#+STARTUP: content #+AUTHOR: Elia el Lazkani #+HUGO_BASE_DIR: ../. #+HUGO_AUTO_SET_LASTMOD: t * Custom Pages :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_CUSTOM_FRONT_MATTER: :noauthor true :nocomment true :nodate true :nopaging true :noread true :EXPORT_HUGO_MENU: :menu false :EXPORT_HUGO_SECTION: . :EXPORT_HUGO_WEIGHT: auto :END: ** Not Found :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: not-found :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-07-04 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-02-08 :CUSTOM_ID: not-found :END: *** 404 Not Found Oops... We don't know how you ended up here. There is nothing here to look at... Head back over [[/][home]]. ** Forbidden :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: forbidden :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-07-04 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-06-05 :CUSTOM_ID: forbidden :END: *** 403 Forbidden Naughty naughty ! What brought you to a forbidden page ? Take this =403 Forbidden= and head over the [[/][main site]]. * Pages :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_CUSTOM_FRONT_MATTER: :noauthor true :nocomment true :nodate true :nopaging true :noread true :EXPORT_HUGO_MENU: :menu main :EXPORT_HUGO_SECTION: pages :EXPORT_HUGO_WEIGHT: auto :END: ** About :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: about :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-07-04 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-06-21 :CUSTOM_ID: about :END: *** Who am I ? I am a DevOps cloud engineer with a passion for technology, automation, Linux and OpenSource. I've been on Linux since the /early/ 2000's and have contributed, in some small capacity, to some open source projects along the way. I dabble in this space and I blog about it. This is how I learn, this is how I evolve. *** Contact Me If, for some reason, you'd like to get in touch you have sevaral options. - Find me on [[https://libera.chat/][libera]] in ~#LearnAndTeach~. - Email me at ~blog[at]lazkani[dot]io~ If you use /GPG/ and you should, my public key is ~2383 8945 E07E 670A 4BFE 39E6 FBD8 1F2B 1F48 8C2B~ ** FAQ :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: faq :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-07-04 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-07-04 :CUSTOM_ID: faq :END: *** What is this ? This is my humble blog where I post things related to DevOps in hope that I or someone else might benefit from it. *** Wait what ? What is DevOps ? [[https://duckduckgo.com/?q=what+is+devops+%3F&t=ffab&ia=web&iax=about][Duckduckgo]] defines DevOps as: #+BEGIN_QUOTE DevOps is a software engineering culture and practice that aims at unifying software development and software operation. The main characteristic of the DevOps movement is to strongly advocate automation and monitoring at all steps of software construction, from integration, testing, releasing to deployment and infrastructure management. DevOps aims at shorter development cycles, increased deployment frequency, and more dependable releases, in close alignment with business objectives. #+END_QUOTE In short, we build an infrastructure that is easily deployable, maintainable and, in all forms, makes the lives of the developers a breeze. *** What do you blog about ? Anything and everything related to DevOps. The field is very big and complex with a lot of different tools and technologies implemented. I try to blog about interesting and new things as much as possible, when time permits. *** Does this blog have *RSS* ? Yup, here's the [[/posts/index.xml][link]]. * Posts :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_SECTION: posts :END: ** Backup :@backup: *** DONE BorgBackup :borg:borgbackup: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-01-30 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-01-30 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: borgbackup :CUSTOM_ID: borgbackup :END: I usually lurk around *Freenode* in a few projects that I use, can learn from and/or help with. This is a great opportunity to learn new things /all the time/. This story is familiar in that manner, but that's where similarities diverge. Someone asked around =#Weechat= a question that caught my attention because it was, sort of, out of topic. The question was around how do you backup your stuff ? #+hugo: more I mean if I were asked that, I would've mentioned revision controlled off-site repositories for the code that I have. For the personal stuff on the other hand, I would've admitted simple rudimentary solutions like =rsync=, =tar= and external drives. So I was sort of happy with my backup solution, it has worked. Plain and simple. I have to admit that, by modern standards it might not offer the ability to go back in time to a certain point. But I use /file systems/ that offer /snapshot/ capabilities. I can recover from previous snapshots and send them somewhere safe. Archiving and encrypting those is not a simple process, wish it was. That limits storage possibilities if you care to keep your data private. But if you know me, you'd know that I'm always open to new ways of doing things. I can't remember exactly the conversation but the name *BorgBackup* was mentioned (thank you however you are). That's when things changed. **** BorgBackup [[https://www.borgbackup.org/][Borg]] is defined as a #+BEGIN_QUOTE Deduplicating archiver with compression and encryption #+END_QUOTE Although this is a very accurate and encompassing definition, it doesn't really show you how /AWESOME/ this thing is. I had to go to the docs first before I stumbled upon this video. #+BEGIN_EXPORT md [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/133292.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/133292) #+END_EXPORT It can be a bit difficult to follow the video, I understand. This is why I decided to write this post, to sort of explain to you how *Borg* can backup your stuff. **** Encryption Oh yeah, that's the *first* thing I look at when I consider any suggested backup solution. *Borg* offers built-in /encryption/ and /authentication/. You can read about it in details in the [[https://borgbackup.readthedocs.io/en/stable/usage/init.html#encryption-modes][docs]]. So that's a check. **** Compression This is another thing I look for in a suggested backup solution. And I'm happy to report that *Borg* has this under the belt as well. *Borg* currently supports /LZ4/, /zlib/, /LZMA/ and /zstd/. You can also tune the level of compression. Pretty neat ! **** Full Backup I've watched a few videos and read a bit of their documentation and they talk about *FULL BACKUP*. Which means every time you run *Borg*, it will take a full backup of your stuff. A full backup at that point in time, don't forget. The implication of this is that you have a versioned list of your backups, and you can go back in time to any of them. Yes, you read that right. *Borg* does a full backup every time you run it. That's a pretty neat feature. If you're a bit ahead of me, you were gonna say woooow there bud ! I have *Gigabytes* of data, what do you mean *FULL BACKUP*, you keep saying *FULL BACKUP*. I mean *FULL BACKUP*, wait until you hear about the next feature. **** Deduplication Booyah ! It has deduplication. Ain't that awesome. I've watched a presentation by the project's original maintainer explain this. I have one thing to say. It's pretty good. How good, you may ask ? My answer would be, good enough to fool me into thinking that it was taking snapshots of my data. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Original size Compressed size Deduplicated size All archives: 34.59 GB 9.63 GB 1.28 GB Unique chunks Total chunks Chunk index: 47772 469277 #+END_EXAMPLE It wasn't until I dug in deeper into the matter that I understood that it was a full backup and the deduping taking care of the rest. **** Check *Borg* offers a way to vefiry the consistency of the repository and the archives within. This way, you can make sure that your backups haven't been corrupted. This is a very good feature, and a must in my opinion from a backup solution. *Borg* has /YOU/ covered. **** Restore A backup solution is nothing if you can't get your data backup. *Borg* has a few ways for you to get your data. You can either create an /archive/ file out of a backup. You can export a file, a directory or the whole directory tree from a backup. You can also, if you like, mount a backup and get stuff out. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Mounting a *Borg* backup is done using /fuse/ #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Conclusion *Borg* is a great tool for backup. It comes in an easily installable self-contained binary so you can use it, pretty much, anywhere giving you no excuse /whatsoever/ not to use it. Their documentation is very good, and *Borg* is easy to use. It offers you all the features you need to do off-site and on-site backups of all your important data. I'll be testing *Borg* moving forward for my data. I'll make sure to report back anything I find, in the future, related to the subject. *** DONE Automating Borg :borgmatic:borgbackup:borg: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-02-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-02-02 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: automating-borg :CUSTOM_ID: automating-borg :END: In the previous blog post entitle [[#borgbackup]], I talked about *borg*. If you read that post, you would've noticed that *borg* has a lot of features. With a lot of features come a lot of automation. If you were thinking about using *borg*, you should either make a /simple cron/ or you're gonna have to write an elaborate script to take care of all the different steps. What if I told you there's another way ? An easier way ! The *Borgmatic* way... What would you say ? #+hugo: more **** Borgmatic *Borgmatic* is defined on their [[https://torsion.org/borgmatic/][website]] as follows. #+BEGIN_QUOTE borgmatic is simple, configuration-driven backup software for servers and workstations. Protect your files with client-side encryption. Backup your databases too. Monitor it all with integrated third-party services. #+END_QUOTE If you go down to it, *borgmatic* uses *borg*'s /API/ to automate a list of configurable /tasks/. This way, it saves you the trouble of writing your own scripts to automate these steps. *Borgmatic* uses a /YAML/ configuration file. Let's configure a few tasks. **** Location First, let's start by configuring the locations that *borg* is going to be working with. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml location: source_directories: - /home/ repositories: - user@backupserver:sourcehostname.borg one_file_system: true exclude_patterns: - /home/*/.cache - '*.pyc' #+END_SRC This tells *borg* that we need to backup our =/home= directories excluding a few patterns. Let's not forget that we told *borg* where the repository is located at. **** Storage We need to configure the storage next. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml storage: # Recommended # encryption_passcommand: secret-tool lookup borg-repository repo-name encryption_passphrase: "ReallyStrongPassphrase" compression: zstd,15 ssh_command: ssh -i /path/to/private/key borg_security_directory: /path/to/base/config/security archive_name_format: 'borgmatic-{hostname}-{now}' #+END_SRC In this section, we tell borg a little big of information about our repository. What are the credentials, where it can find them, etc. The easy way is to go with a =passphrase=, but I recommend using an =encryption_passcommand= instead. I also use =zstd= for encryption instead of =lz4=, you better do your research before you change the default. I also recommend, just as they do, the use of a security directory as well. **** Retention We can configure a retention for our backups, if we like. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml retention: keep_hourly: 7 keep_daily: 7 keep_weekly: 4 keep_monthly: 6 keep_yearly: 2 prefix: "borgmatic-" #+END_SRC The part of what to keep from /hourly/ to /daily/ is self explanatory. I would like to point out the =prefix= part as it is important. This is the /prefix/ that *borgmatic* uses to consider backups for *pruning*. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Watch out for the retention =prefix= #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Consistency After the updates, we'd like to check our backups. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml consistency: checks: - repository - archives check_last: 3 prefix: "borgmatic-" #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Watch out, again, for the consistency =prefix= #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Hooks Finally, hooks. I'm going to talk about hooks a bit. Hooks can be used to backup *MySQL*, *PostgreSQL* or *MariaDB*. They can also be hooks for =on_error=, =before_backup=, =after_backup=, =before_everything= and =after_everything=. You can also hook to third party services which you can check on their webpage. I deployed my own, so I configured my own. **** Borgmatic Configuration Let's put everything together now. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml location: source_directories: - /home/ repositories: - user@backupserver:sourcehostname.borg one_file_system: true exclude_patterns: - /home/*/.cache - '*.pyc' storage: # Recommended # encryption_passcommand: secret-tool lookup borg-repository repo-name encryption_passphrase: "ReallyStrongPassphrase" compression: zstd,15 ssh_command: ssh -i /path/to/private/key borg_security_directory: /path/to/base/config/security archive_name_format: 'borgmatic-{hostname}-{now}' retention: keep_hourly: 7 keep_daily: 7 keep_weekly: 4 keep_monthly: 6 keep_yearly: 2 prefix: "borgmatic-" consistency: checks: - repository - archives check_last: 3 prefix: "borgmatic-" #+END_SRC Now that we have everything together, let's save it in =/etc/borgmatic.d/home.yaml=. **** Usage If you have *borg* and *borgmatic* already installed on your system and the *borgmatic* configuration file in place, you can test it out. You can create the repository. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # borgmatic init -v 2 #+END_EXAMPLE You can list the backups for the repository. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # borgmatic list --last 5 borgmatic-home-2020-01-30T22:01:30 Thu, 2020-01-30 22:01:42 [0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000] borgmatic-home-2020-01-31T22:02:12 Fri, 2020-01-31 22:02:24 [0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000] borgmatic-home-2020-02-01T22:01:34 Sat, 2020-02-01 22:01:45 [0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000] borgmatic-home-2020-02-02T16:01:22 Sun, 2020-02-02 16:01:32 [0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000] borgmatic-home-2020-02-02T18:01:36 Sun, 2020-02-02 18:01:47 [0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000] #+END_EXAMPLE You could run a check. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # borgmatic check -v 1 /etc/borgmatic.d/home.yaml: Pinging Healthchecks start /borg/home: Running consistency checks Remote: Starting repository check Remote: Starting repository index check Remote: Completed repository check, no problems found. Starting archive consistency check... Analyzing archive borgmatic-home-2020-02-01T22:01:34 (1/3) Analyzing archive borgmatic-home-2020-02-02T16:01:22 (2/3) Analyzing archive borgmatic-home-2020-02-02T18:01:36 (3/3) Orphaned objects check skipped (needs all archives checked). Archive consistency check complete, no problems found. summary: /etc/borgmatic.d/home.yaml: Successfully ran configuration file #+END_EXAMPLE But most of all, if you simply run =borgmatic= without any parameters, it will run through the whole configuration and apply all the steps. At this point, you can simply add the =borgmatic= command in a *cron* to run on an interval. The other options would be to configure a =systemd= *timer* and *service* to run this on an interval. The latter is usually provided to you if you used your *package manager* to install *borgmatic*. **** Conclusion If you've checked *borg* and found it too much work to script, give *borgmatic* a try. I've been using borgmatic for few weeks now with no issues at all. I recently hooked it to a monitoring system so I will have a better view on when it runs, how much time each run takes. Also, if any of my backups fail I get notified by email. I hope you enjoy *borg* and *borgmatic* as much as I am. *** DONE Dotfiles with /Chezmoi/ :dotfiles:chezmoi:encryption:templates: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-10-05 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-10-05 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: dotfiles-with-chezmoi :CUSTOM_ID: dotfiles-with-chezmoi :END: A few months ago, I went on a search for a solution for my /dotfiles/. I tried projects likes [[https://www.gnu.org/software/stow/][GNU Stow]], [[https://github.com/anishathalye/dotbot][dotbot]] and a [[https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/dotfiles][bare /git/ repository]]. Each one of these solutions has its advantages and its advantages, but I found mine in [[https://www.chezmoi.io/][/Chezmoi/]]. /Chezmoi/ ? That's *French* right ? How is learning *French* going to help me ? #+hugo: more **** Introduction On a /*nix/ system, whether /Linux/, /BSD/ or even /Mac OS/ now, the applications one uses have their configuration saved in the user's home directory. These files are called /configuration/ files. Usually, these configuration files start with a =.= which on these systems designate hidden files (they do not show up with a simple =ls=). Due their names, these /configuration/ files are also referred to as /dotfiles/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I will be using /dotfiles/ and /configuration files/ interchangeably in this article, and they can be thought as such. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT One example of such files is the =.bashrc= file found in the user's /home directory/. It allows the user to configure /bash/ and change some behaviours. Now that we understand what /dotfiles/ are, let's talk a little bit about the /previously mentioned/ solutions. They deserve mentioning, especially if you're looking for such solution. ***** GNU Stow /GNU Stow/ leverages the power of /symlinks/ to keep your /configuration/ in a *centralized* location. Wherever your repository lives, /GNU Stow/ will mimic the internal structure of said repository in your *home directory* by /smartly symlinking/ everything. I said /smartly/ because it tries to *minimize* the amount of /symlinks/ created by /symlinking/ to common root directories if possible. By having all your configuration files under one directory structure, it is easier to push it to any public repository and share it with others. The downsize is, you end-up with a lot of /symlinks/. It is also worth mentioning that not all applications behave well when their /configuration directories/ are /symlinked/. Otherwise, /GNU Stow/ is a great project. ***** Dotbot /Dotbot/ is a /Python/ project that *aims* at automating your /dotfiles/. It gives you great control over what and how to manage your /dotfiles/. Having it written in /Python/ means it is very easy to install; =pip=. It also means that it /should/ be easy to migrate it to different systems. /Dotbot/ has a lot going for it. If the idea of having control over every aspect of your /dotfiles/, including the /possibility/ of the setup of the environment along with it, then /dotbot/ is for you. Well, it's not for *me*. ***** Bare /Git/ Repository This is arguably the /most elegant/ solution of them all. The nice thing about this solution is its /simplicity/ and /cleanliness/. It is /essentially/ creating a /bare git/ repository /somewhere/ in your /home directory/ specifying the /home directory/ itself to be the /working directory/. If you are wondering where one would use a /bare git/ repository in real life other than this use case. Well, you have no other place to turn than any /git server/. On the server, /Gitea/ for example, your repository is only a /bare/ repository. One has to clone it to get the /working directory/ along with it. Anyway, back to our topic. This is a great solution if you don't have to worry about things you would like to hide. By hide, I mean things like /credentials/, /keys/ or /passwords/ which *never* belong in a /repository/. You will need to find solutions for these types of files. I was looking for something /less involving/ and /more involved/. **** /Chezmoi/ to the rescue ? Isn't that what they *all* say ? I like how the creator(s) defines [[https://www.chezmoi.io/][/Chezmoi/]] #+BEGIN_QUOTE Manage your dotfiles across multiple machines, securely. #+END_QUOTE Pretty basic, straight to the point. Unfortunately, it's a little bit harder to grasp the concept of how it works. /Chezmoi/ basically /generates/ the /dotfiles/ from the /local repository/. These /dotfiles/ are saved in different forms in the /repository/ but they *always* generate the same output; the /dotfiles/. Think of /Chezmoi/ as a /dotfiles/ templating engine, at its basic form it saves your /dotfiles/ as is and /deploys/ them in *any* machine. **** Working with /Chezmoi/ I think we should take a /quick/ look at /Chezmoi/ to see how it works. /Chezmoi/ is written /Golang/ making it /fairly/ easy to [[https://www.chezmoi.io/docs/install/][install]] so I will forgo that boring part. ***** First run To start using /Chezmoi/, one has to *initialize* a new /Chezmoi repository/. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi init #+END_SRC This will create a *new* /git repository/ in =~/.local/share/chezmoi=. This is now the *source state*, where /Chezmoi/ will get your /dotfiles/. ***** Plain /dotfiles/ management with /Chezmoi/ Now that we have a /Chezmoi/ repository. We can start to /populate/ it with /dotfiles/. Let's assume that we would like to start managing one of our /dotfiles/ with /Chezmoi/. I'm going with an /imaginary application/'s configuration directory. This directory will hold different files with /versatile/ content types. This is going to showcase some of /Chezmoi/'s capabilities. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT This is how I use /Chezmoi/. If you have a better way to do things, I'd like to hear about it! #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ****** Adding a /dotfile/ This *DS9* application has its directory configuration in =~/.ds9/= where we find the =config=. The configuration looks like any /generic/ /ini/ configuration. #+BEGIN_SRC ini :tangle ~/.ds9/config [character/sisko] Name = Benjamin Rank = Captain Credentials = sisko-creds.cred Mastodon = sisko-api.mastodon #+END_SRC /Nothing/ special about this file, let's add it to /Chezmoi/ #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi add ~/.ds9/config #+END_SRC ****** Listing /dotfiles/ And /nothing/ happened... Hmm... #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi managed #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE /home/user/.ds9 /home/user/.ds9/config #+END_EXAMPLE Okay, it seems that it is being managed. ****** Diffing /dotfiles/ We can /test/ it out by doing something like this. #+BEGIN_SRC bash mv ~/.ds9/config ~/.ds9/config.old chezmoi diff #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE install -m 644 /dev/null /home/user/.ds9/config --- a/home/user/.ds9/config +++ b/home/user/.ds9/config @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +[character/sisko] +Name = Benjamin +Rank = Captain +Credentials = sisko-creds.cred +Mastodon = sisko-api.mastodon #+END_EXAMPLE Alright, everything looks as it should be. ****** Apply /dotfiles/ But that's only a /diff/, how do I make /Chezmoi/ apply the changes because my /dotfile/ is still =config.old=. Okay, we can actually get rid of the =config.old= file and make /Chezmoi/ regenerate the configuration. #+BEGIN_SRC bash rm ~/.ds9/config ~/.ds9/config.old chezmoi -v apply #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I like to use the =-v= flag to check what is *actually* being applied. