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README.md |
Provision a Nomad cluster on AWS with Packer & Terraform
Use this to easily provision a Nomad sandbox environment on AWS with Packer and Terraform. Consul and Vault are also installed (colocated for convenience). The intention is to allow easy exploration of Nomad and its integrations with the HashiCorp stack. This is not meant to be a production ready environment. A demonstration of Nomad's Apache Spark integration is included.
Setup
Clone this repo and (optionally) use Vagrant to bootstrap a local staging environment:
$ git clone git@github.com:hashicorp/nomad.git
$ cd terraform/aws
$ vagrant up && vagrant ssh
The Vagrant staging environment pre-installs Packer, Terraform, and Docker.
Pre-requisites
You will need the following:
- AWS account
- API access keys
- SSH key pair
Set environment variables for your AWS credentials:
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=[ACCESS_KEY_ID]
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=[SECRET_ACCESS_KEY]
Provision a cluster
cd
to an environment subdirectory:
$ cd env/us-east
Update terraform.tfvars
with your SSH key name:
region = "us-east-1"
ami = "ami-a780afdc"
instance_type = "t2.medium"
key_name = "KEY_NAME"
server_count = "3"
client_count = "4"
Note that a pre-provisioned, publicly available AMI is used by default
(for the us-east-1
region). To provision your own customized AMI with
Packer, follow the instructions
here. You will need to replace the AMI ID in
terraform.tfvars
with your own. You can also modify the region
,
instance_type
, server_count
, and client_count
. At least one client and
one server are required.
Provision the cluster:
$ terraform get
$ terraform plan
$ terraform apply
Access the cluster
SSH to one of the servers using its public IP:
$ ssh -i /path/to/key ubuntu@PUBLIC_IP
Note that the AWS security group is configured by default to allow all traffic over port 22. This is not recommended for production deployments.
Run a few basic commands to verify that Consul and Nomad are up and running properly:
$ consul members
$ nomad server-members
$ nomad node-status
Optionally, initialize and unseal Vault:
$ vault init -key-shares=1 -key-threshold=1
$ vault unseal
$ export VAULT_TOKEN=[INITIAL_ROOT_TOKEN]
The vault init
command above creates a single
Vault unseal key for
convenience. For a production environment, it is recommended that you create at
least five unseal key shares and securely distribute them to independent
operators. The vault init
command defaults to five key shares and a key
threshold of three. If you provisioned more than one server, the others will
become standby nodes (but should still be unsealed). You can query the active
and standby nodes independently:
$ dig active.vault.service.consul
$ dig active.vault.service.consul SRV
$ dig standby.vault.service.consul
Getting started with Nomad & the HashiCorp stack
See:
Apache Spark integration
Nomad is well-suited for analytical workloads, given its performance characteristics and first-class support for batch scheduling. Apache Spark is a popular data processing engine/framework that has been architected to use third-party schedulers. The Nomad ecosystem includes a fork that natively integrates Nomad with Spark. A detailed walkthrough of the integration is included here.