Extending teracy-dev

teracy-dev is developed with the goal to keep it as minimal and extensible as possible. The extension feature is so powerful that you can customize the VM in anyway you want.

You can extend teracy-dev’s VM by your own choice of operating system and automate the provisioning process by your own choice of configuration software. “The only limit is your imagination” :–).

To extend teracy-dev, you can use any kind of provisioners that are supported by vagrant (as teracy-dev is built on top of vagrant), you can see more info here: https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/provisioning/

We choose Chef as it’s our default provisioner because we have more years of usage experience. We also intend to use Ansible for some future projects, too.

Let me show you how to extend it to work with Kubernetes.

Make sure that you have teracy-dev running, if not, follow the Getting Started guide first.

Make sure that you master the Basic Usage and Advanced Usage guides, too.

Installing ChefDK

To work with Chef cookbooks, we need to install ChefDK. Fortunately, there is already an available cookbook for us to use to install ChefDK automatically on our VM: https://supermarket.chef.io/cookbooks/chef-dk

Usually, we have a dev-setup directory to extend teracy-dev. The initial dev-setup content should be like this: https://github.com/acme101/kubernetes-dev-setup/tree/0-initial

To install ChefDK, we must install the chef-dk cookbook and use it as follows:

  • Add depends 'chef-dk' to dev-setup/chef/main-cookbooks/acme/metadata.rb

  • Install vendor cookbooks with the following commands within the VM:

    $ vagrant ssh
    $ ws
    $ cd dev-setup/chef
    $ docker-compose up
    
  • Sync back the changes from the VM to the host machine:

    $ vagrant rsync-back
    

The updated content should be like this: https://github.com/acme101/kubernetes-dev-setup/tree/1-dependency

Now, to install chef-dk, just add the following Ruby code to default.rb recipe, it’s never so easy:

chef_dk 'my_chef_dk' do
  global_shell_init true
  action :install
end

Make sure you have berks-cookbooks paths that vagrant can look up. The configuration step should be like this: https://github.com/acme101/kubernetes-dev-setup/tree/2-configuration

  • After that, $ vagrant reload --provision and voila, you should have ChefDk installed.

    $ vagrant ssh
    $ chef --version
    Chef Development Kit Version: 1.4.3
    chef-client version: 12.19.36
    delivery version: master (41b94ffb5efd33723cf72a89bf4d273c8151c9dc)
    berks version: 5.6.4
    kitchen version: 1.16.0
    inspec version: 1.25.1
    

That’s how we use Chef cookbooks to manage the VM’s software automatically. You can do the same with all other types of Chef cookbooks shared and opensourced from the public Chef Supermarket: https://supermarket.chef.io/ You can use all the public shared cookbooks to do almost anything you want for your VM.

However, sometimes, there is not available cookbook that we want, then it’s time we should build new cookbooks from scratch.

Creating new Chef cookbooks

From the steps above, we have ChefDK available to work with Chef cookbooks. To learn how to use it, you can follow: https://github.com/chef/chef-dk

I already created the initial kubernetes-stack-cookbook that we can work with. You need to clone the repo into the workspace directory:

$ cd ~/teracy-dev/workspace
$ git clone git@github.com:teracyhq-incubator/kubernetes-stack-cookbook.git

You can test the cookbook within the VM ($ vagrant ssh) with rspec, kitchen easily:

$ ws
$ cd kubernetes-stack-cookbook/
$ rspec

you should see the following similar content:

kubernetes-stack::default
  When all attributes are default, on ubuntu 16.04
    converges successfully

kubernetes-stack-test::gcloud_install_default
  When all attributes are default, on ubuntu 16.04
    converges successfully
    install gcloud

kubernetes-stack-test::kubectl_install_default
  When all attributes are default, on ubuntu 16.04
    converges successfully
    install kubectl

Finished in 1.35 seconds (files took 1.78 seconds to load)
5 examples, 0 failures


ChefSpec Coverage report generated...

  Total Resources:   7
  Touched Resources: 2
  Touch Coverage:    28.57%

Untouched Resources:

  gcloud[install default gcloud]     kubernetes-stack-test/recipes/gcloud_install_default.rb:1
  execute[import google-cloud-sdk public key]   kubernetes-stack/resources/gcloud.rb:13
  apt_repository[google-cloud-sdk]   kubernetes-stack/resources/gcloud.rb:17
  bash[clean up the mismatched kubectl version]   kubernetes-stack/resources/kubectl.rb:20
  remote_file[/usr/local/bin/kubectl]   kubernetes-stack/resources/kubectl.rb:33

and to test with kitchen:

$ ws
$ cd kubernetes-stack-cookbook/
$ export KITCHEN_LOCAL_YAML=.kitchen.dokken.yml
$ kitchen test

then you should see the following similar content:

