multi-env-deploy
infrastructure
multi-env-deploy | infrastructure | |
---|---|---|
9 | 8 | |
351 | 89 | |
0.9% | - | |
5.7 | 9.4 | |
6 months ago | 6 days ago | |
HCL | Jinja | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
multi-env-deploy
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AWS Devops tools vs Bitbucket
I have used CodePipeline/CodeBuild, CodeDeploy, and CodeCommit quite a bit. You can see an example of it all working together with Terraform here: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy
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Running python when building a Docker image on AWS
Parameter Store is a good place to store things. ECS can read from it and set variables. This is a complete example of using Terraform to manage infrastructure with EC2 or ECS: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy Here is an app that runs in ECS: https://github.com/cogini/phoenix_container_example This task file sets env vars based on parameter store: https://github.com/cogini/phoenix_container_example/blob/master/ecs/taskdef.json
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Ask HN: Who operates at scale without containers?
AWS has a fine stack for deploying "cloud native" apps on top of EC2 instances.
Build a base AMI using Packer and launch it to an Auto Scaling Group behind a load balancer. Deploy code to the ASG using CodeDeploy. Use RDS for the database.
This is a good match for languages that have good concurrency like Elixir. They benefit from deploying to big machines that have a lot of CPU cores, and keeping a common in-memory cache on the EC2 instance is more efficient than using an external cache like Elasticache. It also works well for resource-hungry systems with poor concurrency like Ruby on Rails. Putting these kinds of apps into big containers is just a waste of money.
Here is a complete example of that architecture using Terraform: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy
Similarly, bare metal can be really cost-effective. For $115/month, I can get a dedicated server with 24 VCPU cores (2x Intel Hexa-Core Xeon E5-2620 CPU), 64 GB RAM, 4x8 TB SATA, 30 TB traffic (see https://www.leaseweb.com/dedicated-servers#NL). That would be an order of magnitude more expensive on AWS with containers.
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CodeBuild doesnt have access to Put Objects in S3 bucket after "Block all public access" has been turned on.
Here is how I did it with Terraform: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy/blob/master/terraform/modules/iam-codepipeline-app/main.tf
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Advice on CI/CD at scale from GitHub Enterprise to CodePipeline (TF & CFN) ?
The AWS components are managed via Terraform: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy
- Do any companies/projects publish their Terraform code publicly?
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Does anyone's company have open sourced infrastructure with Terraform/Terragrunt?
A fully featured infrastructure using terraform with terragrunt can be found in this repo: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy/tree/master/terraform
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Terraform Prerequisites
You might like this full-featured example of using Terraform to set up the infrastructure for an application using EC2 instances in an autoscaling group or ECS containers. https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy
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Does your team/org create its own modules for production?
Here is a set of hand-coded modules I wrote that handle deploying real world complex apps to AWS: https://github.com/cogini/multi-env-deploy
infrastructure
- Learned bit of Ansible to automate some post-fresh-Arch-install work
- Do any companies/projects publish their Terraform code publicly?
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Arch Server
The entire archlinux.org infrastructure is actually run on arch linux servers, so yeah arch can be used for server work. The arch linux infrastructure is described in this gitlab
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Does anyone's company have open sourced infrastructure with Terraform/Terragrunt?
At Arch Linux, our infrastructure is a mix of Ansible and Terraform and it's all out in the open.
- What is monitoring.archlinux.org ?
- Is it a good idea to use arch on my server?
- What Do You Think About “I Use Arch BTW” ?
- "Best" Arch Linux installer?
What are some alternatives?
cloud_workstation - A linux desktop in the cloud - reachable via browser using Apache Guacamole. Deployed automatically via Terraform ( + Ansible ). [Moved to: https://github.com/chadgeary/cloudworkstation]
molecule - Molecule aids in the development and testing of Ansible content: collections, playbooks and roles
openvpn-aws-tf-ansible - OpenVPN with Terraform and Ansible on AWS
terraform-aws-components - Opinionated, self-contained Terraform root modules that each solve one, specific problem
govuk-infrastructure - Terraform turnup automation for the EKS Kubernetes clusters that host GOV.UK. See https://github.com/alphagov/govuk-helm-charts for application config.
nodejs-leak-env-vars - POC of a vulnerable app leaking environment variables via a compromised NPM package
forms-terraform - Infrastructure as Code for the GC Forms environment
tutorials - DevOps Tutorials
modernisation-platform - A place for the core work of the Modernisation Platform • This repository is defined and managed in Terraform
Terraform-EKS-Cluster-with-Node-Group - Creating an EKS cluster with node group
ansible-arch - Post fresh install setup automated