm.network "public_network", bridge: "en0: Wi-Fi (AirPort)"

Adapt the name of your network adapter to use (this was on a Mac, as you can guess) to your needs. Another solution is not to specify any adapter name, so you will be presented a list of possible adapters to bridge:

==> srv-1: Available bridged network interfaces:
1) en0: Wi-Fi (AirPort)
[...]

Start the Vagrant environment (vagrant up), and when it's available, you can execute commands such as finding out the network information: vagrant ssh -c "ip addr". Your mileage will vary, but in this network, the public IP of this Vagrant box is 192.168.1.106, so our work is available.

Now you can start coding in the ./src/ folder. This is not a Laravel book, but a way to create a new project in a clean directory is as follows:

cd /srv/app
composer create-project --prefer-dist laravel/laravel.

Don't forget to remove all files from the folder beforehand. Navigate to http://local-ip/ and you'll see the default Laravel welcome screen.

To verify the file sharing sync is working correctly, edit the ./resources/views/welcome.blade.php file and reload your browser to see the change reflected.

There's more…

If you include the Vagrantfile directly with your project's code, coworkers or contributors will only have to run vagrant up to see it running.

Other Vagrantfile sharing options include Windows Sharing (smb), rsync (useful with remote virtual machines such as on AWS EC2), and even NFS.

A noticeable bug in the sharing feature using VirtualBox leads to corrupted or non-updating files. The workaround is to deactivate in the web server configuration sendfile, using NGINX:

sendfile off;

Using Apache, it is as follows:

EnableSendfile Off

Sharing access to your Vagrant environment with the world

You're working on your project with your local Vagrant environment, and you'd like to show the status of the job to your customer who's located in another city. Maybe you have an issue configuring something and you'd like some remote help from your coworker on the other side of the planet. Alternatively, maybe you'd like to access your work Vagrant box from home, hotel, or coworking space? There's a neat Vagrant sharing feature we'll use here, working with a Ghost blog on CentOS 7.2.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

How to do it…

Let's start with this simple Vagrantfile:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
  config.vm.define "blog" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "blog"
  end
end

We know we'll have to install some packages, so let's add a provisioning script to be executed:

    config.vm.provision :shell, :path => "provision.sh"

We'll want to hack locally on our Ghost blog, such as adding themes and more, so let's sync our src/ folder to the remote /srv/blog folder:

    config.vm.synced_folder "src/", "/srv/blog"

We want a local private network so we can access the virtual machine, with the 2368 TCP port (Ghost default) redirected to our host 8080 HTTP port:

    config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp"
    config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 2368, host: 8080

Provisioning

  1. To configure our new box, we'll first need to enable EPEL:
    sudo yum install -q -y epel-release
    
  2. Then install the requirements, node, npm, and unzip:
    sudo yum install -q -y node npm unzip 
    
  3. Download the latest Ghost version:
    curl -L https://ghost.org/zip/ghost-latest.zip -o ghost.zip
    
  4. Uncompress it in the /srv/blog folder:
    sudo unzip -uo ghost.zip -d /srv/blog/
    
  5. Install the Ghost dependencies:
    cd /srv/blog && sudo npm install --production
    

Put all those commands in the provisioning.sh script and we're good to go: vagrant up.

Starting Ghost engine

As you would do normally, log in to your Vagrant box to launch the node server:

vagrant ssh
cd /srv/blog && sudo npm start --production
[…]
Ghost is running in production...
Your blog is now available on http://my-ghost-blog.com
Ctrl+C to shut down

Change the host IP from 127.0.0.1 to 0.0.0.0 in the generated config.js file so the server listens on all interfaces:

server: {
            host: '0.0.0.0',
            port: '2368'
        }

Restart the node server:

cd /srv/blog && sudo npm start --production

You now have a direct access to the blog through your box LAN IP (adapt the IP to your case): http://172.28.128.3:2368/.