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE install -m 644 /dev/null /home/user/.ds9/config --- a/home/user/.ds9/config +++ b/home/user/.ds9/config @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +[character/sisko] +Name = Benjamin +Rank = Captain +Credentials = sisko-creds.cred +Mastodon = sisko-api.mastodon #+END_EXAMPLE And we get the same output as the =diff=. Nice! The configuration file was also recreated, that's awesome. ****** Editing /dotfiles/ If you've followed so far, you might have wondered... If I edit =~/.ds9/config=, then /Chezmoi/ is going to *override* it! *YES*, *yes* it will. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Always use /Chezmoi/ to edit your managed /dotfiles/. Do *NOT* edit them directly. *ALWAYS* use =chezmoi diff= before every /applying/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT To /edit/ your managed /dotfile/, simply tell /Chezmoi/ about it. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi edit ~/.ds9/config #+END_SRC /Chezmoi/ will use your =$EDITOR= to open the file for you to edit. Once saved, it's saved in the /repository database/. Be aware, at this point the changes are not reflected in your /home/ directory, *only* in the /Chezmoi source state/. Make sure you *diff* and then *apply* to make the changes in your /home/. ***** /Chezmoi/ repository management As mentioned previously, the repository is found in =~/.local/share/chezmoi=. I *always* forget where it is, luckily /Chezmoi/ has a solution for that. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi cd #+END_SRC Now, we are in the repository. We can work with it as a /regultar/ /git/ repository. When you're done, don't forget to =exit=. ***** Other features It is worth mentioning at this point that /Chezmoi/ offers a few more integrations. ****** Templating Due to the fact that /Chezmoi/ is written in /Golang/, it can leverage the power of the /Golang [[https://www.chezmoi.io/docs/how-to/#use-templates-to-manage-files-that-vary-from-machine-to-machine][templating]]/ system. One can replace /repeatable/ values like *email* or *name* with a template like ={{ .email }}= or ={{ .name }}=. This will result in a replacement of these /templated variables/ with their real values in the resulting /dotfile/. This is another reason why you should *always* edit your managed /dotfiles/ through /Chezmoi/. Our /previous/ example would look a bit different. #+BEGIN_SRC ini :tangle ~/.ds9/config [character/sisko] Name = {{ .sisko.name }} Rank = {{ .sisko.rank }} Credentials = sisko-creds.cred Mastodon = sisko-api.mastodon #+END_SRC And we would add it a bit differently now. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi add --template ~/.ds9/config #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Follow the [[https://www.chezmoi.io/docs/how-to/#use-templates-to-manage-files-that-vary-from-machine-to-machine][documentation]] to /configure/ the *values*. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ****** Password manager integration Once you have the power of /templating/ on your side, you can always take it one step further. /Chezmoi/ has integration with a big list of [[https://www.chezmoi.io/docs/how-to/#keep-data-private][password managers]]. These can be used directly into the /configuration files/. In our /hypothetical/ example, we can think of the /credentials/ file (=~/.ds9/sisko-creds.cred=). #+BEGIN_SRC init :tangle ~/.ds9/sisko-creds.cred Name = {{ (keepassxc "sisko.ds9").Name }} Rank = {{ (keepassxc "sisko.ds9").Rank }} Access_Code = {{ (keepassxc "sisko.ds9").AccessCode }} #+END_SRC Do not /forget/ that this is also using the /templating/ engine. So you need to add as a /template/. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi add --template ~/.ds9/sisko-creds.cred #+END_SRC ****** File encryption Wait, what ! You almost slipped away right there old fellow. We have our /Mastodon/ *API* key in the =sisko-api.mastodon= file. The whole file cannot be pushed to a repository. It turns out that /Chezmoi/ can use /gpg/ to [[https://www.chezmoi.io/docs/how-to/#use-gpg-to-keep-your-secrets][encrypt your files]] making it possible for you to push them. To add a file encrypted to the /Chezmoi/ repository, use the following command. #+BEGIN_SRC bash chezmoi add --encrypt ~/.ds9/sisko-api.mastodon #+END_SRC ****** Misc There is a list of other features that /Chezmoi/ supports that I did not mention. I did not use all the /features/ offered yet. You should check the [[https://www.chezmoi.io/][website]] for the full documentation. **** Conclusion I am fully migrated into /Chezmoi/ so far. I have used all the features above, and it has worked flawlessly so far. I like the idea that it offers *all* the features I need while at the same time staying out of the way. I find myself, often, editing the /dotfiles/ in my /home/ directory as a /dev/ version. Once I get to a configuration I like, I add it to /Chezmoi/. If I ever mess up badly, I ask /Chezmoi/ to override my changes. I understand it adds a little bit of /overhead/ with the use of =chezmoi= commands, which I aliased to =cm=. But the end result is a /home/ directory which seems untouched by any tools (no symlinks, no copies, etc...) making it easier to migrate /out/ of /Chezmoi/ as a solution and into another one if I ever choose in the future. ** Configuration Management :@configuration_management: *** DONE Ansible testing with Molecule :ansible:molecule: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-06-21 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-01-11 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: ansible-testing-with-molecule :CUSTOM_ID: ansible-testing-with-molecule :END: When I first started using [[https://www.ansible.com/][ansible]], I did not know about [[https://molecule.readthedocs.io/en/latest/][molecule]]. It was a bit daunting to start a /role/ from scratch and trying to develop it without having the ability to test it. Then a co-worker of mine told me about molecule and everything changed. #+hugo: more I do not have any of the tools I need installed on this machine, so I will go through, step by step, how I set up ansible and molecule on any new machine I come across for writing ansible roles. **** Requirements What we are trying to achieve in this post, is a working ansible role that can be tested inside a docker container. To be able to achieve that, we need to install docker on the system. Follow the instructions on [[https://docs.docker.com/install/][installing docker]] found on the docker website. **** Good Practices First thing's first. Let's start by making sure that we have python installed properly on the system. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ python --version Python 3.7.1 #+END_EXAMPLE Because in this case I have /python3/ installed, I can create a /virtualenv/ easier without the use of external tools. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # Create the directory to work with $ mkdir -p sandbox/test-roles # Navigate to the directory $ cd sandbox/test-roles/ # Create the virtualenv ~/sandbox/test-roles $ python -m venv .ansible-venv # Activate the virtualenv ~/sandbox/test-roles $ source .ansible-venv/bin/activate # Check that your virtualenv activated properly (.ansible-venv) ~/sandbox/test-roles $ which python /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/.ansible-venv/bin/python #+END_EXAMPLE At this point, we can install the required dependencies. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ pip install ansible molecule docker Collecting ansible Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/56/fb/b661ae256c5e4a5c42859860f59f9a1a0b82fbc481306b30e3c5159d519d/ansible-2.7.5.tar.gz (11.8MB) 100% |████████████████████████████████| 11.8MB 3.8MB/s Collecting molecule Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/84/97/e5764079cb7942d0fa68b832cb9948274abb42b72d9b7fe4a214e7943786/molecule-2.19.0-py3-none-any.whl (180kB) 100% |████████████████████████████████| 184kB 2.2MB/s ... Successfully built ansible ansible-lint anyconfig cerberus psutil click-completion tabulate tree-format pathspec future pycparser arrow Installing collected packages: MarkupSafe, jinja2, PyYAML, six, pycparser, cffi, pynacl, idna, asn1crypto, cryptography, bcrypt, paramiko, ansible, pbr, git-url-parse, monotonic, fasteners, click, colorama, sh, python-gilt, ansible-lint, pathspec, yamllint, anyconfig, cerberus, psutil, more-itertools, py, attrs, pluggy, atomicwrites, pytest, testinfra, ptyprocess, pexpect, click-completion, tabulate, future, chardet, binaryornot, poyo, urllib3, certifi, requests, python-dateutil, arrow, jinja2-time, whichcraft, cookiecutter, tree-format, molecule, docker-pycreds, websocket-client, docker Successfully installed MarkupSafe-1.1.0 PyYAML-3.13 ansible-2.7.5 ansible-lint-3.4.23 anyconfig-0.9.7 arrow-0.13.0 asn1crypto-0.24.0 atomicwrites-1.2.1 attrs-18.2.0 bcrypt-3.1.5 binaryornot-0.4.4 cerberus-1.2 certifi-2018.11.29 cffi-1.11.5 chardet-3.0.4 click-6.7 click-completion-0.3.1 colorama-0.3.9 cookiecutter-1.6.0 cryptography-2.4.2 docker-3.7.0 docker-pycreds-0.4.0 fasteners-0.14.1 future-0.17.1 git-url-parse-1.1.0 idna-2.8 jinja2-2.10 jinja2-time-0.2.0 molecule-2.19.0 monotonic-1.5 more-itertools-5.0.0 paramiko-2.4.2 pathspec-0.5.9 pbr-4.1.0 pexpect-4.6.0 pluggy-0.8.1 poyo-0.4.2 psutil-5.4.6 ptyprocess-0.6.0 py-1.7.0 pycparser-2.19 pynacl-1.3.0 pytest-4.1.0 python-dateutil-2.7.5 python-gilt-1.2.1 requests-2.21.0 sh-1.12.14 six-1.11.0 tabulate-0.8.2 testinfra-1.16.0 tree-format-0.1.2 urllib3-1.24.1 websocket-client-0.54.0 whichcraft-0.5.2 yamllint-1.11.1 #+END_EXAMPLE **** Creating your first ansible role Once all the steps above are complete, we can start by creating our first ansible role. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ molecule init role -r example-role --> Initializing new role example-role... Initialized role in /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role successfully. $ tree example-role/ example-role/ ├── defaults │ └── main.yml ├── handlers │ └── main.yml ├── meta │ └── main.yml ├── molecule │ └── default │ ├── Dockerfile.j2 │ ├── INSTALL.rst │ ├── molecule.yml │ ├── playbook.yml │ └── tests │ ├── __pycache__ │ │ └── test_default.cpython-37.pyc │ └── test_default.py ├── README.md ├── tasks │ └── main.yml └── vars └── main.yml 9 directories, 12 files #+END_EXAMPLE You can find what each directory is for and how ansible works by visiting [[https://docs.ansible.com][docs.ansible.com]]. ***** =meta/main.yml= The meta file needs to modified and filled with information about the role. This is not a required file to modify if you are keeping this for yourself, for example. But it is a good idea to have as much information as possible if this is going to be released. In my case, I don't need any fanciness as this is just sample code. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- galaxy_info: author: Elia el Lazkani description: This is an example ansible role to showcase molecule at work license: license (BDS-2) min_ansible_version: 2.7 galaxy_tags: [] dependencies: [] #+END_SRC ***** =tasks/main.yml= This is where the magic is set in motion. Tasks are the smallest entities in a role that do small and idempotent actions. Let's write a few simple tasks to create a user and install a service. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- # Create the user example - name: Create 'example' user user: name: example comment: Example user shell: /bin/bash state: present create_home: yes home: /home/example # Install nginx - name: Install nginx apt: name: nginx state: present update_cache: yes notify: Restart nginx #+END_SRC ***** =handlers/main.yml= If you noticed, we are notifying a handler to be called after installing /nginx/. All handlers notified will run after all the tasks complete and each handler will only run once. This is a good way to make sure that you don't restart /nginx/ multiple times if you call the handler more than once. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- # Handler to restart nginx - name: Restart nginx service: name: nginx state: restarted #+END_SRC ***** =molecule/default/molecule.yml= It's time to configure molecule to do what we need. We need to start an ubuntu docker container, so we need to specify that in the molecule YAML file. All we need to do is change the image line to specify that we want an =ubuntu:bionic= image. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- dependency: name: galaxy driver: name: docker lint: name: yamllint platforms: - name: instance image: ubuntu:bionic provisioner: name: ansible lint: name: ansible-lint scenario: name: default verifier: name: testinfra lint: name: flake8 #+END_SRC ***** =molecule/default/playbook.yml= This is the playbook that molecule will run. Make sure that you have all the steps that you need here. I will keep this as is. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- - name: Converge hosts: all roles: - role: example-role #+END_SRC **** First Role Pass This is time to test our role and see what's going on. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE (.ansible-role) ~/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/ $ molecule converge --> Validating schema /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/molecule.yml. Validation completed successfully. --> Test matrix └── default ├── dependency ├── create ├── prepare └── converge --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'dependency' Skipping, missing the requirements file. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'create' PLAY [Create] ****************************************************************** TASK [Log into a Docker registry] ********************************************** skipping: [localhost] => (item=None) TASK [Create Dockerfiles from image names] ************************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Discover local Docker images] ******************************************** ok: [localhost] => (item=None) ok: [localhost] TASK [Build an Ansible compatible image] *************************************** changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Create docker network(s)] ************************************************ TASK [Create molecule instance(s)] ********************************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Wait for instance(s) creation to complete] ******************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* localhost : ok=5 changed=4 unreachable=0 failed=0 --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'prepare' Skipping, prepare playbook not configured. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'converge' PLAY [Converge] **************************************************************** TASK [Gathering Facts] ********************************************************* ok: [instance] TASK [example-role : Create 'example' user] ************************************ changed: [instance] TASK [example-role : Install nginx] ******************************************** changed: [instance] RUNNING HANDLER [example-role : Restart nginx] ********************************* changed: [instance] PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* instance : ok=4 changed=3 unreachable=0 failed=0 #+END_EXAMPLE It looks like the *converge* step succeeded. **** Writing Tests It is always a good practice to write unittests when you're writing code. Ansible roles should not be an exception. Molecule offers a way to run tests, which you can think of as unittest, to make sure that what the role gives you is what you were expecting. This helps future development of the role and keeps you from falling in previously solved traps. ***** =molecule/default/tests/test_default.py= Molecule leverages the [[https://testinfra.readthedocs.io/en/latest/][testinfra]] project to run its tests. You can use other tools if you so wish, and there are many. In this example we will be using /testinfra/. #+BEGIN_SRC python import os import testinfra.utils.ansible_runner testinfra_hosts = testinfra.utils.ansible_runner.AnsibleRunner( os.environ['MOLECULE_INVENTORY_FILE']).get_hosts('all') def test_hosts_file(host): f = host.file('/etc/hosts') assert f.exists assert f.user == 'root' assert f.group == 'root' def test_user_created(host): user = host.user("example") assert user.name == "example" assert user.home == "/home/example" def test_user_home_exists(host): user_home = host.file("/home/example") assert user_home.exists assert user_home.is_directory def test_nginx_is_installed(host): nginx = host.package("nginx") assert nginx.is_installed def test_nginx_running_and_enabled(host): nginx = host.service("nginx") assert nginx.is_running #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Uncomment =truthy: disable= in =.yamllint= found at the base of the role. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE (.ansible_venv) ~/sandbox/test-roles/example-role $ molecule test --> Validating schema /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/molecule.yml. Validation completed successfully. --> Test matrix └── default ├── lint ├── destroy ├── dependency ├── syntax ├── create ├── prepare ├── converge ├── idempotence ├── side_effect ├── verify └── destroy --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'lint' --> Executing Yamllint on files found in /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/... Lint completed successfully. --> Executing Flake8 on files found in /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/tests/... /home/elijah/.virtualenvs/world/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pycodestyle.py:113: FutureWarning: Possible nested set at position 1 EXTRANEOUS_WHITESPACE_REGEX = re.compile(r'[[({] | []}),;:]') Lint completed successfully. --> Executing Ansible Lint on /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/playbook.yml... Lint completed successfully. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'destroy' PLAY [Destroy] ***************************************************************** TASK [Destroy molecule instance(s)] ******************************************** changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Wait for instance(s) deletion to complete] ******************************* ok: [localhost] => (item=None) ok: [localhost] TASK [Delete docker network(s)] ************************************************ PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* localhost : ok=2 changed=1 unreachable=0 failed=0 --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'dependency' Skipping, missing the requirements file. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'syntax' playbook: /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/playbook.yml --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'create' PLAY [Create] ****************************************************************** TASK [Log into a Docker registry] ********************************************** skipping: [localhost] => (item=None) TASK [Create Dockerfiles from image names] ************************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Discover local Docker images] ******************************************** ok: [localhost] => (item=None) ok: [localhost] TASK [Build an Ansible compatible image] *************************************** changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Create docker network(s)] ************************************************ TASK [Create molecule instance(s)] ********************************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Wait for instance(s) creation to complete] ******************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* localhost : ok=5 changed=4 unreachable=0 failed=0 --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'prepare' Skipping, prepare playbook not configured. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'converge' PLAY [Converge] **************************************************************** TASK [Gathering Facts] ********************************************************* ok: [instance] TASK [example-role : Create 'example' user] ************************************ changed: [instance] TASK [example-role : Install nginx] ******************************************** changed: [instance] RUNNING HANDLER [example-role : Restart nginx] ********************************* changed: [instance] PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* instance : ok=4 changed=3 unreachable=0 failed=0 --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'idempotence' Idempotence completed successfully. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'side_effect' Skipping, side effect playbook not configured. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'verify' --> Executing Testinfra tests found in /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default/tests/... ============================= test session starts ============================== platform linux -- Python 3.7.1, pytest-4.1.0, py-1.7.0, pluggy-0.8.1 rootdir: /home/elijah/sandbox/test-roles/example-role/molecule/default, inifile: plugins: testinfra-1.16.0 collected 5 items tests/test_default.py ..... [100%] =============================== warnings summary =============================== ... ==================== 5 passed, 7 warnings in 27.37 seconds ===================== Verifier completed successfully. --> Scenario: 'default' --> Action: 'destroy' PLAY [Destroy] ***************************************************************** TASK [Destroy molecule instance(s)] ******************************************** changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Wait for instance(s) deletion to complete] ******************************* changed: [localhost] => (item=None) changed: [localhost] TASK [Delete docker network(s)] ************************************************ PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************* localhost : ok=2 changed=2 unreachable=0 failed=0 #+END_EXAMPLE I have a few warning messages (that's likely because I am using /python 3.7/ and some of the libraries still don't fully support the new standards released with it) but all my tests passed. **** Conclusion Molecule is a great tool to test ansible roles quickly and while developing them. It also comes bundled with a bunch of other features from different projects that will test all aspects of your ansible code. I suggest you start using it when writing new ansible roles. ** Container :@container: *** DONE Linux Containers :linux:kernel:docker:podman:dockerfile: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-02-27 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-02-27 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: linux-containers :CUSTOM_ID: linux-containers :END: Our story dates /all the way/ back to 2006, believe it or not. The first steps were taken towards what we know today as *containers*. We'll discuss their history, how to build them and how to use them. Stick around! you might enjoy the ride. #+hugo: more **** History ***** 2006-2007 - The /[[https://lkml.org/lkml/2006/10/20/251][Generic Process Containers]]/ lands in Linux This was renamed thereafter to /[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cgroups][Control Groups]]/, popularily known as /cgroups/, and landed in /Linux/ version =2.6.24=. /Cgroups/ are the first piece of the puzzle in /Linux Containers/. We will be talking about /cgroups/ in detail later. ***** 2008 - Namespaces Even though /namespaces/ have been around since 2002, /Linux/ version =2.4.19=, they saw a [[https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/history-containers][rapid development]] beginning 2006 and into 2008. /namespaces/ are the other piece of the puzzle in /Linux Containers/. We will talk about /namespaces/ in more details later. ***** 2008 - LXC /LXC/ finally shows up! /LXC/ is the first form of /containers/ on the /Linux/ kernel. /LXC/ combined both /cgroups/ and /namespaces/ to provide isolated environments; containers. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT It is worth mentioning that /LXC/ runs a full /operating system/ containers from an image. In other words, /LXC/ containers are meant to run more than one process. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** 2013 - Docker /Docker/ offered a full set of tools for working with /containers/, making it easier than ever to work with them. /Docker/ containers are designed to only run the application process. Unlike /LXC/, the =PID= =1= of a Docker container is excepted to be the application running in the contanier. We will be discussing this topic in more detail later. **** Concepts ***** /cgroups/ ****** What are cgroups ? Let's find out ! Better yet, let's use the tools at our disposal to find out together... Open a *terminal* and run the following command. #+BEGIN_SRC bash man 7 cgroups #+END_SRC This should open the ~man~ pages for =cgroups=. #+BEGIN_QUOTE Control groups, usually referred to as cgroups, are a Linux kernel feature which allow processes to be organized into hierarchical groups whose usage of various types of resources can then be limited and monitored. The kernel's cgroup interface is provided through a pseudo-filesystem called cgroupfs. Grouping is implemented in the core cgroup kernel code, while resource tracking and limits are implemented in a set of per-resource-type subsystems (memory, CPU, and so on). #+END_QUOTE ****** What does this all mean ? This can all be simplified by explaining it in a different way. Essentially, you can think of =cgroups= as a way for the /kernel/ to *limit* what you can *use*. This gives us the ability to give a /container/ only *1* CPU out of the 4 available to the /kernel/. Or maybe, limit the memory allowed to *512MB* to the container. This way the container cannot overload the resources of the system in case they run a fork-bomb, for example. But, =cgroups= do not limit what we can "/see/". ***** /namespaces/ ****** /Namespaces/ to the rescue ! As we did before, let's check the ~man~ page for =namespaces= #+BEGIN_SRC bash man 7 namespaces #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_QUOTE A namespace wraps a global system resource in an abstraction that makes it appear to the processes within the namespace that they have their own isolated instance of the global resource. Changes to the global resource are visible to other processes that are members of the namespace, but are invisible to other processes. One use of namespaces is to implement containers. #+END_QUOTE Wooow ! That's more mumbo jumbo ?! ****** Is it really simple ? Let's simplify this one as well. You can think of =namespaces= as a way for the /kernel/ to *limit* what we *see*. There are multiple =namespaces=, like the =cgroup_namespaces= which /virtualizes/ the view of a process =cgroup=. In other words, inside the =cgroup= the process with =PID= *1* is not =PID= on the *system*. The =namespaces= manual page lists them, you check them out for more details. But I hope you get the gist of it ! ***** Linux Containers We are finally here! Let's talk /Linux Containers/. The first topic we need to know about is *images*. ****** What are container images ? We talked before that /Docker/ came in and offered tooling around /containers/. One of those concepts which they used, in docker images, is *layers*. First of all, an image is a /file-system/ representation of a container. It is an on-disk, read-only, image. It sort of looks like your /Linux/ *filesystem*. Then, layers on top to add functionality. You might ask, what are these layers. We will see them in action. Let's look at my system. #+BEGIN_SRC bash lsb_release -a #+END_SRC #+begin_example LSB Version: n/a Distributor ID: ManjaroLinux Description: Manjaro Linux Release: 20.2.1 Codename: Nibia #+end_example As you can see, I am running =Manjaro=. Keep that in mind. Let's take a look at the kernel running on this machine. #+BEGIN_SRC bash uname -a #+END_SRC #+begin_example Linux manjaro 5.10.15-1-MANJARO #1 SMP PREEMPT Wed Feb 10 10:42:47 UTC 2021 x86_64 GNU/Linux #+end_example So, it's /kernel version/ =5.8.6=. Remember this one as well. ******* /neofetch/ I would like to /test/ a tool called =neofetch=. Why ? - First reason, I am not that creative. - Second, it's a nice tool, you'll see. We can test =neofetch= #+BEGIN_SRC bash neofetch #+END_SRC #+begin_example fish: Unknown command: neofetch #+end_example Look at that! We don't have it installed... Not a big deal. We can download an image and test it inside. ****** Pulling an image Let's download a docker image. I am using =podman=, an open source project that allows us to *use* containers. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT You might want to run these commands with =sudo= privileges. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman pull ubuntu:20.04 #+END_SRC #+begin_example f63181f19b2fe819156dcb068b3b5bc036820bec7014c5f77277cfa341d4cb5e #+end_example Let's pull an ~Ubuntu~ image. As you can see, we have pulled an image from the repositories online. We can see further information about the image. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman images #+END_SRC #+begin_example REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE docker.io/library/ubuntu 20.04 f63181f19b2f 5 weeks ago 75.3 MB #+end_example Much better, now we can see that we have an ~Ubuntu~ image downloaded from [[https://hub.docker.com][docker.io]]. ****** What's a container then ? A container is nothing more than an instance of an image. It is the running instance of an image. Let's list our containers. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman ps -a #+END_SRC #+begin_example CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES #+end_example We have none. Let's start one. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman run -it ubuntu:20.04 uname -a #+END_SRC #+begin_example Linux 57453b419a43 5.10.15-1-MANJARO #1 SMP PREEMPT Wed Feb 10 10:42:47 UTC 2021 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux #+end_example It's running the same /kernel/ as our machine... Are we really inside a container ? #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman run -it ubuntu:20.04 hostname -f #+END_SRC #+begin_example 6795b85eeb50 #+end_example okay ?! And *our* /hostname/ is ? #+BEGIN_SRC bash hostname -f #+END_SRC #+begin_example manjaro #+end_example Hmm... They have different /hostnames/... Let's see if it's *really* ~Ubuntu~. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman run -it ubuntu:20.04 bash -c 'apt-get update && apt-get install -y vim' #+END_SRC #+begin_example Get:1 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal InRelease [265 kB] Get:2 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-updates InRelease [114 kB] Get:3 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-backports InRelease [101 kB] Get:4 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-security InRelease [109 kB] Get:5 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal/restricted amd64 Packages [33.4 kB] Get:6 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal/multiverse amd64 Packages [177 kB] Get:7 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal/universe amd64 Packages [11.3 MB] ... Setting up libpython3.8:amd64 (3.8.5-1~20.04.2) ... Setting up vim (2:8.1.2269-1ubuntu5) ... update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/vim (vim) in auto mode update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/vimdiff (vimdiff) in auto mode update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/rvim (rvim) in auto mode update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/rview (rview) in auto mode update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/vi (vi) in auto mode ... update-alternatives: using /usr/bin/vim.basic to provide /usr/bin/editor (editor) in auto mode ... Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.31-0ubuntu9.1) ... #+end_example This should not work on my ~Manjaro~. =apt-get= is not a thing here. Well, the output is a bit large so I truncated it a bit for readability but we seem to have installed vim successfully. ****** Building a container image Now that we saw what an /image/ is and what a /container/ is. We can explore a bit inside a container to see it more clearly. So, what can we do with containers? We can use the layering system and the /docker/ created tooling to create them and distribute them. Let's go back to our =neofetch= example. I want to get an ~Ubuntu~ image, then install =neofetch= on it. First step, create a ~Dockerfile~ in your current directory. It should look like this. #+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile :dir /tmp/docker/ :tangle /tmp/docker/Dockerfile.ubuntu :mkdirp yes FROM ubuntu:20.04 RUN apt-get update && \ apt-get install -y neofetch #+END_SRC This file has two commands: - =FROM= designates the base image to use. This is the base image we will be building upon. In our case, we chose ~Ubuntu:20.04~. You can find the images on multiple platforms. To mention a few, we have /Dockerhub/, /Quay.io/ and a few others. By default, this downloads from /Dockerhub/. - =RUN= designates the commands to run. Pretty simple. We are running a couple of commands that should be very familiar to any user familiar with /debian-based/ OS's. Now that we have a /Dockerfile/, we can build the container. #+BEGIN_SRC bash :dir /sudo::/tmp/docker/ :results output podman build -t neofetch-ubuntu:20.04 -f Dockerfile.ubuntu . #+END_SRC #+begin_example STEP 1: FROM ubuntu:20.04 STEP 2: RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y neofetch Get:1 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal InRelease [265 kB] Get:2 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-security InRelease [109 kB] Get:3 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-updates InRelease [114 kB] ... Fetched 17.2 MB in 2s (7860 kB/s) Reading package lists... ... The following additional packages will be installed: chafa dbus fontconfig-config fonts-dejavu-core fonts-droid-fallback fonts-noto-mono fonts-urw-base35 ghostscript gsfonts imagemagick-6-common krb5-locales libapparmor1 libavahi-client3 libavahi-common-data libavahi-common3 libbsd0 libchafa0 libcups2 libdbus-1-3 libexpat1 libfftw3-double3 libfontconfig1 libfreetype6 libglib2.0-0 libglib2.0-data libgomp1 libgs9 libgs9-common libgssapi-krb5-2 libicu66 libidn11 libijs-0.35 libjbig0 libjbig2dec0 libjpeg-turbo8 libjpeg8 libk5crypto3 libkeyutils1 libkrb5-3 libkrb5support0 liblcms2-2 liblqr-1-0 libltdl7 libmagickcore-6.q16-6 libmagickwand-6.q16-6 libopenjp2-7 libpaper-utils libpaper1 libpng16-16 libssl1.1 libtiff5 libwebp6 libwebpmux3 libx11-6 libx11-data libxau6 libxcb1 libxdmcp6 libxext6 libxml2 poppler-data shared-mime-info tzdata ucf xdg-user-dirs Suggested packages: default-dbus-session-bus | dbus-session-bus fonts-noto fonts-freefont-otf | fonts-freefont-ttf fonts-texgyre ghostscript-x cups-common libfftw3-bin libfftw3-dev krb5-doc krb5-user liblcms2-utils libmagickcore-6.q16-6-extra poppler-utils fonts-japanese-mincho | fonts-ipafont-mincho fonts-japanese-gothic | fonts-ipafont-gothic fonts-arphic-ukai fonts-arphic-uming fonts-nanum The following NEW packages will be installed: chafa dbus fontconfig-config fonts-dejavu-core fonts-droid-fallback fonts-noto-mono fonts-urw-base35 ghostscript gsfonts imagemagick-6-common krb5-locales libapparmor1 libavahi-client3 libavahi-common-data libavahi-common3 libbsd0 libchafa0 libcups2 libdbus-1-3 libexpat1 libfftw3-double3 libfontconfig1 libfreetype6 libglib2.0-0 libglib2.0-data libgomp1 libgs9 libgs9-common libgssapi-krb5-2 libicu66 libidn11 libijs-0.35 libjbig0 libjbig2dec0 libjpeg-turbo8 libjpeg8 libk5crypto3 libkeyutils1 libkrb5-3 libkrb5support0 liblcms2-2 liblqr-1-0 libltdl7 libmagickcore-6.q16-6 libmagickwand-6.q16-6 libopenjp2-7 libpaper-utils libpaper1 libpng16-16 libssl1.1 libtiff5 libwebp6 libwebpmux3 libx11-6 libx11-data libxau6 libxcb1 libxdmcp6 libxext6 libxml2 neofetch poppler-data shared-mime-info tzdata ucf xdg-user-dirs 0 upgraded, 66 newly installed, 0 to remove and 6 not upgraded. Need to get 36.2 MB of archives. After this operation, 136 MB of additional disk space will be used. Get:1 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal/main amd64 fonts-droid-fallback all 1:6.0.1r16-1.1 [1805 kB] ... Get:66 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal/universe amd64 neofetch all 7.0.0-1 [77.5 kB] Fetched 36.2 MB in 2s (22.1 MB/s) ... Setting up ghostscript (9.50~dfsg-5ubuntu4.2) ... Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.31-0ubuntu9.1) ... STEP 3: COMMIT neofetch-ubuntu:20.04 --> 6486fa42efe 6486fa42efe5df4f761f4062d4986b7ec60b14d9d99d92d2aff2c26da61d13af #+end_example #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT You might need =sudo= to run this command. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT As you can see, we just successfully built the container. We also got a =hash= as a name for it. If you were careful, I used the =&&= command instead of using multiple =RUN=. You *can* use as many =RUN= commands ase you like. But be careful, each one of those commands creates a *layer*. The /more/ layers you create, the /more/ time they require to *download*/*upload*. It might not seem to be a lot of time to download a few extra layer on one system. But if we talk about /container orchestration/ platforms, it makes a big difference there. Let's examine the build a bit more and see what we got. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE STEP 1: FROM ubuntu:20.04 STEP 2: RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y neofetch #+END_EXAMPLE The first step was to /download/ the base image so we could use it, then we added a *layer* which insatlled neofetch. If we list our *images*. #+BEGIN_SRC bash :dir /sudo:: :results output podman images #+END_SRC #+begin_example REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE localhost/neofetch-ubuntu 20.04 6486fa42efe5 5 minutes ago 241 MB docker.io/library/ubuntu 20.04 f63181f19b2f 5 weeks ago 75.3 MB #+end_example We can see that we have =localhost/neofetch-ubuntu=. If we examine the =ID=, we can see that it is the same as the one given to us at the end of the build. ****** Running our container Now that we created a /brand-spanking-new/ image, we can run it. #+BEGIN_SRC bash :dir /sudo:: :results output podman images #+END_SRC #+begin_example REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE localhost/neofetch-ubuntu 20.04 6486fa42efe5 6 minutes ago 241 MB docker.io/library/ubuntu 20.04 f63181f19b2f 5 weeks ago 75.3 MB #+end_example First we list our *images*. Then we choose which one to run. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman run -it neofetch-ubuntu:20.04 neofetch #+END_SRC #+caption: Neofetch on Ubuntu #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/linux-containers/container-neofetch-ubuntu.png][file:images/linux-containers/container-neofetch-ubuntu.png]] =neofetch= is installed in that container, because the *image* has it. We can also build an image based on something else, maybe ~Fedora~ ? I looked in [[https://hub.docker.com/_/fedora/][Dockerhub (Fedora)]] and found the following image. #+BEGIN_SRC dockerfile :tangle /tmp/docker/Dockerfile.fedora FROM fedora:32 RUN dnf install -y neofetch #+END_SRC We can duplicate what we did before real quick. Save file, run command to build the image. #+BEGIN_SRC bash :dir /sudo::/tmp/docker/ :results output podman build -t neofetch-fedora:20.04 -f Dockerfile.fedora . #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: #+begin_example STEP 1: FROM fedora:32 STEP 2: RUN dnf install -y neofetch Fedora 32 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64 2.2 kB/s | 2.5 kB 00:01 Fedora Modular 32 - x86_64 4.1 MB/s | 4.9 MB 00:01 Fedora Modular 32 - x86_64 - Updates 4.9 MB/s | 4.4 MB 00:00 Fedora 32 - x86_64 - Updates 9.0 MB/s | 29 MB 00:03 Fedora 32 - x86_64 9.8 MB/s | 70 MB 00:07 Dependencies resolved. ======================================================================================== Package Arch Version Repo Size ======================================================================================== Installing: neofetch noarch 7.1.0-3.fc32 updates 90 k Installing dependencies: ImageMagick-libs x86_64 1:6.9.11.27-1.fc32 updates 2.3 M LibRaw x86_64 0.19.5-4.fc32 updates 320 k ... xorg-x11-utils x86_64 7.5-34.fc32 fedora 108 k Transaction Summary ======================================================================================== Install 183 Packages Total download size: 62 M Installed size: 203 M Downloading Packages: (1/183): LibRaw-0.19.5-4.fc32.x86_64.rpm 480 kB/s | 320 kB 00:00 ... xorg-x11-utils-7.5-34.fc32.x86_64 Complete! STEP 3: COMMIT neofetch-fedora:20.04 --> a5e57f6d5f1 a5e57f6d5f13075a105e02000e00589bab50d913900ee60399cd5a092ceca5a3 #+end_example Then, run the container. #+BEGIN_SRC bash podman run -it neofetch-fedora:20.04 neofetch #+END_SRC #+caption: Neofetch on Fedora #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/linux-containers/container-neofetch-fedora.png][file:images/linux-containers/container-neofetch-fedora.png]] **** Conclusion Finally thought /before/ I let you go. You may have noticed that I used =Podman= instead of =Docker=. In these examples, both commands should be interchangeable. Remember kids, /containers/ are cool! They can be used for a wide variety of things. They are great at many things and with the help of /container orchestration/ platforms, they can scale better than ever. They are also very bad at certain things. Be careful where to use them, how to use and when to use them. Stay safe and mainly have fun! *** DONE Playing with containers and Tor :docker:linux:@text_editors:ubuntu:fedora:proxy:privoxy: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-06-21 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-06-21 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: playing-with-containers-and-tor :CUSTOM_ID: playing-with-containers-and-tor :END: As my followers well know, by now, I am a tinkerer at heart. Why do I do things ? No one knows ! I don't even know. All I know, all I can tell you is that I like to see what can I do with the tools I have at hand. How can I bend them to my will. Why, you may ask. The answer is a bit complicated; part of who I am, part of what I do as a DevOps. End line is, this time I was curious. I went down a road that taught me so much more about /containers/, /docker/, /docker-compose/ and even /Linux/ itself. The question I had was simple, *can I run a container only through Tor running in another container?* #+hugo: more **** Tor I usually like to start topics that I haven't mentioned before with definitions. In this case, what is [[https://2019.www.torproject.org/index.html.en][Tor]], you may ask ? #+begin_quote Tor is free software and an open network that helps you defend against traffic analysis, a form of network surveillance that threatens personal freedom and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security. #+end_quote Although that /home/ page is obscure because it was replaced by the new /design/ of the website. Although I love what *Tor* has done with all the services they offer, don't get me wrong. But giving so much importance on the browser only and leaving the rest for dead when it comes to website, I have to say, I'm a bit sad. Anyway, let's share the love for *Tor* and thank them for the beautiful project they offered humanity. Now that we thanked them, let's abuse it. ***** Tor in a container The task I set to discover relied on *Tor* being containerized. The first thing I do is, simply, not re-invent the wheel. Let's find out if someone already took that task. With a litte bit of search, I found the [[https://hub.docker.com/r/dperson/torproxy][dperson/torproxy]] docker image. It isn't ideal but I /believe/ it is written to be rebuilt. Can we run it ? #+begin_src bash docker run -it -p 127.0.0.1:8118:8118 -d dperson/torproxy #+end_src #+begin_src bash curl -Lx http://localhost:8118 http://jsonip.com/ #+end_src And this is *definitely* not your IP. Don't take /my word/ for it! Go to [[http://jsonip.com/][http://jsonip.com/]] in a browser and see for yourself. Now that we *know* we can run *Tor* in a container effectively, let's kick it up a /notch/. **** docker-compose I will be /testing/ and making changes as I go along. For this reason, it's a good idea to use [[https://docs.docker.com/compose/][docker-compose]] to do this. #+begin_quote Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. With Compose, you use a YAML file to configure your application’s services. Then, with a single command, you create and start all the services from your configuration. #+end_quote /Now/ that we saw what the *docker* team has to say about *docker-compose*, let's go ahead and use it. First, let's implement what we just ran /ad-hoc/ in *docker-compose*. #+begin_src yaml --- version: '3.9' services: torproxy: image: dperson/torproxy container_name: torproxy restart: unless-stopped #+end_src **** Air-gapped container The next piece of the puzzle is to figure out *if* and *how* can we create an /air-gapped container/. It turns out, we can create an =internal= network in /docker/ that has no access to the internet. First, the /air-gapped container/. #+begin_src yaml air-gapped: image: ubuntu container_name: air-gapped restart: unless-stopped command: - bash - -c - sleep infinity networks: - no-internet #+end_src Then comes the network. #+begin_src yaml networks: no-internet: driver: bridge internal: true #+end_src Let's put it all together in a =docker-compose.yaml= file and run it. #+begin_src bash docker-compose up -d #+end_src Keep that terminal open, and let's put the /hypothesis/ to the test and see if rises up to be a /theory/. #+begin_src bash :results output docker exec air-gapped apt-get update #+end_src Aaaaand... #+begin_src text Err:1 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' Err:2 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-security InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'security.ubuntu.com' Err:3 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-updates InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' Err:4 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu focal-backports InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' Reading package lists... W: Failed to fetch http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dists/focal/InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' W: Failed to fetch http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dists/focal-updates/InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' W: Failed to fetch http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dists/focal-backports/InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'archive.ubuntu.com' W: Failed to fetch http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dists/focal-security/InRelease Temporary failure resolving 'security.ubuntu.com' W: Some index files failed to download. They have been ignored, or old ones used instead. #+end_src looks like it's real peeps, *hooray* ! **** Putting everything together Okay, now let's put everything together. The list of changes we need to make are minimal. First, I will list them, then I will simply write them out in *docker-compose*. - Create an =internet= network for the *Tor* container - Attach the =internet= network to the *Tor* container - Attach the =no-internet= network to the *Tor* container so that our /air-gapped/ container can access it. Let's get to work. #+begin_src yaml :tangle docker-compose.yaml --- version: '3.9' services: torproxy: image: dperson/torproxy container_name: torproxy restart: unless-stopped networks: - no-internet - internet air-gapped: image: ubuntu container_name: air-gapped restart: unless-stopped command: - bash - -c - sleep infinity networks: - no-internet networks: no-internet: driver: bridge internal: true internet: driver: bridge internal: false #+end_src Run everything. #+begin_src bash :results output docker-compose up -d #+end_src Yes, this will run it in the background and there is *no* need for you to open another terminal. It's always /good/ to know *both* ways. Anyway, let's test. let's =exec= into the container. #+begin_src bash docker exec -it air-gapped bash #+end_src Then we configure =apt= to use our =torproxy= service. #+begin_src bash :dir /docker:air-gapped:/ echo 'Acquire::http::Proxy "http://torproxy:8118/";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/proxy echo "export HTTP_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/" >> ~/.bashrc echo "export HTTPS_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/" >> ~/.bashrc export HTTP_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/ export HTTPS_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/ apt-get update apt-get upgrade -y DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get install -y curl #+end_src **** Harvesting the fruits of our labour First, we *always* check if everything is set correctly. While inside the container, we check the /environment variables/. #+begin_src bash :dir /docker:air-gapped:/ env | grep HTTP #+end_src You should see. #+begin_example HTTPS_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/ HTTP_PROXY=http://torproxy:8118/ #+end_example Then, we curl our *IP*. #+begin_src bash :dir /docker:air-gapped:/ curl https://jsonip.com/ #+end_src And that is also not your *IP*. It works ! **** Conclusion Is it possible to route a container through another *Tor* container ? The answer is /obviously/ *Yes* and this is the way to do it. Enjoy. *** DONE Let's play with Traefik :docker:linux:traefik:nginx:ssl:letsencrypt: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-06-24 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-06-24 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: let-s-play-with-traefik :CUSTOM_ID: let-s-play-with-traefik :END: I've been playing around with containers for a few years now. I find them very useful. If you host your own, like I do, you probably write a lot of /nginx/ configurations, maybe /apache/. If that's the case, then you have your own solution to get certificates. I'm also assuming that you are using /let's encrypt/ with /certbot/ or something. Well, I didn't want to anymore. It was time to consolidate. Here comes Traefik. #+hugo: more **** Traefik So [[https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/][Traefik]] is #+begin_quote an open-source Edge Router that makes publishing your services a fun and easy experience. It receives requests on behalf of your system and finds out which components are responsible for handling them. #+end_quote Which made me realize, I still need /nginx/ somewhere. We'll see when we get to it. Let's focus on /Traefik/. ***** Configuration If you run a lot of containers and manage them, then you probably use /docker-compose/. I'm still using =version 2.3=, I know I am due to an upgrade but I'm working on it slowly. It's a bigger project... One step at a time. Let's start from the top, literally. #+NAME: docker-compose-header #+begin_src yaml --- version: '2.3' services: #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Upgrading to =version 3.x= of /docker-compose/ requires the creation of /network/ to /link/ containers together. It's worth investing into, this is not a /docker-compose/ tutorial. