The obscene ansible paas distribution
Project description
DISCLAMER: maybe it even works for you, but that’s far from garanteed so far.
I love ansible most of the time, the rest of the time it makes me feel like it deserves better UX. Playlabs unfrustrates me:
provides a CLI to generate ansible-playbook commands,
works without inventory with options passed on the CLI,
also works with an inventory, that it standardizes,
able to combine both of the above,
provides a generic “project” role for my custom projects CD, that provides with nginx-proxy, letsencrypt-companion, netdata monitoring, sentry, etc
1-click galaxy role install, role sub-task execution, chaining, etc, using generic playbooks
provides a command to setup ansible host dependencies (enforcing python3), my user with my key and passwordless sudo and disable root and password ssh access (my way or the highway !)
also supports k8s, but I won’t prescribe it until you need HA
A more extensive and user-friendly documentation is in the docs sub-directory of playlabs and online @ https://playlabs.rtfd.io thanks to RTFD :)
Install playlabs
This would install in the ~/src/playlabs directory:
pip3 install --user --editable git+https://yourlabs.io/oss/playlabs#egg=playlabs
Run the ansible-playbook wrapper command without argument to see the quick getting started commands:
~/.local/bin/playlabs # or: echo 'export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/.local/bin"' >> ~/.bashrc
Then, install your user with your public key, passwordless sudo, and secure SSH for the playlabs install command to work. Playlabs provide two ways.
Vagrant/VirtualBox
You can work in a VM if you have vagrant:
cd ~/src/playlabs vagrant destroy -f vagrant up vagrant ssh-config > ssh playlabs deploy image=yourlabs/crudlfap --ssh-common-args="-F ssh" @default
Bare host
The playlabs init command can setup your user for you:
# example with root acces playlabs init root:aoeu@1.2.3.4 # all options are ansible options are proxied playlabs init @192.168.168.168 --ask-become-pass # example with a typical openstack vm playlabs init ubuntu@192.168.168.168 --ask-become-pass
Now you should be able to install roles.
Deploy a project
Without inventory
You can now deploy a container for a custom image, it will create a project-staging container by default:
playlabs @192.168.168.168 deploy image=betagouv/mrs:master
This time with more variables and in ybs-hack instead of project-staging:
playlabs @192.168.168.168 deploy image=betagouv/mrs:master prefix=ybs instance=hack plugins=postgres,django,uwsgi backup_password=foo env.SECRET_KEY=itsnotasecret env.VIRTUAL_HOST=ybs.hack.example.com env.LETSENCRYPT_HOST=ybs.hack.example.com env.LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL=your@example.com
With inventory
To generate a starter inventory where you can store variables such as users, keys, passwords with ansible-vault, etc:
playlabs scaffold ./your-inventory
Then from CI of a project, you can auto-deploy the ybs-hack instance from above as such (it will pickup the ybs_hack_* variables from the inventory):
playlabs @192.168.168.168 deploy prefix=ybs instance=hack instance=$CI_BRANCH image=$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_SHA
Installing roles
You will probably want to monitor your server:
playlabs install netdata @192.168.168.168
You could also install galaxy roles that contain a dot, in which case playlabs will automatically download it if necessary:
playlabs install ferrarimarco.virtualbox @192.168.168.168
You could also execute a specific role task file instead of main.yml, if your role name contains a slash:
# run k8s/tasks/users.yml instead of k8s/tasks/main.yml # in the CI of your inventory for example to react to changes ? playlabs install k8s/users @192.168.168.168
Note that the dot and slash notations should be compatible.
You can also execute multiple roles at once if you separate them by comma:
playlabs install netdata,ferrarimarco.virtualbox,k8s/users @192.168.168.168
You can set ansible variables directly on the command line. If you use dot in variable name, it will build a dict, ie.:
playlabs install netdata @192.168.168.168 example=lol foo.bar=test # will generate the extra ansible-playbook options: ansible-playbook ... -e example=lol -e '{"foo": {"bar": "test"}}'
Kubernetes
We also have k8s support, but beware that it’s not compatible with the deploy command, that relies on nginx-proxy and its letsencrypt companion, it’s currently in-development and not tested in production, but still pretty cool:
playlabs install k8s @192.168.168.168 # run k8s/tasks/init.yml instead of k8s/tasks/main.yml to reset a cluster playlabs install k8s/init @192.168.168.168
Command explanation
playlabs init
Initializing means going from a naked system to a system with your own user, ssh key, dotfiles, sudo access, secure sshd, and all necessary dependencies to execute ansible, such as python3. It will also install your friend account if you have an ansible inventory repository where you store your friend list in yml.
You might need to pass extra options to ansible in some cases, for example if your install provides a passworded sudo, add --ask-sudo-pass or put the password in the CLI, since initializing will remove
playlabs init @192.168.168.168 playlabs init user:pass@192.168.168.168 playlabs init user@192.168.168.168 --ask-sudo-pass playlabs init root@192.168.168.168
playlabs install
If you want to deploy your project, then you need to install the paas which consists of three roles: docker, firewall, and nginx. The nginx role sets up two containers, nginx-proxy that watches the docker socket and introspects docker container environment variables, such as VIRTUAL_HOST, to reconfigure itself, it even supports uWSGI. The other container is nginx-letsencrypt, that shares a cert volume with the nginx-proxy container, and watches the docker socket for containers and introspect variables such as LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL, to configure the certificates.
Remember the architecture:
nginx-proxy container recieves requests,
nginx-letsencrypt container generates certificates,
other docker containers have environment variables necessary for the above
The CLI itself is pretty straightforward:
playlabs install docker,firewall,nginx @192.168.168.168 # the paas for the project role playbabs install sendmail,netdata,mailcatcher,gitlab @staging playbabs install sendmail,netdata,sentry user@production
The difference between traditionnal roles and playlabs roles, is that in playlabs they strive to have stuff running inside docker to leverage the architecture of the nginx proxy.
Playlabs can configure sendmail of course, but also has roles providing full-featured docker based mailservers or mailcatcher instances for your dev, training or staging environments for example.
This approach comes from migrating away from “building in production” to “building immutable tested chroots”, away from “pet” to “cattle”.
But if you’re already an ansible hacker you’re better off with ansible to do a lot more than than what docker-compose has to offer, such as managing k and roles, on your SDN as in your apps.
In fact, you will see role that consist of a single docker ansible module call, but the thing is that you can spawn it in one command and have it integrated with the rest of your server, and even rely on ansible to provision fine-grained RBAC in your own apps.
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