Sharing access

Now you can access your application locally through your Vagrant box, let's give access to it to others through the Internet using vagrant share:

HTTP

The default is to share through HTTP, so your work is available through a web browser:

$ vagrant share
==> srv-1: Detecting network information for machine...
[...]
==> srv-1: Your Vagrant Share is running! Name: anxious-cougar-6317
==> srv-1: URL: http://anxious-cougar-6317.vagrantshare.com

This URL is the one you can give to anyone to access publicly your work: Vagrant servers being used as proxy.

SSH

Another possible sharing option is by SSH (deactivated by default). The program will ask you for a password you'll need to connect to the box remotely:

$ vagrant share --ssh
==> srv-1: Detecting network information for machine...
[...]
srv-1: Please enter a password to encrypt the key:
    srv-1: Repeat the password to confirm:
[...]
==> srv-1: You're sharing with SSH access. This means that another user
==> srv-1: simply has to run `vagrant connect --ssh subtle-platypus-4976`
==> srv-1: to SSH to your Vagrant machine.
[...]

Now, at home or at the coworking space, you can simply connect to your work Vagrant box (if needed, the default Vagrant password is vagrant):

$ vagrant connect --ssh subtle-platypus-4976
Loading share 'subtle-platypus-4976'...
[...]
[vagrant@srv-1 ~]$ head -n1 /srv/blog/config.js
// # Ghost Configuration

You or your coworker are now remotely logged into your own Vagrant box over the Internet!

Simulating Chef upgrades using Vagrant

Wouldn't it be awesome to simulate production changes quickly? Chances are you're using Chef in production. We'll see how to use both Chef cookbooks with Vagrant, as well as how to simulate Chef version upgrades between environments. This kind of setup is the beginning of a good combination of infrastructure as code.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working VirtualBox installation
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Let's start with a minimal virtual machine named prod that simply boots a CentOS 7.2, like we have in our production environment:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
  config.vm.define "prod" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "prod"
    config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp"
  end

end

Vagrant Omnibus Chef plugin

Now, if we want to use Chef code, if we want to use Chef code (Ruby files organized in directories that form a unit called a 'cookbook' that configure and maintain a specific area of a system), we first need to install Chef on the Vagrant box. There're many ways to do this, from provisioning shell scripts to using boxes with Chef already installed. A clean, reliable, and repeatable way is to use a Vagrant plugin to do just that—vagrant-omnibus. Omnibus is a packaged Chef. Install it like any other Vagrant plugin:

$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-omnibus
Installing the 'vagrant-omnibus' plugin. This can take a few minutes...
Installed the plugin 'vagrant-omnibus (1.4.1)'!

Then, just add the following configuration in your VM definition of the Vagrantfile and you'll always have the latest Chef version installed on this box:

config.omnibus.chef_version = :latest

However, our goal is to mimic production, maybe we're still using the latest in v11.x series of Chef instead of the latest 12.x, so instead let's specify exactly which version we want:

config.omnibus.chef_version = "11.18.12"

Now that we're using a new plugin, our Vagrantfile won't work out of the box for everybody. Users will have to install this vagrant-omnibus plugin. If you care about consistency and repeatability, an option is to add the following Ruby check at the beginning of your Vagrantfile:

%w(vagrant-vbguest vagrant-omnibus).each do |plugin|
  unless Vagrant.has_plugin?(plugin)
    raise "#{plugin} plugin is not installed! Please install it using `vagrant plugin install #{plugin}`"
  end
end

This code snippet will simply iterate over each plugin name to verify that Vagrant returns them as installed. If not, stop there and return a helpful exit message on how to install the required plugins.

