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196 lines
7.8 KiB
196 lines
7.8 KiB
.. _fabric-deployment: |
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Deploying with Fabric |
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===================== |
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`Fabric`_ is a tool for Python similar to Makefiles but with the ability |
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to execute commands on a remote server. In combination with a properly |
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set up Python package (:ref:`larger-applications`) and a good concept for |
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configurations (:ref:`config`) it is very easy to deploy Flask |
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applications to external servers. |
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Before we get started, here a quick checklist of things we have to ensure |
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upfront: |
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- Fabric 1.0 has to be installed locally. This tutorial assumes the |
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latest version of Fabric. |
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- The application already has to be a package and requires a working |
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:file:`setup.py` file (:ref:`distribute-deployment`). |
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- In the following example we are using `mod_wsgi` for the remote |
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servers. You can of course use your own favourite server there, but |
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for this example we chose Apache + `mod_wsgi` because it's very easy |
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to setup and has a simple way to reload applications without root |
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access. |
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Creating the first Fabfile |
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-------------------------- |
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A fabfile is what controls what Fabric executes. It is named :file:`fabfile.py` |
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and executed by the `fab` command. All the functions defined in that file |
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will show up as `fab` subcommands. They are executed on one or more |
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hosts. These hosts can be defined either in the fabfile or on the command |
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line. In this case we will add them to the fabfile. |
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This is a basic first example that has the ability to upload the current |
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source code to the server and install it into a pre-existing |
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virtual environment:: |
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from fabric.api import * |
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# the user to use for the remote commands |
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env.user = 'appuser' |
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# the servers where the commands are executed |
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env.hosts = ['server1.example.com', 'server2.example.com'] |
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def pack(): |
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# create a new source distribution as tarball |
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local('python setup.py sdist --formats=gztar', capture=False) |
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def deploy(): |
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# figure out the release name and version |
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dist = local('python setup.py --fullname', capture=True).strip() |
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# upload the source tarball to the temporary folder on the server |
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put('dist/%s.tar.gz' % dist, '/tmp/yourapplication.tar.gz') |
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# create a place where we can unzip the tarball, then enter |
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# that directory and unzip it |
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run('mkdir /tmp/yourapplication') |
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with cd('/tmp/yourapplication'): |
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run('tar xzf /tmp/yourapplication.tar.gz') |
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# now setup the package with our virtual environment's |
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# python interpreter |
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run('/var/www/yourapplication/env/bin/python setup.py install') |
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# now that all is set up, delete the folder again |
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run('rm -rf /tmp/yourapplication /tmp/yourapplication.tar.gz') |
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# and finally touch the .wsgi file so that mod_wsgi triggers |
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# a reload of the application |
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run('touch /var/www/yourapplication.wsgi') |
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The example above is well documented and should be straightforward. Here |
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a recap of the most common commands fabric provides: |
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- `run` - executes a command on a remote server |
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- `local` - executes a command on the local machine |
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- `put` - uploads a file to the remote server |
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- `cd` - changes the directory on the serverside. This has to be used |
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in combination with the `with` statement. |
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Running Fabfiles |
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---------------- |
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Now how do you execute that fabfile? You use the `fab` command. To |
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deploy the current version of the code on the remote server you would use |
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this command:: |
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$ fab pack deploy |
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However this requires that our server already has the |
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:file:`/var/www/yourapplication` folder created and |
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:file:`/var/www/yourapplication/env` to be a virtual environment. Furthermore |
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are we not creating the configuration or `.wsgi` file on the server. So |
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how do we bootstrap a new server into our infrastructure? |
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This now depends on the number of servers we want to set up. If we just |
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have one application server (which the majority of applications will |
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have), creating a command in the fabfile for this is overkill. But |
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obviously you can do that. In that case you would probably call it |
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`setup` or `bootstrap` and then pass the servername explicitly on the |
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command line:: |
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$ fab -H newserver.example.com bootstrap |
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To setup a new server you would roughly do these steps: |
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1. Create the directory structure in :file:`/var/www`:: |
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$ mkdir /var/www/yourapplication |
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$ cd /var/www/yourapplication |
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$ virtualenv --distribute env |
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2. Upload a new :file:`application.wsgi` file to the server and the |
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configuration file for the application (eg: :file:`application.cfg`) |
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3. Create a new Apache config for ``yourapplication`` and activate it. |
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Make sure to activate watching for changes of the `.wsgi` file so |
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that we can automatically reload the application by touching it. |
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(See :ref:`mod_wsgi-deployment` for more information) |
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So now the question is, where do the `application.wsgi` and |
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`application.cfg` files come from? |
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The WSGI File |
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------------- |
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The WSGI file has to import the application and also to set an environment |
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variable so that the application knows where to look for the config. This |
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is a short example that does exactly that:: |
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import os |
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os.environ['YOURAPPLICATION_CONFIG'] = '/var/www/yourapplication/application.cfg' |
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from yourapplication import app |
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The application itself then has to initialize itself like this to look for |
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the config at that environment variable:: |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_config') |
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app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_CONFIG') |
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This approach is explained in detail in the :ref:`config` section of the |
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documentation. |
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The Configuration File |
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---------------------- |
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Now as mentioned above, the application will find the correct |
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configuration file by looking up the ``YOURAPPLICATION_CONFIG`` environment |
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variable. So we have to put the configuration in a place where the |
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application will able to find it. Configuration files have the unfriendly |
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quality of being different on all computers, so you do not version them |
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usually. |
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A popular approach is to store configuration files for different servers |
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in a separate version control repository and check them out on all |
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servers. Then symlink the file that is active for the server into the |
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location where it's expected (eg: :file:`/var/www/yourapplication`). |
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Either way, in our case here we only expect one or two servers and we can |
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upload them ahead of time by hand. |
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First Deployment |
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---------------- |
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Now we can do our first deployment. We have set up the servers so that |
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they have their virtual environments and activated apache configs. Now we |
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can pack up the application and deploy it:: |
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$ fab pack deploy |
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Fabric will now connect to all servers and run the commands as written |
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down in the fabfile. First it will execute pack so that we have our |
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tarball ready and then it will execute deploy and upload the source code |
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to all servers and install it there. Thanks to the :file:`setup.py` file we |
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will automatically pull in the required libraries into our virtual |
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environment. |
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Next Steps |
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---------- |
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From that point onwards there is so much that can be done to make |
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deployment actually fun: |
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- Create a `bootstrap` command that initializes new servers. It could |
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initialize a new virtual environment, setup apache appropriately etc. |
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- Put configuration files into a separate version control repository |
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and symlink the active configs into place. |
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- You could also put your application code into a repository and check |
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out the latest version on the server and then install. That way you |
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can also easily go back to older versions. |
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- hook in testing functionality so that you can deploy to an external |
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server and run the test suite. |
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Working with Fabric is fun and you will notice that it's quite magical to |
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type ``fab deploy`` and see your application being deployed automatically |
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to one or more remote servers. |
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.. _Fabric: http://www.fabfile.org/
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