Skip to content

pulibrary/princeton_ansible

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Princeton Ansible Workflow

Princeton Ansible Playbooks

A collection of roles and playbooks for provisioning and managing the machines that run PUL applications.

Project Setup for Development and Testing

First-time setup

Do these things once, after you clone this repo.

Mac

  1. Install homebrew
  2. Install Docker Desktop
  3. Run bin/first-time-setup.sh - this installs all the language and tooling dependencies
  4. Run bin/setup - this adds a pre-commit hook to your environment that will prevent you from accidentally checking in unencrypted vault files.
  5. follow the steps under "Every time setup"

Microsoft Windows/ Ubuntu

  1. Use the WSL Document

Every time setup

Run these commands every time you use this repo

pipenv sync
pipenv shell
source princeton_ansible_env.sh
lpass login <[email protected]>

Now you can run tests (See "Running molecule tests") or playbooks (See "Usage")

Validate that everything is installed correctly

Make sure docker is running before you run the following (from inside the pipenv shell) to test the installation:

cd roles/common
pip3 install 'molecule-plugins[docker]'
molecule test

Developing

Create a new role

In all the steps below substitute your role name for your_new_role

  1. Initialize the role with ansible-galaxy Run the following command from the root of this repo:

    export your_new_role=<fill in the role name here>
    cd roles/$your_new_role
    molecule init scenario
    cd ../..
  2. Set up to run from github actions vim .github/workflows/molecule_tests.yml add for your role at the end matrix of the roles

        - your_new_role
    
  3. Setup the directory to run molecule

    1. copy all molecule and lint files (note you need the . in the command below to get the hidden files)

      cp -r roles/example/* $your_new_role
    2. edit vi roles/$your_new_role/meta/main.yml and add a description

    3. edit vi roles/$your_new_role/molecule/default/converge.yml

      1. replace name: Converge with name: your_new_role
  4. Test that your role is now working All tests should pass

    cd roles/$your_new_role
    molecule test
    
  5. Push your branch and verify that CI runs and passes on GitHub Actions.

  6. If the role is related to a new project, add group variables and inventory.

    1. Add a group_vars/your_new_project directory and add files with the required variables. Usually this includes common.yml for variables that apply in all environments, vault.yml for secret values like passwords and keys, and one file per environment (generally at least production.yml and staging.yml).
    2. Add an inventory/all_projects/your_new_project file and list all VMs and other resources. Group them by environment - see any of the existing files for examples.
    3. Add your new groups to the relevant files in the inventory/by_environment/ directory. For example, add your_new_project_production to inventory/by_environment/production. Try to keep the lists alphabetized.

Running Molecule tests

You can run molecule test from either the root directory or the role directory (for example roles/example) If you are writing tests we have found it is easier to test just your examples by running from the role directory.

We also recommend instead of running just molecule test which takes a very long time your run molecule converge to build a docker container with your ansible playbook loaded. You can run converge and/or verify as many times as needed to get your playbook working.

molecule lint
molecule converge
molecule verify

If you are having issues with your tests passing and have run molecule converge you can connect to the running container by running

molecule login

Troubleshooting a container step

If you have a specific task that is not behaving, utilize the tests to run just that step. This is especially useful for long running molecule converge

You basically copy the failing task into the molecule/verify.yml and run verify over and over instead of needing to run the entire converge over and over. This makes debugging much faster and joyful!

Troubleshooting a test run

If you need to ensure you're getting the newest docker image for your local test run you can do a dance like this to delete your ansible docker machines, volumes, and images:

cd to the role in question
% molecule destroy
% docker ps -qaf ancestor=quay.io/pulibrary/jammy-ansible:latest | xargs docker stop
% docker ps -qaf ancestor=quay.io/pulibrary/jammy-ansible:latest | xargs docker rm
% docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs docker volume rm
% docker rmi quay.io/pulibrary/jammy-ansible
% molecule converge

Usage

Running a playbook

Run a playbook

ansible-playbook playbooks/example.yml

Run a playbook from an error or a specific task

ansible-playbook playbooks/example.yml --start-at-task="Task Name"

Avoiding downtime

To ensure uptime while provisioning a set of machines, the general process is to remove half the machines from the load balancer, provision and deploy them, then put them back on the load balancer and remove the other half for provisioning and deployment.

2 ways to remove machines from the load balancer:

  • Use the capistrano tasks, duplicated to every rails application, called remove_from_nginx and serve_from_nginx to remove and replace sets of machines.
  • Use the load balancer UI to control which boxes are being served.

To run a playbook on only a subset of hosts, use the --limit option to ansible-playbook, e.g.:

$ ansible-playbook playbooks/figgy_production.yml --limit figgy3.princeton.edu

You can also add --list-hosts just to check which hosts will be affected before you run.

Make sure to deploy the application to each set of boxes after they are provisioned, to ensure the local webserver is restarted after the environment changes.

To check the newly-provisioned boxes before swapping to the other group, SSH to the box that's off the load balancer and check that the index page still looks okay $ curl localhost:80

Note that some playbooks have separate sections for webservers and workers. Make sure that all the boxes get provisioned.

Connections to other boxes

Currently there's no automation on firewall changes when the box you're provisioning needs to talk to the postgres or solr machines. See instructions for manual edits at:

Vault

Use ansible-vault edit to make changes to the vault.yml file, for example:

ansible-vault edit group_vars/bibdata/vault.yml

If you need to diff an ansible-vault file, run

git config --global diff.ansible-vault.textconv "ansible-vault view"
git config --local merge.ansible-vault.driver "./ansible-vault-merge %O %A %B %L %P"
git config --local merge.ansible-vault.name "Ansible Vault merge driver"

after which any git diff command should decrypt your ansible-vault files.

If a file is not decrypting with git diff you may need to add the file you're trying to diff to .gitattributes.

Troubleshooting lastpass

More information about lastpass-cli can be found here: https://lastpass.github.io/lastpass-cli/lpass.1.html

  • If you get the message [WARNING]: Error in vault password file loading (default): Invalid vault password was provided from script, it's possible you have vault passwords hanging around from previous projects, and they are overriding the lastpass password. If you no longer need those passwords, remove them. For example:
rm -rf ~/.vault_pass.txt
rm -rf ~/.ansible-vaults
  • If you get the message ERROR! Decryption failed (no vault secrets were found that could decrypt), you may still need to source the environment for your shell.
source princeton_ansible_env.sh

Rekeying the vault

  1. Open the old_vault_password server in lastpass. Replace the old vault password with the current ansible vault password. Add a note to include today's date.
  2. Run pwgen -s 48 to create a new password.
  3. Run ansible-vault rekey --ask-vault-password $(grep -Frl "\$ANSIBLE_VAULT;")
  4. Enter the old vault password
  5. Enter the new vault password
  6. Run ansible-vault edit --ask-vault-password on one of the files you changed (providing the new password), to validate that everything is as it should be.
  7. Add the new vault password to the vault_password in lastpass.

Upgrading Ansible version

  1. In a pipenv shell

    pipenv sync
    pipenv shell
  2. Upgrade ansible

    pipenv update ansible
    

    If this fails you may need to

    pipenv uninstall ansible
    pipenv install ansible
    
  3. Create the CI ansible environment

    pipenv lock -r > requirements.txt
    
  4. Create a PR and commit

Patching Dependabots

  1. Make recommended changes from dependabot PR run pipenv install -r requirements.txt

  2. Check in changes to Pipfile.lock

  3. Run the entire test suite locally

  4. Re-run pipenv lock -r > requirements.txt

About

Ansible Roles and Playbooks for Princeton University Library

Resources

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published