A sample Chef recipe

This part of the book isn't about writing Chef recipes (read more about it later in the book!), so we'll keep that part simple. Our objective is to install the Apache 2 web server on CentOS 7 (httpd package), and start it. Here's what our sample recipe looks like (cookbooks/apache2/recipes/default.rb); it does exactly what it says in plain English:

package "httpd"

service "httpd" do
  action [ :enable, :start ]
end

Vagrant and Chef integration

Here's how, in our VM definition block, we'll tell Vagrant to work with Chef Solo (a way of running Chef in standalone mode, without the need of a Chef server) to provision our box:

    config.vm.provision :chef_solo do |chef|
      chef.add_recipe 'apache2'
    end

As simple as that. Vagrant this up (vagrant up), and you'll end up with a fully provisioned VM, using the old 11.18.12 version, and a running Apache 2 web server.

Our manual tests can include checking that the chef-solo version is the one we requested:

$ chef-solo --version
Chef: 11.18.12

They can also check if we have httpd installed:

$ httpd -v
Server version: Apache/2.4.6 (CentOS)

Also, we can check if httpd is running:

$ pidof httpd
13029 13028 13027 13026 13025 13024

Note

Various other options than chef-solo exist, such as chef-client and chef-zero.

Testing the Chef version update

So we simulated our production environment locally, with the same CentOS version, the apache2 cookbook used in production, and the old Chef version 11. Our next task is to test if everything is still running smoothly after an upgrade to the new version 12. Let's create a second "staging" VM, very similar to our production setup, except we want to install the current latest Chef version (12.13.37 at the time of writing, feel free to use :latest instead):

  config.vm.define "staging" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "staging"
    config.omnibus.chef_version = "12.13.37"
    config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp"
    config.vm.provision :chef_solo do |chef|
      chef.add_recipe 'apache2'
    end
  end

Launch this new machine (vagrant up staging) and we'll see if our setup still works with the new major Chef version:

$ vagrant ssh staging
$ chef-solo --version
Chef: 12.13.37
$ httpd -v
Server version: Apache/2.4.6 (CentOS)
$ pidof httpd
13029 13028 13027 13026 13025 13024

So we can safely assume, as far as our testing goes, that the newest Chef version still works correctly with our production Chef code.

There's more…

Here are more ways of controlling a Vagrant environment, and use even better Chef tooling inside it.

Controlling default Vagrant VMs

You may not always want to boot both production and staging vagrant virtual machines, especially when you just want to work on the default production setup. To specify a default VM:

config.vm.define "prod", primary: true do |config|
  […]
end

To not start automatically a VM when issuing the vagrant up command:

config.vm.define "staging", autostart: false do |config|
  […]
end

Berkshelf and Vagrant

Chances are, if your production environment is using Chef, you're also using Berkshelf for dependency management and not 100% local cookbooks (if you aren't, you should!).

Vagrant work pretty well with a Berkshelf enabled Chef environment, using the vagrant-berkshelf plugin.

Note

Your workstation will need the Chef Development Kit (Chef DK: https://downloads.chef.io/chef-dk/) for this to work correctly.

Testing with Test Kitchen

This setup is in fact so close to what's used to make infrastructure code testing that you'll see a lot of similarities in the dedicated section of this book.

Using Ansible with Vagrant to create a Docker host

Ansible (https://www.ansible.com/) is a very simple and powerful open source automation tool. While using and creating Ansible playbooks is off-topic for this book, we'll use a very simple playbook to install and configure Docker on a CentOS 7 box. Starting from here, you'll be able to iterate through more complex Ansible playbooks.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working hypervisor
  • A working Ansible installation on your machine (an easy way is to $ pip install ansible or to pick your usual package manager like APT or YUM/DNF)
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

Because writing complex Ansible playbooks is out of the scope of this book, we'll use a very simple one, so you can learn more about Ansible later and still reuse this recipe.

A simple Ansible Docker playbook for Vagrant

Our playbook file (playbook.yml) is a plain YAML file, and we'll do the following in this order:

  1. Install EPEL.
  2. Create a Docker Unix group.
  3. Add the default Vagrant user to the new Docker group.
  4. Install Docker from CentOS repositories.
  5. Enable and start Docker Engine.

