435c0d9fc8
This PR switches the Nomad repository from using govendor to Go modules for managing dependencies. Aspects of the Nomad workflow remain pretty much the same. The usual Makefile targets should continue to work as they always did. The API submodule simply defers to the parent Nomad version on the repository, keeping the semantics of API versioning that currently exists. |
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.. | ||
provider | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
config.go | ||
discover.go | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum |
README.md
Go Discover Nodes for Cloud Providers
go-discover
is a Go (golang) library and command line tool to discover
ip addresses of nodes in cloud environments based on meta information
like tags provided by the environment.
The configuration for the providers is provided as a list of key=val key=val ...
tuples. If either the key or the value contains a space (
), a backslash
(\
) or double quotes ("
) then it needs to be quoted with double quotes.
Within a quoted string you can use the backslash to escape double quotes or the
backslash itself, e.g. key=val "some key"="some value"
Duplicate keys are reported as error and the provider is determined through the
provider
key.
Supported Providers
The following cloud providers have implementations in the go-discover/provider sub packages. Additional providers can be added through the Register function.
- Aliyun (Alibaba) Cloud Config options
- Amazon AWS Config options
- DigitalOcean Config options
- Google Cloud Config options
- Linode Config options
- mDNS Config options
- Microsoft Azure Config options
- Openstack Config options
- Scaleway Config options
- SoftLayer Config options
- TencentCloud Config options
- Triton Config options
- vSphere Config options
- Packet Config options
The following providers are implemented in the go-discover/provider subdirectory but aren't automatically registered. If you want to support these providers, register them manually:
- Kubernetes Config options
HashiCorp maintains acceptance tests that regularly allocate and run tests with real resources to verify the behavior of several of these providers. Those currently are: Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, DigitalOcean, Triton, Scaleway, AliBaba Cloud, vSphere, and Packet.net.
Config Example
# Aliyun (Alibaba) Cloud
provider=aliyun region=... tag_key=consul tag_value=... access_key_id=... access_key_secret=...
# Amazon AWS
provider=aws region=eu-west-1 tag_key=consul tag_value=... access_key_id=... secret_access_key=...
# DigitalOcean
provider=digitalocean region=... tag_name=... api_token=...
# Google Cloud
provider=gce project_name=... zone_pattern=eu-west-* tag_value=consul credentials_file=...
# Linode
provider=linode tag_name=... region=us-east address_type=private_v4 api_token=...
# mDNS
provider=mdns service=consul domain=local
# Microsoft Azure
provider=azure tag_name=consul tag_value=... tenant_id=... client_id=... subscription_id=... secret_access_key=...
# Openstack
provider=os tag_key=consul tag_value=server username=... password=... auth_url=...
# Scaleway
provider=scaleway organization=my-org tag_name=consul-server token=... region=...
# SoftLayer
provider=softlayer datacenter=dal06 tag_value=consul username=... api_key=...
# TencentCloud
provider=tencentcloud region=ap-guangzhou tag_key=consul tag_value=... access_key_id=... access_key_secret=...
# Triton
provider=triton account=testaccount url=https://us-sw-1.api.joyentcloud.com key_id=... tag_key=consul-role tag_value=server
# vSphere
provider=vsphere category_name=consul-role tag_name=consul-server host=... user=... password=... insecure_ssl=[true|false]
# Packet
provider=packet auth_token=token project=uuid url=... address_type=...
# Kubernetes
provider=k8s label_selector="app = consul-server"
Command Line Tool Usage
Install the command line tool with:
go get -u github.com/hashicorp/go-discover/cmd/discover
Then run it with:
$ discover addrs provider=aws region=eu-west-1 ...
Library Usage
Install the library with:
go get -u github.com/hashicorp/go-discover
You can then either support discovery for all available providers or only for some of them.