...
Starting Chef Client, version 13.2.7
[2017-06-14T17:53:24+00:00] WARN: Plugin Network: unable to detect ipaddress
resolving cookbooks for run list: ["kubernetes-stack-test::gcloud_install_default"]
Synchronizing Cookbooks:
  - kubernetes-stack-test (0.1.0)
  - kubernetes-stack (0.1.0)
Installing Cookbook Gems:
Compiling Cookbooks...
Converging 1 resources
Recipe: kubernetes-stack-test::gcloud_install_default
  * gcloud[install default gcloud] action install
    * execute[import google-cloud-sdk public key] action run
      - execute curl https://packages.cloud.google.com/apt/doc/apt-key.gpg | apt-key add -
    * apt_repository[google-cloud-sdk] action add
      * execute[apt-cache gencaches] action nothing (skipped due to action :nothing)
      * apt_update[google-cloud-sdk] action nothing (skipped due to action :nothing)
      * file[/etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-cloud-sdk.list] action create
        - create new file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-cloud-sdk.list
        - update content in file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-cloud-sdk.list from none to 24ee22
        --- /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-cloud-sdk.list 2017-06-14 17:53:25.296105380 +0000
        +++ /etc/apt/sources.list.d/.chef-google-cloud-sdk20170614-20-7wqkmu.list 2017-06-14 17:53:25.296105380 +0000
        @@ -1 +1,2 @@
        +deb      "http://packages.cloud.google.com/apt" cloud-sdk-xenial main
        - change mode from '' to '0644'
        - change owner from '' to 'root'
        - change group from '' to 'root'
      * execute[apt-cache gencaches] action run
        - execute apt-cache gencaches
      * apt_update[google-cloud-sdk] action update
        - force update new lists of packages
        * directory[/var/lib/apt/periodic] action create (up to date)
        * directory[/etc/apt/apt.conf.d] action create (up to date)
        * file[/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/15update-stamp] action create_if_missing
          - create new file /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/15update-stamp
          - update content in file /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/15update-stamp from none to 174cdb
          --- /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/15update-stamp  2017-06-14 17:53:26.136525380 +0000
          +++ /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/.chef-15update-stamp20170614-20-1r28edv 2017-06-14 17:53:26.136525380 +0000
          @@ -1 +1,2 @@
          +APT::Update::Post-Invoke-Success {"touch /var/lib/apt/periodic/update-success-stamp 2>/dev/null || true";};
        * execute[apt-get -q update] action run
          - execute apt-get -q update


    * apt_package[google-cloud-sdk] action install

      - install version 159.0.0-0 of package google-cloud-sdk


Running handlers:
Running handlers complete
Chef Client finished, 9/13 resources updated in 55 seconds
       Finished converging <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604> (1m0.97s).
-----> Setting up <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604>...
       Finished setting up <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604> (0m0.00s).
-----> Verifying <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604>...
       Loaded tests from test/smoke/gcloud

Profile: tests from test/smoke/gcloud
Version: (not specified)
Target:  docker://16562c9afb7c00447169330fc584b442617a810f6b776d2eb6b78ce87d5d652f


  Command which
     ✔  gcloud exit_status should eq 0
     ✔  gcloud stdout should match "/usr/bin/gcloud"

Test Summary: 2 successful, 0 failures, 0 skipped
       Finished verifying <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604> (0m0.64s).
-----> Destroying <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604>...
       Deleting kitchen sandbox at /home/vagrant/.dokken/kitchen_sandbox/1000b8c847-smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604
       Deleting verifier sandbox at /home/vagrant/.dokken/verifier_sandbox/1000b8c847-smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604
       Finished destroying <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604> (0m10.67s).
       Finished testing <smoke-gcloud-ubuntu-1604> (1m55.61s).
-----> Kitchen is finished. (4m12.76s)

That’s how we develop and test the cookbook on local dev.

You can see the cookbook here at https://github.com/teracyhq-incubator/kubernetes-stack-cookbook

It’s currently a very simple cookbook to support the installation of kubectl and gcloud. In the future, it will do more than that and support more platforms than current Ubuntu only.

Installing kubectl and gcloud

The kubernetes-stack-cookbook is not available on the Chef Supermarket (yet), so to use it, we need to install it from the github repo.

To install kubectl, add this to the default.rb recipe:

kubectl 'install the latest kubectl'

To install gcloud, add this to the default.rb recipe:

gcloud 'install the latest gcloud'

The configuration step should be like this: https://github.com/acme101/kubernetes-dev-setup/tree/3-kubectl-gcloud-installation

After that, $ vagrant reload --provision and voila (again), you should have both of the packages installed.

$ kubectl version
Client Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"6", GitVersion:"v1.6.4", GitCommit:"d6f433224538d4f9ca2f7ae19b252e6fcb66a3ae", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2017-05-19T18:44:27Z", GoVersion:"go1.7.5", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"}
The connection to the server localhost:8080 was refused - did you specify the right host or port?
vagrant@teracy:~$ gcloud --version
Google Cloud SDK 159.0.0
alpha 2017.06.09
beta 2017.06.09
bq 2.0.24
core 2017.06.09
gcloud
gsutil 4.26

Summary

Now you should know how to extend teracy-dev with Chef cookbooks, this is a very common task to do. And other newcomer devs can just use your dev-setup without learning anything new, just follow the instructions and learn more to master later.