Here's how the playbook.yml file looks:

---
- hosts: all
  become: yes
  tasks:
    - name: Enable EPEL
      yum: name=epel-release state=present
    - name: Create a Docker group
      group: name=docker state=present
    - name: Add the vagrant user to Docker group
      user: name=vagrant groups=docker append=yes
    - name: Install Docker
      yum: name=docker state=present
    - name: Enable and Start Docker Daemon
      service: name=docker state=started enabled=yes

Apply Ansible from Vagrant

To use our Ansible playbook, let's start with a simple Vagrantfile starting a CentOS 7 box:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
  config.vm.define "srv-1" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "srv-1"
    config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp"
  end
end

Simply add Ansible provisioning like this to the VM definition so it will load and apply your playbook.yml file:

    config.vm.provision "ansible" do |ansible|
      ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
    end

You can now run vagrant up and use CentOS 7 Docker Engine version right away:

$ vagrant ssh
[vagrant@srv-1 ~]$ systemctl status docker
[vagrant@srv-1 ~]$ docker --version
Docker version 1.10.3, build d381c64-unsupported
[vagrant@srv-1 ~]$ docker run -it --rm alpine /bin/hostname
0f44a4d7afcd

There's more…

What if for some reason you don't or can't have Ansible installed on your host machine? Alternatively, maybe you need a specific Ansible version on your Vagrant box to mimic production and you don't want to mess with your local Ansible installation. There's an interesting variant Ansible provider you can use: it will either use Ansible directly from the guest VM, and if it's not installed, it will install it from official repositories or PIP. You can use this very simple default configuration:

    config.vm.provision "ansible_local" do |ansible|
      ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
    end

You can also use the following command:

$ vagrant up
[…]
==> srv-1: Running provisioner: ansible_local...
    srv-1: Installing Ansible...
    srv-1: Running ansible-playbook...
[…]

Log in to the box via SSH and check that Ansible is locally installed with the latest version:

$ vagrant ssh
$ ansible --version
ansible 2.1.1.0

If your use case is different, you can use more precise deployment options, to be able to fix an Ansible version number using PIP (here, version 1.9.6 instead of the latest 2.x series):

Note

It will take noticeably longer to start, as it needs to install many packages on the guest system.

    config.vm.provision "ansible_local" do |ansible|
      ansible.version = "1.9.6"
      ansible.install_mode = :pip
      ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
    end

You can also use the following command:

$ vagrant up
[…]
==> srv-1: Running provisioner: ansible_local...
    srv-1: Installing Ansible...
    srv-1: Installing pip... (for Ansible installation)
    srv-1: Running ansible-playbook...

Inside the Vagrant guest, you can now check for the PIP and Ansible versions:

$ pip --version
pip 8.1.2 from /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
$ ansible --version
ansible 1.9.6

You can also check if our playbook has been installed correctly with the old 1.x Ansible version:

$ docker version

Also check if Docker is installed, and verify now it's working as the Vagrant user:

$ docker run -it --rm alpine ping -c2 google.com
PING google.com (216.58.211.78): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 216.58.211.78: seq=0 ttl=61 time=22.078 ms
64 bytes from 216.58.211.78: seq=1 ttl=61 time=21.061 ms

Using Docker containers on CoreOS with Vagrant

Vagrant can help in simulating environments, and Docker containers are not forgotten with Vagrant. We'll use one of the best platforms to run containers, the free and open source lightweight operating system CoreOS. Based on Linux, targeting easy container and clustered deployments, it also provides official Vagrant boxes. We'll deploy the official WordPress container with MariaDB on another container using the Vagrant Docker provisioner (and not the Vagrant Docker provider).

