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📙 Disclaimer: This is being deprecated for the Mesosphere Universal Installer located here.

Open DC/OS on Azure with Terraform

Prerequisites

Getting Started

  1. Create directory
  2. Initialize Terraform
  3. Configure Azure SSH and Azure ID keys
  4. Configure settings
  5. Apply Terraform

Install Terraform

If you're on a Mac environment with homebrew installed, run this command.

brew install terraform

If you want to leverage the terraform installer, feel free to check out https://www.terraform.io/downloads.html.

Create Installer Directory

Make your directory where Terraform will download and place your Terraform infrastructure files.

mkdir dcos-installer
cd dcos-installer

Run this command below to have Terraform initialized from this repository. There is no git clone of this repo required as Terraform performs this for you.

terraform init -from-module github.com/dcos/terraform-dcos/azure
cp desired_cluster_profile.tfvars.example desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Configure your Cloud Provider Credentials

Configure your Azure ssh Keys

Set the private key that you will be you will be using to your ssh-agent and set public key in terraform.

ssh-add ~/.ssh/your_private_key.pem
cat desired_cluster_profile.tfvars
ssh_pub_key = "INSERT_PUBLIC_KEY_HERE"

Configure your Azure ID Keys

Follow the Terraform instructions here to setup your Azure credentials to provide to terraform.

When you've successfully retrieved your output of az account list, create a source file to easily run your credentials in the future.

$ cat ~/.azure/credentials
export ARM_TENANT_ID=45ef06c1-a57b-40d5-967f-88cf8example
export ARM_CLIENT_SECRET=Lqw0kyzWXyEjfha9hfhs8dhasjpJUIGQhNFExAmPLE
export ARM_CLIENT_ID=80f99c3a-cd7d-4931-9405-8b614example
export ARM_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=846d9e22-a320-488c-92d5-41112example
$ source ~/.azure/credentials

Source Credentials

Set your environment variables by sourcing the files before you run any terraform commands.

$ source ~/.azure/credentials

Custom terraform-dcos variables

The default variables are tracked in the variables.tf file. Since this file can be overwritten during updates when you may run terraform get --update when you want to fetch new releases of DC/OS to upgrade too, its best to use the desired_cluster_profile.tfvars and set your custom terraform and DC/OS flags there. This way you can keep track of a single file that you can use manage the lifecycle of your cluster.

Supported Operating Systems

For a list of supported operating systems for this repo, see the ones that DC/OS recommends here. You can find the list that Terraform for this repo here.

Supported DC/OS Versions

For a list of all the DC/OS versions that this repository supports, you can find them at the tf_dcos_core module here.

Note: Master DC/OS version is not meant for production use. It is only for CI/CD testing.

To apply the configuration file, you can use this command below.

terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Advance YAML Configuration

We have designed this project to be flexible. Here are the example working variables that allows very deep customization by using a single tfvars file.

For advance users with stringent requirements, here are the DC/OS flags examples where you can simply paste your YAML configuration in your desired_cluster_profile.tfvars. The alternative to YAML is to convert it to JSON.

$ cat desired_cluster_profile.tfvars
dcos_version = "1.10.2"
os = "centos_7.3"
num_of_masters = "3"
num_of_private_agents = "2"
num_of_public_agents = "1"
expiration = "6h"
dcos_security = "permissive"
dcos_cluster_docker_credentials_enabled =  "true"
dcos_cluster_docker_credentials_write_to_etc = "true"
dcos_cluster_docker_credentials_dcos_owned = "false"
dcos_cluster_docker_registry_url = "https://index.docker.io"
dcos_use_proxy = "yes"
dcos_http_proxy = "example.com"
dcos_https_proxy = "example.com"
dcos_no_proxy = <<EOF
# YAML
 - "internal.net"
 - "168.63.129.16"
EOF
dcos_overlay_network = <<EOF
# YAML
    vtep_subnet: 44.128.0.0/20
    vtep_mac_oui: 70:B3:D5:00:00:00
    overlays:
      - name: dcos
        subnet: 12.0.0.0/8
        prefix: 26
EOF
dcos_rexray_config = <<EOF
# YAML
  rexray:
    loglevel: warn
    modules:
      default-admin:
        host: tcp://127.0.0.1:61003
    storageDrivers:
    - ec2
    volume:
      unmount:
        ignoreusedcount: true
EOF
dcos_cluster_docker_credentials = <<EOF
# YAML
  auths:
    'https://index.docker.io/v1/':
      auth: Ze9ja2VyY3licmljSmVFOEJrcTY2eTV1WHhnSkVuVndjVEE=
EOF
ssh_pub_key = "INSERT_PUBLIC_KEY_HERE"

