A BOSH release of a MySQL database-as-a-service for Cloud Foundry using MariaDB Galera Cluster and a v2 Service Broker.
Component | Description | Build Status |
---|---|---|
CF MySQL Broker | Advertises the MySQL service and plans. Creates and deletes MySQL databases and credentials (bindings) at the request of Cloud Foundry's Cloud Controller. | |
MySQL Server | MariaDB 10.0.16; database instances are hosted on the servers. | n/a |
Proxy | Switchboard; proxies to MySQL, severing connections on MySQL node failure. |
Final releases are designed for public use, and are tagged with a version number of the form "v".
The develop branch is where we do active development. Although we endeavor to keep the develop branch stable, we do not guarantee that any given commit will deploy cleanly.
The release-candidate branch has passed all of our unit, integration, smoke, & acceptance tests, but has not been used in a final release yet. This branch should be fairly stable.
The master branch points to the most recent stable final release.
At semi-regular intervals a final release is created from the release-candidate branch. This final release is tagged and pushed to the master branch.
Pushing to any branch other than develop will create problems for the CI pipeline, which relies on fast forward merges. To recover from this condition follow the instructions here.
See our contributing docs for instructions on how to make a pull request.
This BOSH release doubles as a $GOPATH
. It will automatically be set up for
you if you have direnv installed.
# fetch release repo
mkdir -p ~/workspace
cd ~/workspace
git clone https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cf-mysql-release.git
cd cf-mysql-release/
# switch to develop branch (not master!)
git checkout develop
# automate $GOPATH and $PATH setup
direnv allow
# initialize and sync submodules
./update
If you do not wish to use direnv, you can simply source
the .envrc
file in the root
of the release repo. You may manually need to update your $GOPATH
and $PATH
variables
as you switch in and out of the directory.
For release notes and known issues, see the release wiki.
- A deployment of BOSH
- A deployment of Cloud Foundry, final release 193 or greater
- Instructions for installing BOSH and Cloud Foundry can be found at http://docs.cloudfoundry.org/.
After installation, the MySQL service will be visible in the Services Marketplace; using the CLI, run cf marketplace
.
The latest final release expects the Ubuntu Trusty (14.04) go_agent stemcell version 2831 by default. Older stemcells are not recommended. Stemcells can be downloaded from http://bosh.io/stemcells; choose the appropriate stemcell for your infrastructure (vsphere esxi or aws hvm).
You can use a pre-built final release or build a dev release from any of the branches described in Getting the Code.
Final releases are stable releases created periodically for completed features. They also contain pre-compiled packages, which makes deployment much faster. To deploy the latest final release, simply check out the master branch. This will contain the latest final release and accompanying materials to generate a manifest. If you would like to deploy an earlier final release, use git checkout <tag>
to obtain both the release and corresponding manifest generation materials. It's important that the manifest generation materials are consistent with the release.
If you'd like to deploy the latest code, build a release yourself from the develop branch.
Run the upload command, referencing the latest config file in the releases
directory.
$ cd ~/workspace/cf-mysql-release
$ git checkout master
$ ./update
$ bosh upload release releases/cf-mysql-<N>.yml
If deploying an older final release than the latest, check out the tag for the desired version; this is necessary for generating a manifest that matches the code you're deploying.
$ cd ~/workspace/cf-mysql-release
$ git checkout v<N>
$ ./update
$ bosh upload release releases/cf-mysql-<N>.yml
- Checkout one of the branches described in Getting the Code. Build a BOSH development release.
$ cd ~/workspace/cf-mysql-release
$ git checkout release-candidate
$ ./update
$ bosh create release
When prompted to name the release, call it cf-mysql
.
- Upload the release to your bosh environment:
$ bosh upload release
-
Generate the manifest using a bosh-lite specific script and a stub provided for you,
bosh-lite/cf-mysql-stub-spiff.yml
.$ ./bosh-lite/make_manifest
The resulting file,
bosh-lite/manifests/cf-mysql-manifest.yml
is your deployment manifest. To modify the deployment configuration, you can edit the stub and regenerate the manifest or edit the manifest directly. -
The
make_manifest
script will set the deployment tobosh-lite/manifests/cf-mysql-manifest.yml
for you, so to deploy you only need to run:
$ bosh deploy
-
Create a stub file called
cf-mysql-vsphere-stub.yml
by copying and modifying the sample_vsphere_stub.yml intemplates/sample_stubs
. -
Generate the manifest:
$ ./generate_deployment_manifest vsphere cf-mysql-vsphere-stub.yml > cf-mysql-vsphere.yml
The resulting file, cf-mysql-vsphere.yml
is your deployment manifest. To modify the deployment configuration, you can edit the stub and regenerate the manifest or edit the manifest directly.
- To deploy:
$ bosh deployment cf-mysql-vsphere.yml && bosh deploy
-
Create a stub file called
cf-mysql-aws-stub.yml
by copying and modifying the sample_aws_stub.yml intemplates/sample_stubs
. -
Generate the manifest:
$ ./generate_deployment_manifest aws cf-mysql-aws-stub.yml > cf-mysql-aws.yml
The resulting file, cf-mysql-aws.yml
is your deployment manifest. To modify the deployment configuration, you can edit the stub and regenerate the manifest or edit the manifest directly.
- To deploy:
$ bosh deployment cf-mysql-aws.yml && bosh deploy
Manifest properties are described in the spec
file for each job; see jobs.
You can find your director_uuid by running bosh status
.
The MariaDB cluster nodes are configured by default with 100GB of persistent disk. This can be configured in your stub or manifest using jobs.mysql.persistent_disk
, however your deployment will fail if this is less than 3GB; we recommend allocating 10GB at a minimum.