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need the following:

  • A working Vagrant installation
  • A working hypervisor
  • An Internet connection

How to do it…

CoreOS doesn't host its official images at the default location on Atlas, it hosts it itself. So, we have to specify the full URL to the Vagrant box in our Vagrantfile:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = https://stable.release.core-os.net/amd64-usr/current/coreos_production_vagrant.box
end

As CoreOS is a minimal OS, it doesn't support any of the VirtualBox guest addition tools, so we'll disable them, and don't try anything if we (most likely) have the vagrant-vbguest plugin:

  config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
      vb.check_guest_additions = false
      vb.functional_vboxsf     = false
  end

  if Vagrant.has_plugin?("vagrant-vbguest") then
    config.vbguest.auto_update = false
  end

Let's create a new VM definition, using the CoreOS Vagrant box:

  config.vm.define "core-1" do |config|
    config.vm.hostname = "core-1"
    config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp" 
  end

We now need to run the mariadb and wordpress official containers from the Docker Hub. Using Docker directly, we would have run the following:

$ docker run -d --name mariadb -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=h4ckm3 mariadb
$ docker run -d -e WORDPRESS_DB_HOST=mariadb -e 'WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD=h4ckm3 --link mariadb:mariadb -p 80:80 wordpress

Let's translate this into our Vagrantfile:

db_root_password = "h4ckm3"
config.vm.provision "docker" do |docker|
      docker.run "mariadb",
        args: "--name 'mariadb' -e 'MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=#{db_root_password}'"
      docker.run "wordpress",
        args: "-e 'WORDPRESS_DB_HOST=mariadb' -e 'WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD=#{db_root_password}' --link 'mariadb:mariadb' -p '80:80'"
    end

Vagrant this up ($ vagrant up), and you'll access a ready-to-use WordPress installation running on CoreOS:

$ curl -IL http://172.28.128.3/wp-admin/install.php
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 10:54:17 GMT
Server: Apache/2.4.10 (Debian)
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.6.25
Expires: Wed, 11 Jan 1984 05:00:00 GMT
Cache-Control: no-cache, must-revalidate, max-age=0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8

There's more…

The CoreOS team proposes a full Vagrant environment to try and manipulate a CoreOS cluster https://github.com/coreos/coreos-vagrant. You'll then be able to try all CoreOS features and configuration options for all release channels (alpha, beta, or stable).

Other operating systems such as Ubuntu or CentOS are fully supported to provision Docker containers, even if Docker isn't installed at first on the base image. Vagrant will install Docker for you, so it will work transparently and run the containers as soon as it's installed.

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Key benefits

  • Over 90 practical, actionable recipes to automate, test, and manage your infrastructure quickly and effectively
  • About This Book
  • • Bring down your delivery timeline from days to hours by treating your server configurations and VMs as code, just like you would with software code.
  • • Take your existing knowledge and skill set with your existing tools (Puppet, Chef, or Docker) to the next level and solve IT infrastructure challenges.
  • • Use practical recipes to use code to provision and deploy servers and applications and have greater control of your infrastructure.
  • Who This Book Is For
  • This book is for DevOps engineers and developers working in cross-functional teams or operations and would now switch to IAC to manage complex infrastructures.
  • What You Will Learn
  • • Provision local and remote development environments with Vagrant
  • • Automate production infrastructures with Terraform, Ansible and Cloud-init on AWS, OpenStack, Google Cloud, Digital Ocean, and more
  • • Manage and test automated systems using Chef and Puppet
  • • Build, ship, and debug optimized Docker containers
  • • Explore the best practices to automate and test everything from cloud infrastructures to operating system configuration
  • In Detail
  • Infrastructure as Code (IAC) is a key aspect of the DevOps movement, and this book will show you how to transform the way you work with your infrastructure—by treating it as software.
  • This book is dedicated to helping you discover the essentials of infrastructure automation and its related practices; the over 90 organized practical solutions will demonstrate how to work with some of the very best tools and cloud solutions.
  • You will learn how to deploy repeatable infrastructures and services on AWS, OpenStack, Google Cloud, and Digital Ocean. You will see both Ansible and Terraform in action, manipulate the best bits from cloud-init to easily bootstrap instances, and simulate consistent environments locally or remotely using Vagrant. You will discover how to automate and test a range of system tasks using Chef or Puppet. You will also build, test, and debug various Docker containers having developers’ interests in mind.
  • This book will help you to use the right tools, techniques, and approaches to deliver working solutions for today’s modern infrastructure challenges.
  • Style and approach
  • This is a recipe-based book that allows you to venture into some of the most cutting-edge practices and techniques about IAC and solve immediate problems when trying to implement them.