// support discovery for all supported providers
d := discover.Discover{}
// support discovery for AWS and GCE only
d := discover.Discover{
Providers : map[string]discover.Provider{
"aws": discover.Providers["aws"],
"gce": discover.Providers["gce"],
}
}
// use ioutil.Discard for no log output
l := log.New(os.Stderr, "", log.LstdFlags)
cfg := "provider=aws region=eu-west-1 ..."
addrs, err := d.Addrs(cfg, l)
You can also add support for providers that aren't registered by default:
// Imports at top of file
import "github.com/hashicorp/go-discover/provider/k8s"
// support discovery for all supported providers
d := discover.Discover{}
// support discovery for AWS and GCE only
d := discover.Discover{
Providers : map[string]discover.Provider{
"k8s": &k8s.Provider{},
}
}
// ...
For complete API documentation, see GoDoc. The configuration for the supported providers is documented in the providers sub-package.
Testing
Note: Due to the go.sum
checksum errors referenced in #68,
you will need Go 1.11.4+ to build/test go-discover.
Configuration tests can be run with Go:
$ go test ./...
By default tests that communicate with providers do not run unless credentials are set for that provider. To run provider tests you must set the necessary environment variables.
Note: This will make real API calls to the account provided by the credentials.
$ AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=... AWS_ACCESS_KEY_SECRET=... AWS_REGION=... go test -v ./provider/aws
This requires resources to exist that match those specified in tests
(eg instance tags in the case of AWS). To create these resources,
there are sets of Terraform configuration
in the test/tf
directory for supported providers.
You must use the same account and access credentials above. The same environment variables should be applicable and read by Terraform.
$ cd test/tf/aws
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=... AWS_ACCESS_KEY_SECRET=... AWS_REGION=...
$ terraform init
...
$ terraform apply
...
After Terraform successfully runs, you should be able to successfully run the tests, assuming you have exported credentials into your environment:
$ go test -v ./provider/aws
To destroy the resources you need to use Terraform again:
$ cd test/tf/aws
$ terraform destroy
...
Note: There should be no requirements to create and test these resources other than credentials and Terraform. This is to ensure tests can run in development and CI environments consistently across all providers.
Retrieving Test Credentials
Below are instructions for retrieving credentials in order to run tests for some of the providers.
Google Cloud
- Go to https://console.cloud.google.com/
- IAM & Admin / Settings:
- Create Project, e.g.
discover
- Write down the
Project ID
, e.g.discover-xxx
- Create Project, e.g.
- Billing: Ensure that the project is linked to a billing account
- API Manager / Dashboard: Enable the following APIs
- Google Compute Engine API
- IAM & Admin / Service Accounts: Create Service Account
- Service account name:
admin
- Roles:
Project/Service Account Actor
Compute Engine/Compute Instance Admin (v1)
Compute Engine/Compute Security Admin
- Furnish a new private key:
yes
- Key type:
JSON
- Service account name:
- The credentials file
discover-xxx.json
will have been downloaded automatically to your machine - Source the contents of the credentials file into the
GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS
environment variable
Azure
See also the [Terraform provider documentation](https://www.terraform.io/docs/providers/azurerm/index.html#creating-credentials).# Install Azure CLI (https://github.com/Azure/azure-cli)
curl -L https://aka.ms/InstallAzureCli | bash
# 1. Login
$ az login
# 2. Get SubscriptionID
$ az account list
[
{
"cloudName": "AzureCloud",
"id": "subscription_id",
"isDefault": true,
"name": "Gratis versie",
"state": "Enabled",
"tenantId": "tenant_id",
"user": {
"name": "user@email.com",
"type": "user"
}
}
]
# 3. Switch to subscription
$ az account set --subscription="subscription_id"
# 4. Create ClientID and Secret
$ az ad sp create-for-rbac --role="Contributor" --scopes="/subscriptions/subscription_id"
{
"appId": "client_id",
"displayName": "azure-cli-2017-07-18-16-51-43",
"name": "http://azure-cli-2017-07-18-16-51-43",
"password": "client_secret",
"tenant": "tenant_id"
}
# 5. Export the Credentials for the client
export ARM_CLIENT_ID=client_id
export ARM_CLIENT_SECRET=client_secret
export ARM_TENANT_ID=tenant_id
export ARM_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=subscription_id
# 6. Test the credentials
$ az vm list-sizes --location 'West Europe'