BOSH errands were introduced in version 2366 of the BOSH CLI, BOSH Director, and stemcells.
$ bosh run errand broker-registrar
Note: the broker-registrar errand will fail if the broker has already been registered, and the broker name does not match the manifest property jobs.broker-registrar.properties.broker.name
. Use the cf rename-service-broker
CLI command to change the broker name to match the manifest property then this errand will succeed.
-
First register the broker using the
cf
CLI. You must be logged in as an admin.$ cf create-service-broker p-mysql BROKER_USERNAME BROKER_PASSWORD URL
BROKER_USERNAME
andBROKER_PASSWORD
are the credentials Cloud Foundry will use to authenticate when making API calls to the service broker. Use the values for manifest propertiesjobs.cf-mysql-broker.properties.auth_username
andjobs.cf-mysql-broker.properties.auth_password
.URL
specifies where the Cloud Controller will access the MySQL broker. Use the value of the manifest propertyjobs.cf-mysql-broker.properties.external_host
.For more information, see Managing Service Brokers.
Since cf-release v175, applications by default cannot to connect to IP addresses on the private network. This prevents applications from connecting to the MySQL service. To enable access to the service, create a new security group for the IP configured in your manifest for the property jobs.mysql_broker.mysql_node.host
.
- Add the rule to a file in the following json format; multiple rules are supported.
[
{
"destination": "10.244.1.18",
"protocol": "all"
}
]
- Create a security group from the rule file.
$ cf create-security-group p-mysql rule.json
- Enable the rule for all apps
$ cf bind-running-security-group p-mysql
Changes are only applied to new application containers; in order for an existing app to receive security group changes it must be restarted.
The smoke tests are a subset of the acceptance tests, useful for verifying a deployment. The acceptance tests are for developers to validate changes to the MySQL Release. These tests can be run manually or from a BOSH errand. For details on running these tests manually, see Acceptance Tests.
The MySQL Release contains an "acceptance-tests" job which is deployed as a BOSH errand. The errand can then be run to verify the deployment. A deployment manifest generated with the provided spiff templates will include this job. The errand can be configured to run either the smoke tests (default) or the acceptance tests.
To run the MySQL Release Smoke tests you will need:
- a running CF instance
- credentials for a CF Admin user
- a deployed MySQL Release with the broker registered and the plan made public
The following properties must be included in the deployment manifest under the acceptance-tests
job (most will be there by default):
cf.api_url
cf.admin_username
cf.admin_password
cf.apps_domain
cf.skip_ssl_validation
broker.host
service.name
service.plans
The service.plans
array must include the following properties for each plan:
plan_name
max_storage_mb
The following property is optional:
mysql.max_user_connections
(default: 40)
To run the smoke tests via bosh errand:
$ bosh run errand acceptance-tests
The following commands are destructive and are intended to be run in conjuction with deleting your BOSH deployment.
BOSH errands were introduced in version 2366 of the BOSH CLI, BOSH Director, and stemcells.
This errand runs the two commands listed in the manual section below from a BOSH-deployed VM. This errand should be run before deleting your BOSH deployment. If you have already deleted your deployment follow the manual instructions below.
$ bosh run errand broker-deregistrar
Run the following:
$ cf purge-service-offering p-mysql
$ cf delete-service-broker p-mysql
A user-facing service dashboard is provided by the service broker that displays storage utilization information for each service instance. The dashboard is accessible by users via Single Sign-On (SSO) once authenticated with Cloud Foundry.
Service authors interested in implementing a service dashboard accessible via SSO can follow documentation for Dashboard SSO.
-
SSO is initiated when a user navigates to the URL found in the
dashboard_url
field. This value is returned to cloud controller by the broker in response to a provision request, and is exposed in the cloud controller API for the service instance. A users client must expose this field as a link, or it can be obtained via curl (cf curl /v2/service_instances/:guid
) and copied into a browser. -
SSO requires the following OAuth client to be configured in cf-release. This client is responsible for creating the OAuth client for the MySQL dashboard. Without this client configured in cf-release, the MySQL dashboard will not be accessible but the service will be otherwise functional. Registering the broker will display a warning to this effect.
properties: uaa: clients: cc-service-dashboards: secret: cc-broker-secret scope: cloud_controller.write,openid,cloud_controller.read,cloud_controller_service_permissions.read authorities: clients.read,clients.write,clients.admin authorized-grant-types: client_credentials
-
SSO was implemented in v169 of cf-release; if you are on an older version of cf-release you'll encounter an error when you register the service broker. If upgradiing cf-release is not an option, try removing the following lines from the cf-mysql-release manifest and redeploy.
dashboard_client: id: p-mysql secret: yoursecret
The dashboard URL defaults to using the https
scheme. To override this, you can change properties.ssl_enabled
to false
in the cf-mysql-broker
job.
Keep in mind that changing the ssl_enabled
setting for an existing broker will not update previously advertised dashboard URLs.
Visiting the old URL may fail if you are using the SSO integration,
because the OAuth2 client registered with UAA will expect users to both come from and return to a URI using the scheme
implied by the ssl_enabled
setting.
The following links show how this release implements Dashboard SSO integration.
- Update the broker catalog with the dashboard client properties
- Implement oauth workflow with the omniauth-uaa-oauth2 gem
- Use the cf-uaa-lib gem to get a valid access token and request permissions on the instance
- Before showing the user the dashboard, the broker checks to see if the user is logged-in and has permissions to view the usage details of the instance.
Traffic to the MySQL cluster is routed through one or more proxy nodes. The current proxy implementation is Switchboard. This proxy acts as an intermediary between the client and the MySQL server - providing failover between MySQL nodes. The number of nodes is configured by the proxy job instance count in the deployment manifest.
For more details see the proxy documentation.