Note: The YAML comment is required for the DC/OS specific YAML settings.

Upgrading DC/OS

You can upgrade your DC/OS cluster with a single command. This terraform script was built to perform installs and upgrades from the inception of this project. With the upgrade procedures below, you can also have finer control on how masters or agents upgrade at a given time. This will give you the ability to change the parallelism of master or agent upgrades.

DC/OS Upgrades

Rolling Upgrade

Supported upgraded by dcos.io
Prerequisite:

Update your terraform scripts to gain access to the latest DC/OS version with this command below. Please make sure you meet the current upgrade version conditions here https://docs.mesosphere.com/1.11/installing/oss/upgrading/#supported-upgrade-paths.

terraform get --update
# change dcos_version = "<desired_version>" in desired_cluster_profile.tfvars
Masters Sequentially, Agents Parellel:
terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars -var state=upgrade -target null_resource.bootstrap -target null_resource.master -parallelism=1
terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars -var state=upgrade
All Roles Simultaniously
Not supported by dcos.io but it works without dcos_skip_checks enabled.
terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars -var state=upgrade

Maintenance

If you would like to add more or remove (private) agents or public agents from your cluster, you can do so by telling terraform your desired state and it will make sure it gets you there. For example, if I have 2 private agents and 1 public agent in my -var-file I can always override that flag by specifying the -var flag. It has higher priority than the -var-file.

Adding Agents

# update num_of_private_agents = "5" in desired_cluster_profile.tfvars
terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Removing Agents

# update num_of_private_agents = "2" in desired_cluster_profile.tfvars
terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Important: Always remember to save your desired state in your desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Redeploy an existing Master

If you wanted to redeploy a problematic master (ie. storage filled up, not responsive, etc), you can tell terraform to redeploy during the next cycle.

NOTE: This only applies to DC/OS clusters that have set their dcos_master_discovery to master_http_loadbalancer and not static.

Master Node

Taint Master Node

terraform taint azurerm_virtual_machine.master.0 # The number represents the agent in the list

Redeploy Master Node

terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Redeploy an existing Agent

If you wanted to redeploy a problematic agent, (ie. storage filled up, not responsive, etc), you can tell terraform to redeploy during the next cycle.

Private Agents

Taint Private Agent

terraform taint azurerm_virtual_machine.agent.0 # The number represents the agent in the list

Redeploy Agent

terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Public Agents

Taint Private Agent

terraform taint azurerm_virtual_machine.public-agent.0 # The number represents the agent in the list

Redeploy Agent

terraform apply -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Experimental

Adding GPU Private Agents

Coming soon!

Destroy Cluster

You can shutdown/destroy all resources from your environment by running this command below

terraform destroy -var-file desired_cluster_profile.tfvars

Roadmaps

  • Support for Azure
  • Support for CoreOS
  • Support for Public Agents
  • Support for expanding Private Agents
  • Support for expanding Public Agents
  • Support for specific versions of CoreOS
  • Support for Centos
  • Secondary support for specific versions of Centos
  • Support for RHEL
  • Secondary support for specific versions of RHEL
  • Multi AZ support via Availability Sets