Description

Para 1: Infrastructure as code is transforming the way we solve infrastructural challenges. This book will show you how to make managing servers in the cloud faster, easier and more effective than ever before. With over 90 practical recipes for success, make the very most out of IAC.

Who is this book for?

This book is for DevOps engineers and developers working in cross-functional teams or operations and would now switch to IAC to manage complex infrastructures.

What you will learn

  • With this book, you?ll learn about: ? Provisioning local and remote development environments with Vagrant ? Automating production infrastructures with Terraform, Ansible and Cloud-init on AWS, OpenStack, Google Cloud, Digital Ocean, and more ? Bringing down your delivery timeline from days to hours by treating your server configurations and VMs as code, just like you would with software code ? Managing and testing automated systems using Chef and Puppet ? Using code to provision and deploy servers and applications and have greater control of your infrastructure ? Building, shipping, and debugging optimized Docker containers ? Exploring the best practices to automate and test everything from cloud infrastructures to operating system configuration ? Taking knowledge with existing tools (Puppet, Chef, or Docker) to the next level
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Table of Contents

11 Chapters
1. Vagrant Development Environments Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
2. Provisioning IaaS with Terraform Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
3. Going Further with Terraform Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
4. Automating Complete Infrastructures with Terraform Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
5. Provisioning the Last Mile with Cloud-Init Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
6. Fundamentals of Managing Servers with Chef and Puppet Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
7. Testing and Writing Better Infrastructure Code with Chef and Puppet Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
8. Maintaining Systems Using Chef and Puppet Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
9. Working with Docker Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
10. Maintaining Docker Containers Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Index Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

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Economy: Can deliver to P. O. Boxes and private residences.
Trackable service with delivery to addresses in Australia only.
Delivery time ranges from 7-9 business days for VIC and 8-10 business days for Interstate metro
Delivery time is up to 15 business days for remote areas of WA, NT & QLD.

Premium: Delivery to addresses in Australia only
Trackable delivery to most P. O. Boxes and private residences in Australia within 4-5 days based on the distance to a destination following dispatch.

India:

Premium: Delivery to most Indian addresses within 5-6 business days

Rest of the World:

Premium: Countries in the American continent: Trackable delivery to most countries within 4-7 business days

Asia:

Premium: Delivery to most Asian addresses within 5-9 business days

Disclaimer:
All orders received before 5 PM U.K time would start printing from the next business day. So the estimated delivery times start from the next day as well. Orders received after 5 PM U.K time (in our internal systems) on a business day or anytime on the weekend will begin printing the second to next business day. For example, an order placed at 11 AM today will begin printing tomorrow, whereas an order placed at 9 PM tonight will begin printing the day after tomorrow.


Unfortunately, due to several restrictions, we are unable to ship to the following countries:

  1. Afghanistan
  2. American Samoa
  3. Belarus
  4. Brunei Darussalam
  5. Central African Republic
  6. The Democratic Republic of Congo
  7. Eritrea
  8. Guinea-bissau
  9. Iran
  10. Lebanon
  11. Libiya Arab Jamahriya
  12. Somalia
  13. Sudan
  14. Russian Federation
  15. Syrian Arab Republic
  16. Ukraine
  17. Venezuela