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Then comes the service. #+NAME: docker-compose-service-traefik #+begin_src yaml traefik: container_name: traefik image: "traefik:latest" restart: unless-stopped mem_limit: 40m mem_reservation: 25m #+end_src and of course, who can forget the volume mounting. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-volumes #+begin_src yaml volumes: - "/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro" #+end_src ***** Design Now let's talk design to see how we're going to configuse this bad boy. I want to /Traefik/ to listen on ports =80= and =443= at a minimum to serve traffic. Let's do that. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-listeners #+begin_src yaml command: - --entrypoints.web.address=:80 - --entrypoints.websecure.address=:443 #+end_src and let's not forget to map them. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-port-mapping #+begin_src yaml ports: - "80:80" - "443:443" #+end_src Next, we would like to redirect =http= to =https= always. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-https-redirect #+begin_src yaml - --entrypoints.web.http.redirections.entryPoint.to=websecure - --entrypoints.web.http.redirections.entryPoint.scheme=https #+end_src We are using docker, so let's configure that as the provider. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-provider #+begin_src yaml - --providers.docker #+end_src We can set the log level. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-log-level #+begin_src yaml - --log.level=INFO #+end_src If you want a /dashboard/, you have to enable it. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-dashboard #+begin_src yaml - --api.dashboard=true #+end_src And finally, if you're using Prometheus to scrape metrics... You have to enable that too. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-prometheus #+begin_src yaml - --metrics.prometheus=true #+end_src ***** Let's Encrypt Let's talk *TLS*. You want to serve encrypted traffic to users. You will need an /SSL Certificate/. Your best bet is /open source/. Who are we kidding, you'd want to go with /let's encrypt/. Let's configure /acme/ to do just that. Get us certificates. In this example, we are going to be using /Cloudflare/. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-acme #+begin_src yaml - --certificatesresolvers.cloudflareresolver.acme.email= - --certificatesresolvers.cloudflareresolver.acme.dnschallenge.provider=cloudflare - --certificatesresolvers.cloudflareresolver.acme.storage=./acme.json #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT /Let's Encrypt/ have set limits on *how many* certificates you can request per certain amount of time. To test your certificate request and renewal processes, use their staging infrastructure. It is made for such purpose. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Then we mount it, for persistence. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-volumes-acme #+begin_src yaml - "./traefik/acme.json:/acme.json" #+end_src Let's not forget to add our /Cloudflare/ *API* credentials as environment variables for /Traefik/ to use. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-environment #+begin_src yaml environment: - CLOUDFLARE_EMAIL= - CLOUDFLARE_API_KEY= #+end_src ***** Dashboard Now let's configure /Traefik/ a bit more with a bit of labeling. First, we specify the /host/ /Traefik/ should listen for to service the /dashboard/. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-labels #+begin_src yaml labels: - "traefik.http.routers.dashboard-api.rule=Host(`dashboard.your-host.here`)" - "traefik.http.routers.dashboard-api.service=api@internal" #+end_src With a little bit of /Traefik/ documentation searching and a lot of help from =htpasswd=, we can create a =basicauth= login to protect the dashboard from public use. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-labels-basicauth #+begin_src yaml - "traefik.http.routers.dashboard-api.middlewares=dashboard-auth-user" - "traefik.http.middlewares.dashboard-auth-user.basicauth.users=:$$pws5$$rWsEfeUw9$$uV45uwsGeaPbu8RSexB9/" - "traefik.http.routers.dashboard-api.tls.certresolver=cloudflareresolver" #+end_src ***** Middleware I'm not going to go into details about the /middleware/ flags configured here but you're welcome to check the /Traefik/ middleware [[https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/middlewares/overview/][docs]]. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik-config-middleware #+begin_src yaml - "traefik.http.middlewares.frame-deny.headers.framedeny=true" - "traefik.http.middlewares.browser-xss-filter.headers.browserxssfilter=true" - "traefik.http.middlewares.ssl-redirect.headers.sslredirect=true" #+end_src ***** Full Configuration Let's put everything together now. #+NAME: docker-compose-traefik #+begin_src yaml :noweb yes <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> <> #+end_src **** nginx [[https://nginx.org/en/][nginx]] pronounced #+begin_quote [engine x] is an HTTP and reverse proxy server, a mail proxy server, and a generic TCP/UDP proxy server, originally written by Igor Sysoev. #+end_quote In this example, we're going to assume you have a /static blog/ generated by a /static blog generator/ of your choice and you would like to serve it for people to read it. So let's do this quickly as there isn't much to tell except when it comes to labels. #+NAME: docker-compose-service-nginx #+begin_src yaml nginx: container_name: nginx image: nginxinc/nginx-unprivileged:alpine restart: unless-stopped mem_limit: 8m command: ["nginx", "-enable-prometheus-metrics", "-g", "daemon off;"] volumes: - "./blog/:/usr/share/nginx/html/blog:ro" - "./nginx/default.conf.template:/etc/nginx/templates/default.conf.template:ro" environment: - NGINX_BLOG_PORT=80 - NGINX_BLOG_HOST= #+end_src We are mounting the blog directory from our /host/ to =/usr/share/nginx/html/blog= as *read-only* into the /nginx/ container. We are also providing /nginx/ with a template configuration and passing the variables as /environment/ variables as you noticed. It is also mounted as *read-only*. The configuration template looks like the following, if you're wondering. #+begin_src nginx server { listen ${NGINX_BLOG_PORT}; server_name localhost; root /usr/share/nginx/html/${NGINX_BLOG_HOST}; location / { index index.html; try_files $uri $uri/ =404; } } #+end_src ***** Traefik configuration So, /Traefik/ configuration at this point is a little bit tricky for the first time. First, we configure the /host/ like we did before. #+NAME: docker-compose-nginx-labels #+begin_src yaml labels: - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.rule=Host(`blog.your-host.here`)" #+end_src We tell /Traefik/ about our service and the /port/ to loadbalance on. #+NAME: docker-compose-nginx-labels-service #+begin_src yaml - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.service=blog-http" - "traefik.http.services.blog-http.loadbalancer.server.port=80" #+end_src We configure the /middleware/ to use configuration defined in the /Traefik/ middleware configuration section. #+NAME: docker-compose-nginx-labels-middleware #+begin_src yaml - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.middlewares=blog-main" - "traefik.http.middlewares.blog-main.chain.middlewares=frame-deny,browser-xss-filter,ssl-redirect" #+end_src Finally, we tell it about our resolver to generate an /SSL Certificate/. #+NAME: docker-compose-nginx-labels-tls #+begin_src yaml - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.tls.certresolver=cloudflareresolver" #+end_src ***** Full Configuration Let's put the /nginx/ service together. #+NAME: docker-compose-nginx #+begin_src yaml :noweb yes <> <> <> <> <> #+end_src **** Finale It's finally time to put everything together ! #+begin_src yaml :noweb yes <> <> <> #+end_src Now we're all set to save it in a =docker-compose.yaml= file and #+begin_src bash docker-compose up -d #+end_src If everything is configured correctly, your blog should pop-up momentarily. *Enjoy !* *** DONE Time to deploy our static blog :docker:dockerfile:linux:traefik:nginx:ssl:letsencrypt: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-07-10 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-07-10 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: time-to-deploy-our-static-blog :CUSTOM_ID: time-to-deploy-our-static-blog :END: In the previous post, entitled "[[#let-s-play-with-traefik]]", we deployed /Traefik/ and configured it. We left it in a running state but we haven't /really/ used it properly yet. Let's put it to some good use this time around. #+hugo: more **** Pre-requisites This blog post assumes that you already have a generated static /website/ or /blog/. There are multiple tools in the sphere which allows you to statically generate your blog. You can find a list of them on the [[https://github.com/myles/awesome-static-generators][Awesome Static Web Site Generators]]. Once we have the directory on disk, we can move forward. **** Components Let's talk components a tiny bit and see what we have and what we need. We already a /static site/. We can expose our /site/ using /Traefik/. We can also generate an /SSL certificate/ for the exposed /site/. What we don't have, is a way to /serve/ our /static site/. /Traefik/ is only a /reverse proxy/ server. A /reverse proxy/, sort of, routes into and out of sockets. These sockets could be open local ports, or they could, also, be other containers. **** Nginx That's where [[https://nginx.org/][/nginx/]] comes into the picture. #+begin_quote nginx [engine x] is an HTTP and reverse proxy server, a mail proxy server, and a generic TCP/UDP proxy server, originally written by Igor Sysoev. #+end_quote We can find an /nginx/ docker image on [[https://hub.docker.com/_/nginx][dockerhub]]. But, if we look around carefully we can see a section that mentions "/running nginx as a non-root user/". This led me to a small discovery which made me look for an alternative of that image. Luckily for us, /nginxinc/ also releases an /unprivileged/ version of that image under the name of [[https://hub.docker.com/r/nginxinc/nginx-unprivileged][nginx-unprivileged]]. ***** Configuration The /nginx/ docker image can be configured using a /template/ configuration file which can be mounted into the container. The configuration can include /variables/ which will be replaced by /environment variables/ we inject into the container. Let's look at an example configuration =default.conf.template=. #+begin_src conf server { listen ${NGINX_BLOG_PORT}; server_name localhost; root /usr/share/nginx/html/${NGINX_BLOG_HOST}; location / { index index.html; try_files $uri $uri/ =404; } } #+end_src In the example above, we use ~NGINX_BLOG_HOST~ and ~NGINX_BLOG_PORT~ as /environment variables/ to be replaced in the /nginx/ configuration. **** Container After creating our /nginx/ configuration, we need to run an /nginx/ container and serve our blog to the users. In the [[#let-s-play-with-traefik][previous post]], we used /docker-compose/ to deploy /Traefik/. We will continue with that and deploy our /nginx/ container alongside. ***** docker-compose Before we go ahead and create another service in the /docker-compose/ file, let's talk a bit about what we need. We need to deploy an /unprivileged nginx/ container, first and foremost. We need to inject a few /environment variables/ into the container to be included in the /nginx/ templated configuration. We, also, need not forget to include the /labels/ required for /Traefik/ to route our container properly, and generate an /SSL certificate/. Finally, we need to mount both the /nginx configuration template/ and, of course, our /static blog/. Now let's head to work. #+begin_src yaml nginx: container_name: nginx image: nginxinc/nginx-unprivileged:alpine restart: unless-stopped mem_limit: 8m command: ["nginx", "daemon off;"] volumes: - "./blog/static/:/usr/share/nginx/html/blog:ro" - "./blog/nginx/default.conf.template:/etc/nginx/templates/default.conf.template:ro" environment: - NGINX_BLOG_PORT=80 - NGINX_BLOG_HOST=blog.example.com labels: - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.rule=Host(`blog.example.com`)" - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.service=blog-http" - "traefik.http.services.blog-http.loadbalancer.server.port=80" - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.middlewares=blog-main" - "traefik.http.middlewares.blog-main.chain.middlewares=frame-deny,browser-xss-filter,ssl-redirect" - "traefik.http.middlewares.frame-deny.headers.framedeny=true" - "traefik.http.middlewares.browser-xss-filter.headers.browserxssfilter=true" - "traefik.http.middlewares.ssl-redirect.headers.sslredirect=true" - "traefik.http.routers.blog-http.tls.certresolver=cloudflareresolver" #+end_src If we look at the /Traefik/ configuration we can see the following important configurations. - =traefik.http.routers.blog-http.rule= :: This configures the ~hostname~ /Traefik/ should be listening on for our /nginx/ container. - =traefik.http.routers.blog-http.service= :: This configures the /router/ to use our /service/. - =traefik.http.services.blog-http.loadbalancer.server.port= :: We configure the /service/ ~port~. - =traefik.http.routers.blog-http.middlewares= :: We configure the /router/ to use our ~middleware~. - =traefik.http.middlewares.blog-main.chain.middlewares= :: We configure all the ~middleware~ chain. - =traefik.http.middlewares.ssl-redirect.headers.sslredirect= :: We always redirect ~http~ to ~https~. - =traefik.http.routers.blog-http.tls.certresolver= :: We configure the /resolver/ to use to generate our /SSL certificate/. We can also see our /static blog/ and the /nginx template/ being mounted as /read-only/ inside the container to their right paths. Finally, we verify that our ~NGINX_BLOG_HOST~ and ~NGINX_BLOG_PORT~ are configured correctly. **** Final steps After putting everything in place, we do a quick last check that everything is correctly in place. Once we are satisfied with the results, we run ! #+begin_src shell docker-compose up -d #+end_src And we're good to go. If we point our ~/etc/hosts~ to our site, we can test that everything works. #+begin_src conf 192.168.0.1 blog.example.com #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Replace ~192.168.0.1~ with your public server's IP address. This is an example of an IP unroutable on the internet. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT If everything is configured properly, we should see our /site/ pop up momentarily. The /SSL certificate/ will fail for a few minutes until /Traefik/ is able to generate a new one and serve it. Give it some time. Once everything up and running, you can enjoy your /blog/ being served by /Traefik/ through an /nginx/ container. **** Conclusion You can serve your /static blog/ with /Traefik/ and /nginx/ easily. Make sure to take the necessary measures to run container /safely/ and it should be easy as pie. /Traefik/ makes it possible to route to multiple containers this way, allowing us to add more services to the /docker-compose/ file. At the same time, /nginx/, with the /templating feature/, offers us another flexible way to serve a big variety of /static sites/. Using them in combination open a wide range of possibilities. ** K3s :@k3s: *** DONE Building k3s on a Pi :arm:kubernetes: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-08-09 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-08-09 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: building-k3s-on-a-pi :CUSTOM_ID: building-k3s-on-a-pi :END: I have had a *Pi* laying around used for a simple task for a while now. A few days ago, I was browsing the web, learning more about privacy, when I stumbled upon [[https://adguard.com/en/welcome.html][AdGuard Home]]. I have been using it as my internal DNS on top of the security and privacy layers I add to my machine. Its benefits can be argued but it is a DNS after all and I wanted to see what else it can do for me. Anyway, I digress. I searched to see if I could find a container for *AdGuard Home* and I did. At this point, I started thinking about what I could do to make the [[https://www.raspberrypi.org/][Pi]] more useful. That's when [[https://k3s.io/][k3s]] came into the picture. #+hugo: more **** Pre-requisites As this is not a *Pi* tutorial, I am going to be assuming that you have a /Raspberry Pi/ with *Raspberry Pi OS* /Buster/ installed on it. The assumption does not mean you cannot install any other OS on the Pi and run this setup. It only means that I have tested this on /Buster/ and that your milage will vary. **** Prepare the Pi Now that you have /Buster/ already installed, let's go ahead and [[https://rancher.com/docs/k3s/latest/en/advanced/#enabling-legacy-iptables-on-raspbian-buster][fix]] a small default configuration issue with it. *K3s* uses =iptables= to route things around correctly. /Buster/ uses =nftables= by default, let's switch it to =iptables=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ sudo iptables -F $ sudo update-alternatives --set iptables /usr/sbin/iptables-legacy $ sudo update-alternatives --set ip6tables /usr/sbin/ip6tables-legacy $ sudo reboot #+END_EXAMPLE At this point, your /Pi/ should reboot. Your *OS* is configured for the next step. **** Pre-install Configuration After testing *k3s* a few times, I found out that by /default/ it will deploy a few extra services like [[https://docs.traefik.io/][Traefik]]. Unfortunately, just like anything the /default/ configuration is just that. It's plain and not very useful from the start. You will need to tweak it. This step could be done either /post/ or /pre/ deploy. Figuring out the /pre-deploy/ is a bit more involving but a bit more fun as well. The first thing you need to know is that the normal behavior of *k3s* is to deploy anything found in =/var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/=. So a good first step is, of course, to proceed with creating that. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ mkdir -p /var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/ #+END_EXAMPLE The other thing to know is that *k3s* can deploy /Helm Charts/. It will create the /manifests/ it will deploy by default, before beginning the setup, in the manifest path I mentioned. If you would like to see what it deployed and how, visit that path after *k3s* runs. I did, and I took their configuration of *Traefik* which I was unhappy with its /defaults/. My next step was securing the /defaults/ as much as possible and I found out that *Traefik* can do [[https://docs.traefik.io/v2.0/middlewares/basicauth/][basic authentication]]. As a starting point, that's great. Let's create the credentials. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ htpasswd -c ./auth myUser #+END_EXAMPLE That was easy so far. Let's turn up the notch and create the manifest for *k3s*. Create =traefik.yaml= in =/var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/= with the following content. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: helm.cattle.io/v1 kind: HelmChart metadata: name: traefik namespace: kube-system spec: chart: https://%{KUBERNETES_API}%/static/charts/traefik-1.81.0.tgz valuesContent: |- rbac: enabled: true ssl: enabled: true dashboard: enabled: true domain: traefik-ui.example.com auth: basic: myUser: $ars3$4A5tdstr$trSDDa4467Tsa54sTs. metrics: prometheus: enabled: false kubernetes: ingressEndpoint: useDefaultPublishedService: true image: "rancher/library-traefik" tolerations: - key: "CriticalAddonsOnly" operator: "Exists" - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/master" operator: "Exists" effect: "NoSchedule" #+END_SRC It's a *Pi*, I don't need prometheus so I disabled it. I also enabled the dashboard and added the credentials we created in the previous step. Now, the /Helm Chart/ will deploy an ingress and expose the dashboard for you on the value of =domain=. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I figured out the values to set in =valuesContent= by reading the /Helm Chart/ #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** K3s If everything is in place, you are ready to proceed. You can install *k3s*, now, but before I get to that step, I will say a few things about *k3s*. *K3s* has a smaller feature set than *k8s*, hence the smaller footprint. Read the documentation to see if you need any of the missing features. The second thing to mention is that *k3s* is a one binary deploy that uses *containerd*. That's why we will use the script installation method as it adds the necessary *systemd* configuration for us. It is a nice gesture. Let's do that, shall we ? #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ curl -sfL https://get.k3s.io | sh -s - --no-deploy traefik #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT We need to make sure that *k3s* does not deploy its own *traefik* but ours. Make sure to add =--no-deploy traefik= to our deployment command. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Point =traefik.example.com= to your *Pi* =IP= in =/etc/hosts= on your machine. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE traefik.example.com 192.168.0.5 #+END_EXAMPLE When the installation command is done, you should be able to visit [[http://traefik.example.com/][http://traefik.example.com/]] You can get the /kubeconfig/ from the /Raspberry Pi/, you can find it in =/etc/rancher/k3s/k3s.yaml=. You will need to change the =server= *IP*. **** Conclusion If you've made it so far, you should have a *k3s* cluster running on a single /Raspberry Pi/. The next steps you might want to look into is disable the /metrics/ server and use the resources for other things. ** Kubernetes :@kubernetes: *** DONE Minikube Setup :minikube:ingress:ingress_controller: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-07-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-02-09 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: minikube-setup :CUSTOM_ID: minikube-setup :END: If you have ever worked with /kubernetes/, you'd know that minikube out of the box does not give you what you need for a quick setup. I'm sure you can go =minikube start=, everything's up... Great... =kubectl get pods -n kube-system=... It works, let's move on... But what if it's not let's move on to something else. We need to look at this as a local test environment in capabilities. We can learn so much from it before applying to the lab. But, as always, there are a few tweaks we need to perform to give it the magic it needs to be a real environment. #+hugo: more **** Prerequisites If you are looking into /kubernetes/, I would suppose that you know your linux's ABCs and you can install and configure /minikube/ and its prerequisites prior to the beginning of this tutorial. You can find the guide to install /minikube/ and configure it on the /minikube/ [[https://kubernetes.io/docs/setup/minikube/][webpage]]. Anyway, make sure you have /minikube/ installed, /kubectl/ and whatever driver dependencies you need to run it under that driver. In my case, I am using /kvm2/ which will be reflected in the commands given to start /minikube/. **** Starting /minikube/ Let's start minikube. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ minikube start --vm-driver=kvm2 Starting local Kubernetes v1.13.2 cluster... Starting VM... Getting VM IP address... Moving files into cluster... Setting up certs... Connecting to cluster... Setting up kubeconfig... Stopping extra container runtimes... Starting cluster components... Verifying apiserver health ... Kubectl is now configured to use the cluster. Loading cached images from config file. Everything looks great. Please enjoy minikube! #+END_EXAMPLE Great... At this point we have a cluster that's running, let's verify. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # Id Name State -------------------------- 3 minikube running #+END_EXAMPLE For me, I can check =virsh=. If you used /VirtualBox/ you can check that. We can also test with =kubectl=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl version Client Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"13", GitVersion:"v1.13.3", GitCommit:"721bfa751924da8d1680787490c54b9179b1fed0", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2019-02-01T20:08:12Z", GoVersion:"go1.11.5", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"} Server Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"13", GitVersion:"v1.13.2", GitCommit:"cff46ab41ff0bb44d8584413b598ad8360ec1def", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2019-01-10T23:28:14Z", GoVersion:"go1.11.4", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"} #+END_EXAMPLE Now what ? Well, now we deploy a few addons that we need to deploy in production as well for a functioning /kubernetes/ cluster. Let's check the list of add-ons available out of the box. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ minikube addons list - addon-manager: enabled - dashboard: enabled - default-storageclass: enabled - efk: disabled - freshpod: disabled - gvisor: disabled - heapster: enabled - ingress: enabled - kube-dns: disabled - metrics-server: enabled - nvidia-driver-installer: disabled - nvidia-gpu-device-plugin: disabled - registry: disabled - registry-creds: disabled - storage-provisioner: enabled - storage-provisioner-gluster: disabled #+END_EXAMPLE Make sure you have /dashboard/, /heapster/, /ingress/ and /metrics-server/ *enabled*. You can enable add-ons with =kubectl addons enable=. **** What's the problem then ? Here's the problem that comes next. How do you access the dashboard or anything running in the cluster ? Everyone online suggests you proxy a port and you access the dashboard. Is that really how it should work ? Is that how production system do it ? The answer is of course not. They use different types of /ingresses/ at their disposal. In this case, /minikube/ was kind enough to provide one for us, the default /kubernetes ingress controller/, It's a great option for an ingress controller that's solid enough for production use. Fine, a lot of babble. Yes sure but this babble is important. So how do we access stuff on a cluster ? To answer that question we need to understand a few things. Yes, you can use a =NodePort= on your service and access it that way. But do you really want to manage these ports ? What's in use and what's not ? Besides, wouldn't it be better if you can use one port for all of the services ? How you may ask ? We've been doing it for years, and by we I mean /ops/ and /devops/ people. You have to understand that the kubernetes ingress controller is simply an /nginx/ under the covers. We've always been able to configure /nginx/ to listen for a specific /hostname/ and redirect it where we want to. It shouldn't be that hard to do right ? Well this is what an ingress controller does. It uses the default ports to route traffic from the outside according to hostname called. Let's look at our cluster and see what we need. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl get services --all-namespaces NAMESPACE NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE default kubernetes ClusterIP 10.96.0.1 443/TCP 17m kube-system default-http-backend NodePort 10.96.77.15 80:30001/TCP 17m kube-system heapster ClusterIP 10.100.193.109 80/TCP 17m kube-system kube-dns ClusterIP 10.96.0.10 53/UDP,53/TCP 17m kube-system kubernetes-dashboard ClusterIP 10.106.156.91 80/TCP 17m kube-system metrics-server ClusterIP 10.103.137.86 443/TCP 17m kube-system monitoring-grafana NodePort 10.109.127.87 80:30002/TCP 17m kube-system monitoring-influxdb ClusterIP 10.106.174.177 8083/TCP,8086/TCP 17m #+END_EXAMPLE In my case, you can see that I have a few things that are in =NodePort= configuration and you can access them on those ports. But the /kubernetes-dashboard/ is a =ClusterIP= and we can't get to it. So let's change that by adding an ingress to the service. **** Ingress An ingress is an object of kind =ingress= that configures the ingress controller of your choice. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1 kind: Ingress metadata: name: kubernetes-dashboard namespace: kube-system annotations: nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: / spec: rules: - host: dashboard.kube.local http: paths: - path: / backend: serviceName: kubernetes-dashboard servicePort: 80 #+END_SRC Save that to a file =kube-dashboard-ingress.yaml= or something then run. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl apply -f kube-bashboard-ingress.yaml ingress.extensions/kubernetes-dashboard created #+END_EXAMPLE And now we get this. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl get ingress --all-namespaces NAMESPACE NAME HOSTS ADDRESS PORTS AGE kube-system kubernetes-dashboard dashboard.kube.local 80 17s #+END_EXAMPLE Now all we need to know is the IP of our kubernetes cluster of /one/. Don't worry /minikube/ makes it easy for us. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ minikube ip 192.168.39.79 #+END_EXAMPLE Now let's add that host to our =/etc/hosts= file. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 192.168.39.79 dashboard.kube.local #+END_EXAMPLE Now if you go to [[http://dashboard.kube.local]] in your browser, you will be welcomed with the dashboard. How is that so ? Well as I explained, point it to the nodes of the cluster with the proper hostname and it works. You can deploy multiple services that can be accessed this way, you can also integrate this with a service mesh or a service discovery which could find the up and running nodes that can redirect you to point to at all times. But this is the clean way to expose services outside the cluster. *** DONE Your First Minikube Helm Deployment :minikube:ingress:helm:prometheus:grafana: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-06-21 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-02-10 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: your-first-minikube-helm-deployment :CUSTOM_ID: your-first-minikube-helm-deployment :END: In the last post, we have configured a basic /minikube/ cluster. In this post we will deploy a few items we will need in a cluster and maybe in the future, experiment with it a bit. #+hugo: more **** Prerequisite During this post and probably during future posts, we will be using /helm/ to deploy to our /minikube/ cluster. Some offered by the helm team, others by the community and maybe our own. We need to install =helm= on our machine. It should be as easy as downloading the binary but if you can find it in your package manager go that route. **** Deploying Tiller Before we can start with the deployments using =helm=, we need to deploy /tiller/. It's a service that manages communications with the client and deployments. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ helm init --history-max=10 Creating ~/.helm Creating ~/.helm/repository Creating ~/.helm/repository/cache Creating ~/.helm/repository/local Creating ~/.helm/plugins Creating ~/.helm/starters Creating ~/.helm/cache/archive Creating ~/.helm/repository/repositories.yaml Adding stable repo with URL: https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com Adding local repo with URL: http://127.0.0.1:8879/charts $HELM_HOME has been configured at ~/.helm. Tiller (the Helm server-side component) has been installed into your Kubernetes Cluster. Please note: by default, Tiller is deployed with an insecure 'allow unauthenticated users' policy. To prevent this, run ``helm init`` with the --tiller-tls-verify flag. For more information on securing your installation see: https://docs.helm.sh/using_helm/#securing-your-helm-installation #+END_EXAMPLE /Tiller/ is deployed, give it a few minutes for the pods to come up. **** Deploy Prometheus We often need to monitor multiple aspects of the cluster easily. Sometimes maybe even write our applications to (let's say) publish metrics to prometheus. And I said 'let's say' because technically we offer an endpoint that a prometheus exporter will consume regularly and publish to the prometheus server. Anyway, let's deploy prometheus. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ helm install stable/prometheus-operator --name prometheus-operator --namespace kube-prometheus NAME: prometheus-operator LAST DEPLOYED: Sat Feb 9 18:09:43 2019 NAMESPACE: kube-prometheus STATUS: DEPLOYED RESOURCES: ==> v1/Secret NAME TYPE DATA AGE prometheus-operator-grafana Opaque 3 4s alertmanager-prometheus-operator-alertmanager Opaque 1 4s ==> v1beta1/ClusterRole NAME AGE prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 3s psp-prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 3s psp-prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter 3s ==> v1/Service NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE prometheus-operator-grafana ClusterIP 10.107.125.114 80/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics ClusterIP 10.99.250.30 8080/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter ClusterIP 10.111.99.199 9100/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-alertmanager ClusterIP 10.96.49.73 9093/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-coredns ClusterIP None 9153/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-kube-controller-manager ClusterIP None 10252/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-kube-etcd ClusterIP None 4001/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-kube-scheduler ClusterIP None 10251/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-operator ClusterIP 10.101.253.101 8080/TCP 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus ClusterIP 10.107.117.120 9090/TCP 3s ==> v1beta1/DaemonSet NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE NODE SELECTOR AGE prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter 1 1 0 1 0 3s ==> v1/Deployment NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE prometheus-operator-operator 1 1 1 0 3s ==> v1/ServiceMonitor NAME AGE prometheus-operator-alertmanager 2s prometheus-operator-coredns 2s prometheus-operator-apiserver 2s prometheus-operator-kube-controller-manager 2s prometheus-operator-kube-etcd 2s prometheus-operator-kube-scheduler 2s prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 2s prometheus-operator-kubelet 2s prometheus-operator-node-exporter 2s prometheus-operator-operator 2s prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s ==> v1/Pod(related) NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter-fntpx 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 3s prometheus-operator-grafana-8559d7df44-vrm8d 0/3 ContainerCreating 0 2s prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics-7769f5bd54-6znvh 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 2s prometheus-operator-operator-7967865bf5-cbd6r 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 2s ==> v1beta1/PodSecurityPolicy NAME PRIV CAPS SELINUX RUNASUSER FSGROUP SUPGROUP READONLYROOTFS VOLUMES prometheus-operator-grafana false RunAsAny RunAsAny RunAsAny RunAsAny false configMap,emptyDir,projected,secret,downwardAPI,persistentVolumeClaim prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics false RunAsAny MustRunAsNonRoot MustRunAs MustRunAs false secret prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter false RunAsAny RunAsAny MustRunAs MustRunAs false configMap,emptyDir,projected,secret,downwardAPI,persistentVolumeClaim,hostPath prometheus-operator-alertmanager false RunAsAny RunAsAny MustRunAs MustRunAs false configMap,emptyDir,projected,secret,downwardAPI,persistentVolumeClaim prometheus-operator-operator false RunAsAny RunAsAny MustRunAs MustRunAs false configMap,emptyDir,projected,secret,downwardAPI,persistentVolumeClaim prometheus-operator-prometheus false RunAsAny RunAsAny MustRunAs MustRunAs false configMap,emptyDir,projected,secret,downwardAPI,persistentVolumeClaim ==> v1/ConfigMap NAME DATA AGE prometheus-operator-grafana-config-dashboards 1 4s prometheus-operator-grafana 1 4s prometheus-operator-grafana-datasource 1 4s prometheus-operator-etcd 1 4s prometheus-operator-grafana-coredns-k8s 1 4s prometheus-operator-k8s-cluster-rsrc-use 1 4s prometheus-operator-k8s-node-rsrc-use 1 4s prometheus-operator-k8s-resources-cluster 1 4s prometheus-operator-k8s-resources-namespace 1 4s prometheus-operator-k8s-resources-pod 1 4s prometheus-operator-nodes 1 4s prometheus-operator-persistentvolumesusage 1 4s prometheus-operator-pods 1 4s prometheus-operator-statefulset 1 4s ==> v1/ClusterRoleBinding NAME AGE prometheus-operator-grafana-clusterrolebinding 3s prometheus-operator-alertmanager 3s prometheus-operator-operator 3s prometheus-operator-operator-psp 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus-psp 3s ==> v1beta1/Role NAME AGE prometheus-operator-grafana 3s ==> v1beta1/Deployment NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 1 1 1 0 3s ==> v1/Alertmanager NAME AGE prometheus-operator-alertmanager 3s ==> v1/ServiceAccount NAME SECRETS AGE prometheus-operator-grafana 1 4s prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 1 4s prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter 1 4s prometheus-operator-alertmanager 1 4s prometheus-operator-operator 1 4s prometheus-operator-prometheus 1 4s ==> v1/ClusterRole NAME AGE prometheus-operator-grafana-clusterrole 4s prometheus-operator-alertmanager 3s prometheus-operator-operator 3s prometheus-operator-operator-psp 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus-psp 3s ==> v1/Role NAME AGE prometheus-operator-prometheus-config 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s ==> v1beta1/RoleBinding NAME AGE prometheus-operator-grafana 3s ==> v1beta2/Deployment NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE prometheus-operator-grafana 1 1 1 0 3s ==> v1/Prometheus NAME AGE prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s ==> v1beta1/ClusterRoleBinding NAME AGE prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 3s psp-prometheus-operator-kube-state-metrics 3s psp-prometheus-operator-prometheus-node-exporter 3s ==> v1/RoleBinding NAME AGE prometheus-operator-prometheus-config 3s prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s prometheus-operator-prometheus 2s ==> v1/PrometheusRule NAME AGE prometheus-operator-alertmanager.rules 2s prometheus-operator-etcd 2s prometheus-operator-general.rules 2s prometheus-operator-k8s.rules 2s prometheus-operator-kube-apiserver.rules 2s prometheus-operator-kube-prometheus-node-alerting.rules 2s prometheus-operator-kube-prometheus-node-recording.rules 2s prometheus-operator-kube-scheduler.rules 2s prometheus-operator-kubernetes-absent 2s prometheus-operator-kubernetes-apps 2s prometheus-operator-kubernetes-resources 2s prometheus-operator-kubernetes-storage 2s prometheus-operator-kubernetes-system 2s prometheus-operator-node.rules 2s prometheus-operator-prometheus-operator 2s prometheus-operator-prometheus.rules 2s NOTES: The Prometheus Operator has been installed. Check its status by running: kubectl --namespace kube-prometheus get pods -l "release=prometheus-operator" Visit [[https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator]] for instructions on how to create & configure Alertmanager and Prometheus instances using the Operator. #+END_EXAMPLE At this point, prometheus has been deployed to the cluster. Give it a few minutes for all the pods to come up. Let's keep on working to get access to the rest of the consoles offered by the prometheus deployment. **** Prometheus Console Let's write an ingress configuration to expose the prometheus console. First off we need to list all the service deployed for prometheus. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl get service prometheus-operator-prometheus -o yaml -n kube-prometheus apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: creationTimestamp: "2019-02-09T23:09:55Z" labels: app: prometheus-operator-prometheus chart: prometheus-operator-2.1.6 heritage: Tiller release: prometheus-operator name: prometheus-operator-prometheus namespace: kube-prometheus resourceVersion: "10996" selfLink: /api/v1/namespaces/kube-prometheus/services/prometheus-operator-prometheus uid: d038d6fa-2cbf-11e9-b74f-48ea5bb87c0b spec: clusterIP: 10.107.117.120 ports: - name: web port: 9090 protocol: TCP targetPort: web selector: app: prometheus prometheus: prometheus-operator-prometheus sessionAffinity: None type: ClusterIP status: loadBalancer: {} #+END_EXAMPLE As we can see from the service above, its name is =prometheus-operator-prometheus= and it's listening on port =9090=. So let's write the ingress configuration for it. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1 kind: Ingress metadata: name: prometheus-dashboard namespace: kube-prometheus annotations: nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: / spec: rules: - host: prometheus.kube.local http: paths: - path: / backend: serviceName: prometheus-operator-prometheus servicePort: 9090 #+END_SRC Save the file as =kube-prometheus-ingress.yaml= or some such and deploy. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl apply -f kube-prometheus-ingress.yaml ingress.extensions/prometheus-dashboard created #+END_EXAMPLE And then add the service host to our =/etc/hosts=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 192.168.39.78 prometheus.kube.local #+END_EXAMPLE Now you can access [[http://prometheus.kube.local]] from your browser. **** Grafana Console Much like what we did with the prometheus console previously, we need to do the same to the grafana dashboard. First step, let's check the service. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl get service prometheus-operator-grafana -o yaml -n kube-prometheus #+END_EXAMPLE Gives you the following output. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: creationTimestamp: "2019-02-09T23:09:55Z" labels: app: grafana chart: grafana-1.25.0 heritage: Tiller release: prometheus-operator name: prometheus-operator-grafana namespace: kube-prometheus resourceVersion: "10973" selfLink: /api/v1/namespaces/kube-prometheus/services/prometheus-operator-grafana uid: cffe169b-2cbf-11e9-b74f-48ea5bb87c0b spec: clusterIP: 10.107.125.114 ports: - name: service port: 80 protocol: TCP targetPort: 3000 selector: app: grafana release: prometheus-operator sessionAffinity: None type: ClusterIP status: loadBalancer: {} #+END_SRC We get =prometheus-operator-grafana= and port =80=. Next is the ingress configuration. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1 kind: Ingress metadata: name: prometheus-grafana namespace: kube-prometheus annotations: nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: / spec: rules: - host: grafana.kube.local http: paths: - path: / backend: serviceName: prometheus-operator-grafana servicePort: 80 #+END_SRC Then we deploy. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl apply -f kube-grafana-ingress.yaml $ ingress.extensions/prometheus-grafana created #+END_EXAMPLE And let's not forget =/etc/hosts=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 192.168.39.78 grafana.kube.local #+END_EXAMPLE And the grafana dashboard should appear if you visit [[http://grafana.kube.local]]. *** DONE Local Kubernetes Cluster on KVM :rancher:rancheros:kvm:libvirt: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-06-21 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-02-17 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm :CUSTOM_ID: local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm :END: I wanted to explore /kubernetes/ even more for myself and for this blog. I've worked on pieces of this at work but not the totality of the work which I would like to understand for myself. I wanted, also to explore new tools and ways to leverage the power of /kubernetes/. So far, I have been using /minikube/ to do the deployments but there is an inherit restriction that comes with using a single bundled node. Sure, it is easy to get it up and running but at some point I had to use =nodePort= to go around the IP restriction. This is a restriction that you will have in an actual /kubernetes/ cluster but I will show you later how to go around it. For now, let's just get a local cluster up and running. #+hugo: more **** Objective I needed a local /kubernetes/ cluster using all open source tools and easy to deploy. So I went with using /KVM/ as the hypervisor layer and installed =virt-manager= for shallow management. As an OS, I wanted something light and made for /kubernetes/. As I already know of Rancher (being an easy way to deploy /kubernetes/ and they have done a great job so far since the launch of their Rancer 2.0) I decided to try /RancherOS/. So let's see how all that works together. **** Requirements Let's start by thinking about what we actually need. Rancher, the dashboard they offer is going to need a VM by itself and they [[https://rancher.com/docs/rancher/v2.x/en/quick-start-guide/deployment/quickstart-vagrant/][recommend]] /4GB of RAM/. I only have /16GB of RAM/ on my machine so I'll have to do the math to see how much I can afford to give this /dashboard/ and /manager/. By looking at the /RancherOS/ hardware [[https://rancher.com/docs/os/v1.x/en/][requirements]], I can tell that by giving a each node /2GB/ of RAM I should be able to host a /3 node cluster/ and with /2/ more for the /dashboard/ that puts me right on /8GB of RAM/. So we need to create /4 VMs/ with /2GB of RAM/ each. **** Installing RancherOS Once all 4 nodes have been created, when you boot into the /RancherOS/ [[https://rancher.com/docs/os/v1.x/en/installation/running-rancheros/workstation/boot-from-iso/][ISO]] do the following. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Because I was using /libvirt/, I was able to do =virsh console = and run these commands. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Virsh Console If you are running these VMs on /libvirt/, then you can console into the box and run =vi=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # virsh list Id Name State ------------------------- 21 kube01 running 22 kube02 running 23 kube03 running 24 rancher running # virsh console rancher #+END_EXAMPLE **** Configuration If you read the /RancherOS/ [[https://rancher.com/docs/os/v1.x/en/][documentation]], you'll find out that you can configure the /OS/ with a =YAML= configuration file so let's do that. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ vi cloud-config.yml #+END_EXAMPLE And that file should hold. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- hostname: rancher.kube.loco ssh_authorized_keys: - ssh-rsa AAA... rancher: network: interfaces: eth0: address: 192.168.122.5/24 dhcp: false gateway: 192.168.122.1 mtu: 1500 #+END_SRC Make sure that your *public* /ssh key/ is replaced in the example before and if you have a different network configuration for your VMs, change the network configuration here. After you save that file, install the /OS/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ sudo ros install -c cloud-config.yml -d /dev/sda #+END_EXAMPLE Do the same for the rest of the servers and their names and IPs should be as follows (if you are following this tutorial): #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 192.168.122.5 rancher.kube.loco 192.168.122.10 kube01.kube.loco 192.168.122.11 kube02.kube.loco 192.168.122.12 kube03.kube.loco #+END_EXAMPLE **** Post Installation Configuration After /RancherOS/ has been installed, one will need to configure =/etc/hosts= and it should look like the following if one is working off of the /Rancher/ box. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ sudo vi /etc/hosts #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 127.0.0.1 rancher.kube.loco 192.168.122.5 rancher.kube.loco 192.168.122.10 kube01.kube.loco 192.168.122.11 kube02.kube.loco 192.168.122.12 kube03.kube.loco #+END_EXAMPLE Do the same on the rest of the servers while changing the =127.0.0.1= hostname to the host of the server. **** Installing Rancher At this point, I have to stress a few facts: - This is not the Rancher recommended way to deploy /kubernetes/. - The recommended way is of course [[https://rancher.com/docs/rke/v0.1.x/en/][RKE]]. - This is for testing, so I did not take into consideration backup of anything. - There are ways to backup Rancher configuration by mounting storage from the =rancher= docker container. If those points are understood, let's go ahead and deploy Rancher. First, =$ ssh rancher@192.168.122.5= then: #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE [rancher@rancher ~]$ docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped -p 80:80 -p 443:443 rancher/rancher #+END_EXAMPLE Give it a few minutes for the container to come up and the application as well. Meanwhile configure your =/etc/hosts= file on your machine. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE 192.168.122.5 rancher.kube.loco #+END_EXAMPLE Now that all that is out of the way, you can login to [[https://rancher.kube.loco]] and set your =admin= password and the =url= for Rancher. **** Deploying Kubernetes Now that everything is ready, let's deploy /kubernetes/ the easy way. At this point you should be greeted with a page that looks like the following. #+caption: Add Cluster Page #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/01-add-cluster.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/01-add-cluster.png]] Click on the *Add Cluser* #+caption: Custom Cluster Page #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/02-custom-cluster.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/02-custom-cluster.png]] Make sure you choose *Custom* as a /provider/. Then fill in the *Cluser Name* in our case we'll call it *kube*. #+caption: Network Provider: Calico (Optional) #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/03-calico-networkProvider.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/03-calico-networkProvider.png]] Optionally, you can choose your *Network Providor*, in my case I chose *Calico*. Then I clicked on *show advanced* at the bottom right corner then expanded the /newly shown tab/ *Advanced Cluster Options*. #+caption: Nginx Ingress Disabled #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/04-nginx-ingressDisabled.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/04-nginx-ingressDisabled.png]] We will disable the *Nginx Ingress* and the *Pod Security Policy Support* for the time being. This will become more apparent why in the future, hopefully. Then hit *Next*. #+caption: Customize Nodes #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/05-customize-nodes.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/05-customize-nodes.png]] Make sure that you select all *3 Node Roles*. Set the *Public Address* and the *Node Name* to the first node and then copy the command and paste it on the /first/ node. Do the same for /all the rest/. Once the first docker image gets downloaded and ran you should see a message pop at the bottom. #+caption: Registered Nodes #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/06-registered-nodes.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/06-registered-nodes.png]] #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Do *NOT* click /done/ until you see all /3 nodes registered/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Finalizing Now that you have /3 registered nodes/, click *Done* and go grab yourself a cup of coffee. Maybe take a long walk, this will take time. Or if you are curious like me, you'd be looking at the logs, checking the containers in a quad pane =tmux= session. After a long time has passed, our story ends with a refresh and a welcome with this page. #+caption: Kubernetes Cluster #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/07-kubernetes-cluster.png][file:images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/07-kubernetes-cluster.png]] Welcome to your Kubernetes Cluster. **** Conclusion At this point, you can check that all the nodes are healthy and you got yourself a kubernetes cluster. In future blog posts we will explore an avenue to deploy /multiple ingress controllers/ on the same cluster on the same =port: 80= by giving them each an IP external to the cluster. But for now, you got yourself a kubernetes cluster to play with. Enjoy. *** DONE Deploying Helm in your Kubernetes Cluster :helm:tiller: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-07-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-03-16 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: deploying-helm-in-your-kubernetes-cluster :CUSTOM_ID: deploying-helm-in-your-kubernetes-cluster :END: In the previous post in the /kubernetes/ series, we deployed a small /kubernetes/ cluster locally on /KVM/. In future posts we will be deploying more things into the cluster. This will enable us to test different projects, ingresses, service meshes, and more from the open source community, build specifically for /kubernetes/. To help with this future quest, we will be leveraging a kubernetes package manager. You've read it right, helm is a kubernetes package manager. Let's get started shall we ? #+hugo: more **** Helm As mentioned above, helm is a kubernetes package manager. You can read more about the helm project on their [[https://helm.sh/][homepage]]. It offers a way to Go template the deployments of service and package them into a portable package that can be installed using the helm command line. Generally, you would install the helm binary on your machine and install it into the cluster. In our case, the /RBACs/ deployed in the kubernetes cluster by rancher prevent the default installation from working. Not a problem, we can go around the problem and we will in this post. This is a win for us because this will give us the opportunity to learn more about helm and kubernetes. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT This is not a production recommended way to deploy helm. I would *NOT* deploy helm this way on a production cluster. I would restrict the permissions of any =ServiceAccount= deployed in the cluster to its bare minimum requirements. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** What are we going to do ? We need to understand a bit of what's going on and what we are trying to do. To be able to do that, we need to understand how /helm/ works. From a high level, the =helm= command line tool will deploy a service called /Tiller/ as a =Deployment=. The /Tiller/ service talks to the /kubernetes/ /API/ and manages the deployment process while the =helm= command line tool talks to /Tiller/ from its end. So a proper deployment of /Tiller/ in a /kubernetes/ sense is to create a =ServiceAccount=, give the =ServiceAccount= the proper permissions to be able to do what it needs to do and you got yourself a working /Tiller/. **** Service Account This is where we start by creating a =ServiceAccount=. The =ServiceAccount= looks like this. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: tiller namespace: kube-system #+END_SRC We de deploy the =ServiceAccount= to the cluster. Save it to =ServiceAccount.yaml=. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl apply -f ServiceAccount.yaml serviceaccount/tiller created #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT To read more about =ServiceAccount= and their uses please visit the /kubernetes/ documentation page on the [[https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/service-accounts-admin/][topic]]. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Cluster Role Binding We have /Tiller/ (=ServiceAccount=) deployed in =kube-system= (=namespace=). We need to give it access. ***** Option 1 We have the option of either creating a =Role= which would restrict /Tiller/ to the current =namespace=, then tie them together with a =RoleBinding=. This option will restrict /Tiller/ to that =namespace= and that =namespace= only. ***** Option 2 Another option is to create a =ClusterRole= and tie the =ServiceAccount= to that =ClusterRole= with a =ClusterRoleBinding= and this will give /Tiller/ access across /namespaces/. ***** Option 3 In our case, we already know that =ClustRole= =cluster-admin= already exists in the cluster so we are going to give /Tiller/ =cluster-admin= access. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: tiller roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: cluster-admin subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount name: tiller namespace: kube-system #+END_SRC Save the following in =ClusterRoleBinding.yaml= and then #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ kubectl apply -f ClusterRoleBinding.yaml clusterrolebinding.rbac.authorization.k8s.io/tiller created #+END_EXAMPLE **** Deploying Tiller Now that we have all the basics deployed, we can finally deploy /Tiller/ in the cluster. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ helm init --service-account tiller --tiller-namespace kube-system --history-max 10 Creating ~/.helm Creating ~/.helm/repository Creating ~/.helm/repository/cache Creating ~/.helm/repository/local Creating ~/.helm/plugins Creating ~/.helm/starters Creating ~/.helm/cache/archive Creating ~/.helm/repository/repositories.yaml Adding stable repo with URL: https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com Adding local repo with URL: http://127.0.0.1:8879/charts $HELM_HOME has been configured at ~/.helm. Tiller (the Helm server-side component) has been installed into your Kubernetes Cluster. Please note: by default, Tiller is deployed with an insecure 'allow unauthenticated users' policy. To prevent this, run `helm init` with the --tiller-tls-verify flag. For more information on securing your installation see: https://docs.helm.sh/using_helm/#securing-your-helm-installation Happy Helming! #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Please make sure you read the helm installation documentation if you are deploying this in a production environment. You can find how you can make it more secure [[https://helm.sh/docs/using_helm/#securing-your-helm-installation][there]]. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT After a few minutes, your /Tiller/ deployment or as it's commonly known as a =helm install= or a =helm init=. If you want to check that everything has been deployed properly you can run. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ helm version Client: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.13.0", GitCommit:"79d07943b03aea2b76c12644b4b54733bc5958d6", GitTreeState:"clean"} Server: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.13.0", GitCommit:"79d07943b03aea2b76c12644b4b54733bc5958d6", GitTreeState:"clean"} #+END_EXAMPLE Everything seems to be working properly. In future posts, we will be leveraging the power and convenience of helm to expand our cluster's capabilities and learn more about what we can do with kubernetes. ** MISC :@misc: *** DONE A Quick ZFS Overview on Linux :zfs:file_system: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-01-27 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-01-27 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: a-quick-zfs-overview-on-linux :CUSTOM_ID: a-quick-zfs-overview-on-linux :END: I have, for years, been interested in /file systems/. Specifically a /file system/ to run my personal systems on. For most people *Ext4* is good enough and that is totally fine. But, as a power user, I like to have more control, more features and more options out of my file system. I have played with most of file sytsems on Linux, and have been using *Btrfs* for a few years now. I have worked with NAS systems running on *ZFS* and have been very impressed by it. The only problem is that *ZFS* wasn't been well suppored on Linux at the time. *Btrfs* promissed to be the *ZFS* replacement for Linux nativetly, especially that it was backed up by a bunch of the giants like Oracle and RedHat. My decision at that point was made, and yes that was before RedHat's support for *XFS* which is impressive on its own. Recently though, a new project gave everyone hope. [[http://www.open-zfs.org/wiki/Main_Page][OpenZFS]] came to life and so did [[https://zfsonlinux.org/][ZFS on Linux]]. #+hugo: more Linux has had *ZFS* support for a while now but mostly to manage a *ZFS* /file system/, so I kept watching until I saw a blog post by *Ubuntu* entitled [[https://ubuntu.com/blog/enhancing-our-zfs-support-on-ubuntu-19-10-an-introduction][Enhancing our ZFS support on Ubuntu 19.10 -- an introduction]]. In the blog post above, I read the following: #+BEGIN_QUOTE We want to support ZFS on root as an experimental installer option, initially for desktop, but keeping the layout extensible for server later on. The desktop will be the first beneficiary in Ubuntu 19.10. Note the use of the term ‘experimental' though! #+END_QUOTE My eyes widened at this point. I know that *Ubuntu* has had native *ZFS* support since 2016 but now I could install it with one click. At that point I was all in, and I went back to *Ubuntu*. **** Ubuntu on root ZFS You heard me right, the *Ubuntu* installer offers an 'experimental' install on *ZFS*. I made the decision based on the well tested stability of *ZFS* in production environments and its ability to offer me the flexibility and the ability to backup and recover my data easily. In other words, if *Ubuntu* doesn't work, *ZFS* is there and I can install whatever I like on top and if you are familiar with *ZFS* you know exactly what I mean and I have barely scratched the ice on its capabilities. So here I was with *Ubuntu* installed on my laptop on root *ZFS*. So I had to do it. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # zpool status -v pool: bpool state: ONLINE status: The pool is formatted using a legacy on-disk format. The pool can still be used, but some features are unavailable. action: Upgrade the pool using 'zpool upgrade'. Once this is done, the pool will no longer be accessible on software that does not support feature flags. scan: none requested config: NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM bpool ONLINE 0 0 0 nvme0n1p4 ONLINE 0 0 0 errors: No known data errors pool: rpool state: ONLINE scan: none requested config: NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM rpool ONLINE 0 0 0 nvme0n1p5 ONLINE 0 0 0 errors: No known data errors #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I have read somewhere in a blog about *Ubuntu* that I should not run an upgrade on the boot pool. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT and it's running on... #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # uname -s -v -i -o Linux #28-Ubuntu SMP Wed Dec 18 05:37:46 UTC 2019 x86_64 GNU/Linux #+END_EXAMPLE Well that was pretty easy. **** ZFS Pools Let's take a look at how the installer has configured the /pools/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # zpool list NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE CKPOINT EXPANDSZ FRAG CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT bpool 1,88G 158M 1,72G - - - 8% 1.00x ONLINE - rpool 472G 7,91G 464G - - 0% 1% 1.00x ONLINE - #+END_EXAMPLE So it creates a /boot/ pool and a /root/ pool. Maybe looking at the *datasets* would give us a better idea. **** ZFS Datasets Let's look at the sanitized version of the datasets. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # zfs list NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT bpool 158M 1,60G 176K /boot bpool/BOOT 157M 1,60G 176K none bpool/BOOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx 157M 1,60G 157M /boot rpool 7,92G 449G 96K / rpool/ROOT 4,53G 449G 96K none rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx 4,53G 449G 3,37G / rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/srv 96K 449G 96K /srv rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/usr 208K 449G 96K /usr rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/usr/local 112K 449G 112K /usr/local rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var 1,16G 449G 96K /var rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/games 96K 449G 96K /var/games rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/lib 1,15G 449G 1,04G /var/lib rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/lib/AccountServices 96K 449G 96K /var/lib/AccountServices rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/lib/NetworkManager 152K 449G 152K /var/lib/NetworkManager rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/lib/apt 75,2M 449G 75,2M /var/lib/apt rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/lib/dpkg 36,5M 449G 36,5M /var/lib/dpkg rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/log 11,0M 449G 11,0M /var/log rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/mail 96K 449G 96K /var/mail rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/snap 128K 449G 128K /var/snap rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/spool 112K 449G 112K /var/spool rpool/ROOT/ubuntu_xxxxxx/var/www 96K 449G 96K /var/www rpool/USERDATA 3,38G 449G 96K / rpool/USERDATA/user_yyyyyy 3,37G 449G 3,37G /home/user rpool/USERDATA/root_yyyyyy 7,52M 449G 7,52M /root #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT The installer have created some random IDs that I have not figured out if they are totally random or mapped to something so I have sanitized them. I also sanitized the user, of course. ;) #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT It looks like the installer created a bunch of datasets with their respective mountpoints. **** ZFS Properties *ZFS* has a list of features and they are tunable in different ways, one of them is through the properties, let's have a look. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE # zfs get all rpool NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE rpool type filesystem - rpool creation vr jan 24 23:04 2020 - rpool used 7,91G - rpool available 449G - rpool referenced 96K - rpool compressratio 1.43x - rpool mounted no - rpool quota none default rpool reservation none default rpool recordsize 128K default rpool mountpoint / local ... #+END_EXAMPLE This gives us an idea on properties set on the dataset specified, in this case, the /rpool/ root dataset. **** Conclusion I read in a blog post that the *Ubuntu* team responsible for the *ZFS* support has followed all the *ZFS* best practices in the installer. I have no way of verifying that as I am not a *ZFS* expert but I'll be happy to take their word for it until I learn more. What is certain for now is that I am running on *ZFS*, and I will be enjoying its features to the fullest. *** DONE Email Setup with isync, notmuch, afew, msmtp and Emacs :email:isync:notmuch:afew:msmtp:emacs: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-12-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-11-29 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: email-setup-with-isync-notmuch-afew-msmtp-and-emacs :CUSTOM_ID: email-setup-with-isync-notmuch-afew-msmtp-and-emacs :END: I was asked recently about how I have my email client setup. As I naturally do, I replied with something along the lines of the following. #+begin_quote I use isync, notmuch, afew and msmtp with emacs as an interface, let me get you a link on how I did my setup from my blog. #+end_quote To my surprise, I never wrote about the topic. I guess this is as better time as any to do so. Let's dig in. #+hugo: more **** Bird's-eye View Looking at the big list of tools mentioned in the title, I /could/ understand how one could get intimidated but I *assure* you these are very basic, yet very powerful, tools. First task is to divide and conquer, as usual. We start by the first piece of the puzzle, understand email. In a very simplified way of thinking of email is that each email is simply a file. This file has all the information needed as to who sent it to whom, from which server, etc... The bottom line is that it's simply a file in a folder somewhere on a server. Even though this might not be the case on the server, in this setup it will most certainly be the case locally on your filesystem. Thinking about it in terms of files in directories also makes sense because it will most likely be synchronized back with the server that way as well. Now you might ask, what tool would offer us such a way to synchronize emails and my answer would be... Very many, of course... come on this is /Linux/ and /Open Source/ ! Don't ask silly questions... But to what's relevant to my setup it's /isync/. Now that I have the emails locally on my filesystem, I need a way to interact with them. Some prefer to work with directories, I prefer to work with tags instead. That's where /notmuch/ comes in. You can think of it as an email tagging and querying system. To make my life simpler, I utilize /afew/ to handle a few basic email tasks to save me from writing a lot of /notmuch/ rules. I already make use of /emacs/ extensively in my day to day life and having a /notmuch/ interface in /emacs/ is great. I can use /emacs/ to view, tag, search and send email. Oh wait, right... I wouldn't be able to send email without /msmtp/. **** isync [[https://isync.sourceforge.io/][isync]] is defined as #+begin_quote a command line application which synchronizes mailboxes. #+end_quote While isync currently supports *Maildir* and *IMAP4* mailboxes, it has the very logical command of =mbsync=. Of course ! Now, /isync/ is very well documented in the =man= pages. #+begin_src bash man mbsync #+end_src Everything you need is there, have fun reading. While you read the =man= pages to figure out what you want, I already did that and here's what I want in my =~/.mbsyncrc=. #+begin_src conf ########################## # Personal Configuration # ########################## # Name Account IMAPAccount Personal Host email.hostname.com User personal@email.hostname.com Pass "yourPassword" # One can use a command which returns the password # Such as a password manager or a bash script #PassCmd sh script/path SSLType IMAPS CertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt IMAPStore personal-remote Account Personal MaildirStore personal-local Subfolders Verbatim Path ~/.mail/ Inbox ~/.mail/Inbox Channel sync-personal-inbox Master :personal-remote:"Inbox" Slave :personal-local:Inbox Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes Channel sync-personal-archive Master :personal-remote:"Archive" Slave :personal-local:Archive Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes Channel sync-personal-sent Master :personal-remote:"Sent" Slave :personal-local:Sent Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes Channel sync-personal-trash Master :personal-remote:"Junk" Slave :personal-local:Trash Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes # Get all the channels together into a group. Group Personal Channel sync-personal-inbox Channel sync-personal-archive Channel sync-personal-sent Channel sync-personal-trash #+end_src The following will synchronize both ways the following folders: - Remote "Inbox" with local "Inbox" - Remote "Archive" with local "Archive" - Remote "Sent" with local "Sent" - Remote "Junk" with local "Trash" Those are the only directories I care about. With the configuration in place, we can try to sync the emails. #+begin_src bash mbsync -C -a -V #+end_src **** notmuch You can read more about [[https://notmuchmail.org/][notmuch]] on their webpage. Their explanation is interesting to say the least. What /notmuch/ does, is create a database where it saves all the tags and relevant information for all the emails. This makes it extremely fast to query and do different operations on large numbers of emails. I use /notmuch/ mostly indirectly through /emacs/, so my configuration is very simple. All I want from /notmuch/ is to tag all *new* emails with the =new= tag. #+begin_src conf # .notmuch-config - Configuration file for the notmuch mail system # # For more information about notmuch, see https://notmuchmail.org # Database configuration # # The only value supported here is 'path' which should be the top-level # directory where your mail currently exists and to where mail will be # delivered in the future. Files should be individual email messages. # Notmuch will store its database within a sub-directory of the path # configured here named ".notmuch". # [database] path=/home/user/.mail/ # User configuration # # Here is where you can let notmuch know how you would like to be # addressed. Valid settings are # # name Your full name. # primary_email Your primary email address. # other_email A list (separated by ';') of other email addresses # at which you receive email. # # Notmuch will use the various email addresses configured here when # formatting replies. It will avoid including your own addresses in the # recipient list of replies, and will set the From address based on the # address to which the original email was addressed. # [user] name=My Name primary_email=user@email.com # other_email=email1@example.com;email2@example.com; # Configuration for "notmuch new" # # The following options are supported here: # # tags A list (separated by ';') of the tags that will be # added to all messages incorporated by "notmuch new". # # ignore A list (separated by ';') of file and directory names # that will not be searched for messages by "notmuch new". # # NOTE: *Every* file/directory that goes by one of those # names will be ignored, independent of its depth/location # in the mail store. # [new] tags=new; #tags=unread;inbox; ignore= # Search configuration # # The following option is supported here: # # exclude_tags # A ;-separated list of tags that will be excluded from # search results by default. Using an excluded tag in a # query will override that exclusion. # [search] exclude_tags=deleted;spam; # Maildir compatibility configuration # # The following option is supported here: # # synchronize_flags Valid values are true and false. # # If true, then the following maildir flags (in message filenames) # will be synchronized with the corresponding notmuch tags: # # Flag Tag # ---- ------- # D draft # F flagged # P passed # R replied # S unread (added when 'S' flag is not present) # # The "notmuch new" command will notice flag changes in filenames # and update tags, while the "notmuch tag" and "notmuch restore" # commands will notice tag changes and update flags in filenames # [maildir] synchronize_flags=true #+end_src Now that /notmuch/ is configured the way I want it to, I use it as follows. #+begin_src bash notmuch new #+end_src Yup, that simple. This will tag all new emails with the =new= tag. **** afew Once all the new emails have been properly tagged with the =new= tag by /notmuch/, /afew/ comes in. [[https://github.com/afewmail/afew][/afew/]] is defined as an initial tagging script for /notmuch/. The reason of using it will become evident very soon but let me quote some of what their Github page says. #+begin_quote It can do basic thing such as adding tags based on email headers or maildir folders, handling killed threads and spam. In move mode, afew will move mails between maildir folders according to configurable rules that can contain arbitrary notmuch queries to match against any searchable attributes. #+end_quote This is where the bulk of the configuration is, in all honesty. At this stage, I had to make a decision of how would I like to manage my emails ? I think it should be simple if I save them as folders on the server as it doesn't support tags. I can derive the basic tags from the folders and keep a backup of my database for all the rest of the tags. My configuration looks similar to the following. #+begin_src conf # ~/.config/afew/config [global] [SpamFilter] [KillThreadsFilter] [ListMailsFilter] [SentMailsFilter] [ArchiveSentMailsFilter] sent_tag = sent [DMARCReportInspectionFilter] [Filter.0] message = Tagging Personal Emails query = 'folder:.mail/' tags = +personal [FolderNameFilter.0] folder_explicit_list = .mail/Inbox .mail/Archive .mail/Drafts .mail/Sent .mail/Trash folder_transforms = .mail/Inbox:personal .mail/Archive:personal .mail/Drafts:personal .mail/Sent:personal .mail/Trash:personal folder_lowercases = true [FolderNameFilter.1] folder_explicit_list = .mail/Archive folder_transforms = .mail/Archive:archive folder_lowercases = true [FolderNameFilter.2] folder_explicit_list = .mail/Sent folder_transforms = .mail/Sent:sent folder_lowercases = true [FolderNameFilter.3] folder_explicit_list = .mail/Trash folder_transforms = .mail/Trash:deleted folder_lowercases = true [Filter.1] message = Untagged 'inbox' from 'archive' query = 'tag:archive AND tag:inbox' tags = -inbox [MailMover] folders = .mail/Inbox rename = True max_age = 7 .mail/Inbox = 'tag:deleted':.mail/Trash 'tag:archive':.mail/Archive # what's still new goes into the inbox [InboxFilter] #+end_src Basically, I make sure that all the emails, in their folders, are tagged properly. I make sure the emails which need to be moved are moved to their designated folders. The rest is simply the inbox. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT The *read* / *unread* tag is automatically handled between /notmuch/ and /isync/. It's seemlessly synchronized between the tools. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT With the configuration in place, I run /afew/. #+begin_src bash afew -v -t --new #+end_src For moving the emails, I use /afew/ as well but I apply it on all emails and not just the ones tagged with =new=. #+begin_src bash afew -v -m --all #+end_src **** msmtp [[https://marlam.de/msmtp/][/msmtp/]] is an SMTP client. It sends email. The configuration is very simple. #+begin_src conf # Set default values for all following accounts. defaults auth on tls on tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt logfile ~/.msmtp.log # Mail account personal host email.hostname.com port 587 from personal@email.hostname.com user personal@email.hostname.com password yourPassword # One can use a command which returns the password # Such as a password manager or a bash script # passwordeval sh script/path # Set a default account account default : personal #+end_src **** Emacs I use [[https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs][/Doom/]] as a configuration framework for /Emacs/. /notmuch/ comes as a modules which I enabled, but you might want to check the /notmuch/'s /Emacs/ [[https://notmuchmail.org/notmuch-emacs/][Documentation]] page for help with installation and configuration. I wanted to configure the /notmuch/ interface a bit to show me what I'm usually interested in. #+begin_src elisp (setq +notmuch-sync-backend 'mbsync) (setq notmuch-saved-searches '((:name "Unread" :query "tag:inbox and tag:unread" :count-query "tag:inbox and tag:unread" :sort-order newest-first) (:name "Inbox" :query "tag:inbox" :count-query "tag:inbox" :sort-order newest-first) (:name "Archive" :query "tag:archive" :count-query "tag:archive" :sort-order newest-first) (:name "Sent" :query "tag:sent or tag:replied" :count-query "tag:sent or tag:replied" :sort-order newest-first) (:name "Trash" :query "tag:deleted" :count-query "tag:deleted" :sort-order newest-first)) ) #+end_src Now, all I have to do is simply open the =notmuch= interface in /Emacs/. **** Conclusion To put everything together, I wrote a /bash script/ with the commands provided above in series. This script can be called by a *cron* or /even/ *manually* to synchronize emails. From the /Emacs/ interface I can do pretty much everything I need to do. Future improvements I have to think about is the best way to do email notifications. There are a lot of different ways I can approach this. I can use notmuch to query for what I want. I could maybe even try querying the information out of the [[https://xapian.org/][Xapian]] database. But that's food for thought. I want email to be simple and this makes it simple for me. How are you making email simple for you ? *** DONE Email IMAP Setup with isync :email:isync:imap: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-12-03 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-12-03 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: email-imap-setup-with-isync :CUSTOM_ID: email-imap-setup-with-isync :END: The blog post "[[#email-setup-with-isync-notmuch-afew-msmtp-and-emacs]]" prompted a few questions. The questions were around synchronizing email in general. I did promise to write up more blog posts to explain the pieces I brushed over quickly for brevity and ease of understanding. Or so I thought ! #+hugo: more **** Maildir Let's talk *Maildir*. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maildir][Wikipedia]] defines it as the following. #+begin_quote The Maildir e-mail format is a common way of storing email messages in which each message is stored in a separate file with a unique name, and each mail folder is a file system directory. The local file system handles file locking as messages are added, moved and deleted. A major design goal of Maildir is to eliminate the need for program code to handle file locking and unlocking. #+end_quote It is basically what I mentioned before. Think of your emails as folders and files. The image will get clearer, so let's dig even deeper. If you go into a *Maildir* directory, let's say *Inbox* and list all the directories in there, you'll find tree of them. #+begin_src bash $ ls cur/ new/ tmp/ #+end_src These directories have a purpose. - =tmp/=: This directory stores all temporary files and files in the process of being delivered. - =new/=: This directory stores all new files that have not yet been /seen/ by any email client. - =cur/=: This directory stores all the files that have been previously seen. This is basically how emails are going to be represented on your disk. You will need to find an /email client/ which can parse these files and work with them. **** IMAP The *Internet Mail Access Protocol*, shortened to *[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Message_Access_Protocol][IMAP]]*, is an #+begin_quote Internet standard protocol used by email clients to retrieve email messages from a mail server over a TCP/IP connection. #+end_quote In simple terms, it is a way of communication that allows synchronization between a /client/ and an /email server/. **** What can you do with that information ? Now, you have all the pieces of the puzzle to figure out how to think about your email on disk and how to synchronize it. It might be a good idea to dive a little bit into my configuration and why I chose these settings to begin with. Shall we ? **** isync Most /email servers/ nowadays offer you an *IMAP* (*POP3* was another protocol used widely back in the day) endpoint to connect to. You might be using /Outlook/ or /Thunderbird/ or maybe even /Claws-mail/ as an /email client/. They usually show you the emails in a neat *GUI* (Graphical User Interface) with all the /read/ and /unread/ mail and the /folders/. If you've had the chance to configure one of these clients a few years ago, you would've needed to find the *IMAP* /host/ and /port/ of the server. These clients /talk/ *IMAP* too. [[https://isync.sourceforge.io/][isync]] is an application to synchronize mailboxes. I use it to connect to my /email server/ using *IMAP* and synchronize my emails to my hard drive as a *Maildir*. ***** IMAP The very first section of the configuration is the *IMAP* section. #+begin_src conf IMAPAccount Personal Host email.hostname.com User personal@email.hostname.com Pass "yourPassword" # One can use a command which returns the password # Such as a password manager or a bash script #PassCmd sh script/path SSLType IMAPS CertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt IMAPStore personal-remote Account Personal #+end_src In here, we configure the *IMAP* settings. Most notably here is of course =Host=, =User= and =Pass/PassCmd=. These settings refer to your server and you should populate them with that information. The =IMAPStore= is used further in the configuration, this gives a name for the *IMAP* /Store/. In simple terms, if you want to refer to your /server/ you use =personal-remote=. ***** Maildir The next section of the configuration is the *Maildir* part. You can think of this as where do you want /your emails/ to be saved /on disk/. #+begin_src conf MaildirStore personal-local Subfolders Verbatim Path ~/.mail/ Inbox ~/.mail/Inbox #+end_src This should be self explanatory but I'd like to point out the =MaildirStore= key. This refers to /email/ on /disk/. So, if you want to refer to your /emails on disk/ you use =personal-local=. At this point, you are thinking to yourself what the hell does that mean ? What is this dude talking about ! Don't worry, I got you. ***** Synchronize to your taste This is where all what you've learned comes together. The fun part ! The part where you get to choose how you want to do things. Here's what I want. I want to /synchronize/ my /server/ *Inbox* with my /on disk/ *Inbox* both ways. If the *Inbox* folder does not exist /on disk/, create it. The name of the *Inbox* on the server is =Inbox=. This can be translated to the following. #+begin_src conf Channel sync-personal-inbox Master :personal-remote:"Inbox" Slave :personal-local:Inbox Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes #+end_src I want to do the same with =Archive= and =Sent=. #+begin_src conf Channel sync-personal-archive Master :personal-remote:"Archive" Slave :personal-local:Archive Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes Channel sync-personal-sent Master :personal-remote:"Sent" Slave :personal-local:Sent Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes #+end_src At this point, I still have my /trash/. The /trash/ on the server is called =Junk= but I want it to be =Trash= on disk. I can do that easily as follows. #+begin_src conf Channel sync-personal-trash Master :personal-remote:"Junk" Slave :personal-local:Trash Create Slave SyncState * CopyArrivalDate yes #+end_src I choose to /synchronize/ my /emails/ both ways. If you prefer, for example, not to download the /sent/ emails and only /synchronize/ them up to the server, you can do that with =SyncState=. Check the =mbsync= manual pages. ***** Tie the knot At the end, add all the channel names configured above under the save /Group/ with the same account name. #+begin_src conf Group Personal Channel sync-personal-inbox Channel sync-personal-archive Channel sync-personal-sent Channel sync-personal-trash #+end_src **** Conclusion This is pretty much it. It is that simple. This is how I synchronize my email. How do you ? *** DONE A Python Environment Setup :python:pipx:pyenv:virtual_environment:virtualfish: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-6-17 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-06-17 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: a-python-environment-setup :CUSTOM_ID: a-python-environment-setup :END: I've been told that =python= package management is bad. I have seen some really bad practices online, asking you to run commands here and there without an understanding of the bigger picture, what they do and sometimes with escalated privileges. Along the years, I have compiled a list of practices I follow, and a list of tools I use. I hope to be able to share some of the knowledge I've acquired and show you a different way of doing things. You might learn about a new tool, or a new use for a tool. Come along for the ride ! #+hugo: more **** Python As most know, [[https://www.python.org/][Python]] is an interpreted programming language. I am not going to go into the details of the language in this post, I will only talk about management. If you want to develop in Python, you need to install libraries. You can find /some/ in your package manager but let's face it =pip= is your way. The majority of /Linux/ distributions will have Python installed as a lot of system packages now rely on it, even some package managers. Okay, this is the last time I actually use the system's Python. What ? Why ? You ask ! **** pyenv I introduce you to [[https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv][pyenv]]. Pyenv is a Python version management tool, it allows you to install and manage different versions of Python as a /user/. Beautiful, music to my ears. Let's get it from the package manager, this is a great use of the package manager if it offers an up to date version of the package. #+begin_src bash sudo pacman -S pyenv #+end_src If you're not using an /Archlinux/ based distribution follow the instructions on their [[https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv#installation][webpage]]. Alright ! Now that we've got ourselves pyenv, let's configure it real quickly. Following the docs, I created =~/.config/fish/config.d/pyenv.fish= and in it I put the following. #+begin_src fish # Add pyenv executable to PATH by running # the following interactively: set -Ux PYENV_ROOT $HOME/.pyenv set -U fish_user_paths $PYENV_ROOT/bin $fish_user_paths # Load pyenv automatically by appending # the following to ~/.config/fish/config.fish: status is-login; and pyenv init --path | source #+end_src Open a new shell and you're all ready to continue along, you're all locked, loaded and ready to go! ***** Setup the environment This is the first building block of my environment. We first start by querying for Python versions available for us. #+begin_src bash pyenv install --list #+end_src Then, we install the latest Python version. Yes, even if it's an upgrade, I'll handle the upgrade, as well, as we go along. Set everything up to use the new installed version. First, we set the global Python version for our /user/. #+begin_src bash pyenv global 3.9.5 #+end_src Then, we switch our current shell's Python version, instead of opening a new shell. #+begin_src bash pyenv shell 3.9.5 #+end_src That was easy. We test that everything works as expected by checking the version. #+begin_src bash pyenv version #+end_src Now, if you do a =which= on the =python= executable, you will find that it is in the =pyenv= shims' directory. ***** Upgrade In the *future*, the upgrade path is exactly the same as the setup path shown above. You query for the list of Python versions available, choose the latest and move on from there. Very easy, very simple. **** pip [[https://pypi.org/project/pip/][pip]] is the package installer for Python. At this stage, you have to understand that you are using a Python version installed by /pyenv/ as your /user/. The pip provided, if you do a =which=, is also in the same shims directory. Using =pip= at this stage as a /user/ is better than running it as /root/ but it is also not touching your system; just your user. We can do *one* better. I'm going to use =pip= as a /user/ once ! I know, you will have a lot of questions at this point as to why. You will see, patience is a virtue. **** pipx Meet [[https://github.com/pypa/pipx][pipx]], this tool is the *amazing* companion for a /DevOps/, and /developer/ alike. Why ? You would ask. It, basically, creates Python /virtual environments/ for packages you want to have access to /globally/. For example, I'd like to have access to a Python *LSP* server on the go. This way my text editor has access to it too and, of course, can make use of it freely. Anyway, let's cut this short and show you. You will understand better. Let's use the only =pip= command as a /user/ to install =pipx=. #+begin_src bash pip install --user pipx #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT You are setting yourself up for a *world of hurt* if you use =sudo= with =pip= or run it as =root=. *ONLY* run commands as =root= or with escalated privileges when you know what you're doing. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** LSP Server As I gave the *LSP* server as an example, let's go ahead and install it with some other Python packages needed for global things like /emacs/. #+begin_src bash pipx install black pipx install ipython pipx install isort pipx install nose pipx install pytest pipx install python-lsp-server #+end_src Now each one is in it's own happy little /virtual environment/ separated from any other dependency but its own. Isn't that lovely ? If you try to run =ipython=, you will see that it will actually work. If you look deeper at it, you will see that it is pointing to =~/.local/bin/ipython= which is a symlink to the actual package in a /pipx/ /virtual environment/. ***** Upgrade After you *set* a new Python version with /pyenv/, you simply reinstall everything. #+begin_src bash pipx reinstall-all #+end_src And like magic, everything get recreated using the new version of Python /newly/ set. **** virtualfish Now that /pipx/ is installed, let's go head and install something to manage our Python /virtual environments/ on-demand, for use whenever we need to, for targeted projects. Some popular choices people use are [[https://pipenv.pypa.io/en/latest/][Pipenv]], [[https://python-poetry.org/][Poetry]], [[https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/latest/][virtualenv]] and plain and simple python with the =venv= module. You're welcome to play with all of them. Considering I use /fish/ as my default /shell/, I like to use [[https://virtualfish.readthedocs.io/en/latest/][virtualfish]]. Let's install it. #+begin_src bash pipx install virtualfish #+end_src This offers me a new command; =vf=. With =vf=, I can create Python /virtual environments/ and they will all be saved in a directory of my choosing. ***** Setup Let's create one for [[https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/index.html][Ansible]]. #+begin_src bash vf new ansible #+end_src This should *activate* it. Then, we install /Ansible/. #+begin_src bash pip install ansible molecule docker #+end_src At this stage, you will notice that you have =ansible= installed. You will also notice that all the /pipx/ packages are also still available. If you want to tie /virtualfish/ to a specific directory, use =vf connect=. ***** Upgrade To /upgrade/ the Python version of all of our /virtual environments/, /virtualfish/ makes it as easy as #+begin_src bash vf upgrade #+end_src And we're done ! **** Workflow At this stage, you have an idea about the tools I use and where their scope falls. I like them because they are /limited/ to their own scope, each has its own little domain where it reigns. - I use *pyenv* to install and manage different versions of Python for testing purposes while I stay on the latest. - I use *pipx* for the commands that I need access to /globally/ as a user. - I use *virtualfish* to create one or more /virtual environment/ per project I work on. With this setup, I can test with different versions of Python by creating different /virtual environments/ with different version each, or two versions of the tool you're testing as you keep the Python version static. It could also be different versions of a library, testing forward compatibility for example. At each step, I have an upgrade path to keep all my environments running the latest versions. I also have a lot of flexibility by using =requirements.txt= files and others for /development/ sometimes or even /testing/. **** Conclusion As you can see, with a little bit of knowledge and by standing on the shoulders of giants, you can easily manage a Python environment entirely as a /user/. You have full access to a wide array of Python distributions to play with. Endless different versions of packages, /globally/ and /locally/ installed. If you create /virtual environments/ for each of your projects, you won't fall in the common pitfalls of versioning hell. Keep your /virtual environments/ numerous and dedicated to projects, small sets, and you won't face any major problems with keeping your system clean yet up to date. *** DONE My Path Down The Road of Cloudflare's Redirect Loop :cloudflare:cdn: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-01-27 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-01-27 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop :CUSTOM_ID: my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop :END: I have used *Cloudflare* as my /DNS manager/ for years, specifically because it offers *API* that works with *certbot*. This setup has worked very well for me so far. The only thing that kept bothering me is that every time I turn on the /CDN/ capability on my *Cloudflare* , I get a loor error. That's weird. #+hugo: more **** Setup Let's talk about my setup for a little bit. I use *certbot* to generate and maintain my fleet of certificates. I use *Nginx* as a web-server. Let's say I want to host a static content off of my server. My *nginx* configuration would look something like the following. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE server { listen 443 ssl; server_name server.example.com; ssl_certificate /path/to/the/fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /path/to/the/privkey.pem; root /path/to/data/root/; index index.html; location / { try_files $uri $uri/ =404; } } #+END_EXAMPLE This is a static site, of course. Now you may ask about /non-SSL/. Well, I don't do /non-SSL/. In other words, I have something like this in my config. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE server { listen 80; server_name _; location / { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } } #+END_EXAMPLE So, all /http/ traffic gets redirected to /https/. **** Problem Considering the regular setup above, once I enable the "proxy" feature of *Cloudflare* I get the following error. #+caption: Too Many Redirects Error #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/too-many-redirects.png][file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/too-many-redirects.png]] #+BEGIN_EXPORT html That baffled me for a bit. There is no reason for this to happen. I decided to dig deeper. **** Solution As I was digging through the *Cloudflare* configuration, I stumbled upon this page. #+caption: Flexible Encryption #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/flexible-encryption.png][file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/flexible-encryption.png]] This is interesting. It says that the connection is encrypted between the broswer and *Cloudflare*. Does that mean that between *Cloudflare* and my server, the connection is unencrypted ? If that's the case, it means that the request coming from *Cloudflare* to my server is coming on /http/. If it is coming on /http/, it is getting redirected to /https/ which goes back to *Cloudflare* and so on. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE THIS IS IT ! I FOUND MY ANSWER... #+END_EXAMPLE Alright, let's move this to what they call "Full Encryption", which calls my server on /https/ as it should. #+caption: Full Encryption #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/full-encryption.png][file:images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/full-encryption.png]] After this change, all the errors cleared up and got my blog up and running again. *** DONE The Story Behind cmw :python:development: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-08-31 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-08-31 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: the-story-behind-cmw :CUSTOM_ID: the-story-behind-cmw :END: A few days ago, [[https://kushaldas.in][Kushal Das]] shared a curl command. The command was as follows: #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ curl https://wttr.in/ #+END_EXAMPLE I, obviously, was curious. I ran it and it was interesting. So it returns the weather right ? Pretty cool huh! #+hugo: more **** The interest That got me interested to learn how does this work exactly. **** The investigation I looked at [[https://wttr.in/][https://wttr.in/]] and it seemed to have a GitHub [[https://github.com/chubin/wttr.in][link]] and a repository. That is very interesting. This is a Python application, one can tell by the code or if you prefer the GitHub bar at the top. Anyway, one can also tell that this is a [[https://palletsprojects.com/p/flask/][Flask]] application from the following code in the bin/srv.py. #+BEGIN_SRC python from flask import Flask, request, send_from_directory APP = Flask(__name__) #+END_SRC By reading the README.md of the repository one can read. #+BEGIN_QUOTE wttr.in uses [[http://github.com/schachmat/wego][wego]] for visualization and various data sources for weather forecast information. #+END_QUOTE Let's jump to the /wego/ repository then. /wego/ seems to be a command line application to graph the weather in the terminal. Great, so what I did with [[https://gitea.project42.io/Elia/cmw][cmw]] is already done in Go and API'fied by a different project. My answer to that accusation is obviously this post. **** The idea I played a bit more with [[https://wttr.in/][https://wttr.in/]] and I found it to an interesting API. I am trying to work on my python development foo so to me that was a perfect little project to work on. From my perspective this was simply an API and I am to consume it to put it back in my terminal. **** The work The beginning work was very rough and hidden away in a private repository and was moved later [[https://gitea.project42.io/Elia/cmw][here]]. The only thing left from that work is the =--format= argument which allows you full control over what gets sent. But again, let's not forget what the real purpose of this project was. So I decided to make the whole API as accessible as possible from the command line tool I am writing. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ cmw --help usage: cmw [-h] [-L LOCATION] [-f FORMAT] [-l LANG] [-m] [-u] [-M] [-z] [-o] [-w] [-A] [-F] [-n] [-q] [-Q] [-N] [-P] [-p] [-T] [-t TRANSPARENCY] [--v2] [--version] Get the weather! optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -L LOCATION, --location LOCATION Location (look at epilog for more information) -f FORMAT, --format FORMAT Query formatting -l LANG, --lang LANG The language to use -m, --metric Units: Metric (SI) (default outside US) -u, --uscs Units: USCS (default in US) -M, --meter-second Units: Show wind speed in m/s -z, --zero View: Only current weather -o, --one View: Current weather & one day -w, --two View: Current weather & two days -A, --ignore-user-agent View: Force ANSI output format -F, --follow-link View: Show the 'Follow' line from upstream -n, --narrow View: Narrow version -q, --quiet View: Quiet version -Q, --super-quiet View: Super quiet version -N, --no-colors View: Switch terminal sequences off -P, --png PNG: Generate PNG file -p, --add-frame PNG: Add frame around output -T, --mid-transparency PNG: Make transparency 150 -t TRANSPARENCY, --transparency TRANSPARENCY PNG: Set transparency between 0 and 255 --v2 v2 interface of the day --version show program's version number and exit Supported Location Types ------------------------ City name: Paris Unicode name: Москва Airport code (3 letters): muc Domain name: @stackoverflow.com Area code: 94107 GPS coordinates: -78.46,106.79 Special Location ---------------- Moon phase (add ,+US or ,+France for these cities): moon Moon phase for a date: moon@2016-10-25 Supported languages ------------------- Supported: af da de el et fr fa hu id it nb nl pl pt-br ro ru tr uk vi #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ cmw --location London --lang nl --one Weerbericht voor: London \ / Zonnig .-. 20 °C ― ( ) ― → 19 km/h `-’ 10 km / \ 0.0 mm ┌─────────────┐ ┌──────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────┤ za 31 aug ├───────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐ │ 's Ochtends │ 's Middags └──────┬──────┘ 's Avonds │ 's Nachts │ ├──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤ │ \ / Gedeeltelijk b…│ \ / Gedeeltelijk b…│ Bewolkt │ \ / Gedeeltelijk b…│ │ _ /"".-. 21 °C │ _ /"".-. 23..24 °C │ .--. 20 °C │ _ /"".-. 18 °C │ │ \_( ). ↗ 12-14 km/h │ \_( ). ↗ 18-20 km/h │ .-( ). ↗ 20-25 km/h │ \_( ). → 16-19 km/h │ │ /(___(__) 10 km │ /(___(__) 10 km │ (___.__)__) 10 km │ /(___(__) 10 km │ │ 0.0 mm | 0% │ 0.0 mm | 0% │ 0.0 mm | 0% │ 0.0 mm | 0% │ └──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘ Locatie: London [51.509648,-0.099076] #+END_EXAMPLE **** Conclusion All I got to say in conclusion is that it was a lot of fun working on [[https://gitea.project42.io/Elia/cmw][cmw]] and I learned a lot. I'm not going to publish the package on [[https://pypi.org/][PyPI]] because seriously, what's the point. But if you are interested in making changes to the repository, make an MR. *** DONE QMK Firmware :qmk:firmware:mechanical_keyboard:qmk_firmware: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-09-23 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-09-23 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: qmk-firmware :CUSTOM_ID: qmk-firmware :END: Over the years, I have owned a few mechanical keyboards. I'm quite fond of them. I've also built my own keyboard from scratch years ago. Hot-swappable back then was still in its easy stages and the sockets weren't that good. Alas, we're in 2021 and I've recently purchased the *Keychron Q1* keyboard. I've chosen this keyboard for many reasons, but the one you most care about is the topic that brought you here. It's a *QMK Firmware* compatible keyboards. Do you know what that means ? That means that we're going to be digging into ~qmk_firmware~. Tag along ! #+hugo: more **** Quantum Mechanical Keyboard Firmware The [[https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware][*QMK Firmware*]] is #+begin_quote a keyboard firmware based on the tmk_keyboard firmware with some useful features for Atmel AVR and ARM controllers, and more specifically, the OLKB product line, the ErgoDox EZ keyboard, and the Clueboard product line. #+end_quote It goes beyond saying, the *QMK Firmware* is open sourced. So let's hack it. **** Building QMK Firmware The first step to flashing your keyboard starts here. We need to get the source code of ~qmk_firmware~ from Github. #+begin_src shell $ git clone https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware.git # Wait a while... # Yup, I know ! # Okay finally... Cloning into 'qmk_firmware'... remote: Enumerating objects: 295442, done. remote: Counting objects: 100% (34/34), done. remote: Compressing objects: 100% (27/27), done. remote: Total 295442 (delta 13), reused 17 (delta 5), pack-reused 295408 Receiving objects: 100% (295442/295442), 178.92 MiB | 7.10 MiB/s, done. Resolving deltas: 100% (178414/178414), done. Updating files: 100% (27916/27916), done. $ cd qmk_firmware #+end_src Once the repository is clone, we can start with installing the dependencies to build ~qmk~. I'm not a big fan of auto-installers or installers scripts (=util/install/arch.sh=), and here's why. #+begin_src bash python3 -m pip install --user -r $QMK_FIRMWARE_DIR/requirements.txt #+end_src This is how the installer of the ~qmk_firmware~ concludes the round. I would hate to use pip to install willy nilly like that. Otherwise, I don't have objections to what it does on ~arch~ at least. It does the following, I see no reason not to follow it. #+begin_src shell $ sudo pacman -S \ base-devel clang diffutils gcc git unzip wget zip python-pip \ avr-binutils arm-none-eabi-binutils arm-none-eabi-gcc \ arm-none-eabi-newlib avrdude dfu-programmer dfu-util $ sudo pacman -U https://archive.archlinux.org/packages/a/avr-gcc/avr-gcc-8.3.0-1-x86_64.pkg.tar.xz $ sudo pacman -S avr-libc # Must be installed after the above, or it will bring in the latest avr-gcc instead $ sudo pacman -S hidapi # This will fail if the community repo isn't enabled #+end_src Now that all the dependencies required by the system are installed, let's install the ~python~ dependencies. #+begin_src shell $ git checkout 0.14.9 # Checkout the latest version $ vf new qmk_firmware # Create a new python virtualenv and activate it $ pip install -r requirements.txt # Install python requirements $ pip install qmk $ make git-submodule #+end_src Finally, we can build our keyboard firmware. #+begin_src bash $ qmk compile -kb keychron/q1/rev_0100 -km default Ψ Compiling keymap with make --jobs=1 keychron/q1/rev_0100:default [31/494] QMK Firmware 0.14.16 Making keychron/q1/rev_0100 with keymap default avr-gcc (GCC) 11.2.0 Copyright (C) 2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Compiling: keyboards/keychron/q1/q1.c [OK] Compiling: keyboards/keychron/q1/rev_0100/rev_0100.c [OK] Compiling: keyboards/keychron/q1/rev_0100/keymaps/default/keymap.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/quantum.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/send_string.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/bitwise.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/led.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/action.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/action_layer.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/action_macro.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/action_tapping.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/action_util.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/eeconfig.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/keyboard.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/keymap_common.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/keycode_config.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/logging/debug.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/logging/sendchar.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/bootmagic/bootmagic_lite.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/bootmagic/magic.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/matrix_common.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/matrix.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/debounce/sym_defer_g.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/main.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/color.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/rgb_matrix/rgb_matrix.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/rgb_matrix/rgb_matrix_drivers.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lib8tion/lib8tion.c [OK] Compiling: drivers/led/issi/is31fl3733.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/process_keycode/process_rgb.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/led_tables.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/dip_switch.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/process_keycode/process_space_cadet.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/process_keycode/process_magic.c [OK] Compiling: quantum/process_keycode/process_grave_esc.c [OK] Compiling: platforms/avr/drivers/i2c_master.c [OK] Archiving: .build/obj_keychron_q1_rev_0100_default/i2c_master.o [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/host.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/report.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/sync_timer.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/usb_util.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/avr/platform.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/avr/suspend.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/avr/timer.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/avr/bootloader.c [OK] Assembling: tmk_core/common/avr/xprintf.S [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/common/avr/printf.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/protocol/lufa/lufa.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/protocol/usb_descriptor.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Class/Common/HIDParser.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/Device_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/EndpointStream_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/Endpoint_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/Host_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/PipeStream_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/Pipe_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/USBController_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/AVR8/USBInterrupt_AVR8.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/ConfigDescriptors.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/DeviceStandardReq.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/Events.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/HostStandardReq.c [OK] Compiling: lib/lufa/LUFA/Drivers/USB/Core/USBTask.c [OK] Compiling: tmk_core/protocol/lufa/usb_util.c [OK] Linking: .build/keychron_q1_rev_0100_default.elf [OK] Creating load file for flashing: .build/keychron_q1_rev_0100_default.hex [OK] Copying keychron_q1_rev_0100_default.hex to qmk_firmware folder [OK] Checking file size of keychron_q1_rev_0100_default.hex [OK] * The firmware size is fine - 23302/28672 (81%, 5370 bytes free) #+end_src Look at tha, easy as pie ! You got yourself a compiled firmware. Before we move on, let's look at the command again and figure out what the hell I did, just in case you're running a different keyboard. If you look into the =keyboards/=, you'll be able to find a big list of keyboards supported. The =keychron/q1/rev_0100= is simply a directory in there that matches my keyboard. Inside that directory, we can find the =keymaps/= directory. This is where all the keymaps live. We chose the ~default~ keymap which is a directory in there as well. **** Remapping the keyboard At this stage, we were able to succesfully compile the keyboard firmware. But the whole point of this is to modify the layout of the keyboard so let's go right ahead. There are commands suggested on the ~QMK~ docs but I didn't go that far, I simply copied the =default= directory and went down to business. For the sake of this blog post, I'll assume I called the directory =functions=. The =keymap.c= file looks as follows. #+begin_src c #include QMK_KEYBOARD_H enum layers{ MAC_BASE, MAC_FN, WIN_BASE, WIN_FN }; #define KC_TASK LGUI(KC_TAB) #define KC_FLXP LGUI(KC_E) const uint16_t PROGMEM keymaps[][MATRIX_ROWS][MATRIX_COLS] = { [MAC_BASE] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_ESC, KC_BRID, KC_BRIU, KC_F3, KC_F4, RGB_VAD, RGB_VAI, KC_MPRV, KC_MPLY, KC_MNXT, KC_MUTE, KC_VOLD, KC_VOLU, KC_DEL, KC_INS, KC_GRV, KC_1, KC_2, KC_3, KC_4, KC_5, KC_6, KC_7, KC_8, KC_9, KC_0, KC_MINS, KC_EQL, KC_BSPC, KC_PGUP, KC_TAB, KC_Q, KC_W, KC_E, KC_R, KC_T, KC_Y, KC_U, KC_I, KC_O, KC_P, KC_LBRC, KC_RBRC, KC_BSLS, KC_PGDN, KC_CAPS, KC_A, KC_S, KC_D, KC_F, KC_G, KC_H, KC_J, KC_K, KC_L, KC_SCLN, KC_QUOT, KC_ENT, KC_HOME, KC_LSFT, KC_Z, KC_X, KC_C, KC_V, KC_B, KC_N, KC_M, KC_COMM, KC_DOT, KC_SLSH, KC_RSFT, KC_UP, KC_LCTL, KC_LALT, KC_LGUI, KC_SPC, KC_RGUI, MO(MAC_FN),KC_RCTL, KC_LEFT, KC_DOWN, KC_RGHT), [MAC_FN] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_TRNS, KC_F1, KC_F2, KC_F3, KC_F4, KC_F5, KC_F6, KC_F7, KC_F8, KC_F9, KC_F10, KC_F11, KC_F12, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_TOG, RGB_MOD, RGB_VAI, RGB_HUI, RGB_SAI, RGB_SPI, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_RMOD, RGB_VAD, RGB_HUD, RGB_SAD, RGB_SPD, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS), [WIN_BASE] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_ESC, KC_F1, KC_F2, KC_F3, KC_F4, KC_F5, KC_F6, KC_F7, KC_F8, KC_F9, KC_F10, KC_F11, KC_F12, KC_DEL, KC_INS, KC_GRV, KC_1, KC_2, KC_3, KC_4, KC_5, KC_6, KC_7, KC_8, KC_9, KC_0, KC_MINS, KC_EQL, KC_BSPC, KC_PGUP, KC_TAB, KC_Q, KC_W, KC_E, KC_R, KC_T, KC_Y, KC_U, KC_I, KC_O, KC_P, KC_LBRC, KC_RBRC, KC_BSLS, KC_PGDN, KC_CAPS, KC_A, KC_S, KC_D, KC_F, KC_G, KC_H, KC_J, KC_K, KC_L, KC_SCLN, KC_QUOT, KC_ENT, KC_HOME, KC_LSFT, KC_Z, KC_X, KC_C, KC_V, KC_B, KC_N, KC_M, KC_COMM, KC_DOT, KC_SLSH, KC_RSFT, KC_UP, KC_LCTL, KC_LGUI, KC_LALT, KC_SPC, KC_RALT, MO(WIN_FN),KC_RCTL, KC_LEFT, KC_DOWN, KC_RGHT), [WIN_FN] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_TRNS, KC_BRID, KC_BRIU, KC_TASK, KC_FLXP, RGB_VAD, RGB_VAI, KC_MPRV, KC_MPLY, KC_MNXT, KC_MUTE, KC_VOLD, KC_VOLU, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_TOG, RGB_MOD, RGB_VAI, RGB_HUI, RGB_SAI, RGB_SPI, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_RMOD, RGB_VAD, RGB_HUD, RGB_SAD, RGB_SPD, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS) }; #+end_src If you read this you will understand that the keyboard originally comes with 4 layers. Two for windows and two for Mac. The ~0~ and ~1~ layers are toggled using a physical switch. The rest are toggled with the ~Fn~ key. Now let's change the Mac layout to have the ~Function~ keys to be on the main layer while the media keys to be toggled with the ~Fn~ key. The final version should look like the following. #+begin_src c #include QMK_KEYBOARD_H enum layers{ MAC_BASE, MAC_FN, WIN_BASE, WIN_FN }; #define KC_TASK LGUI(KC_TAB) #define KC_FLXP LGUI(KC_E) const uint16_t PROGMEM keymaps[][MATRIX_ROWS][MATRIX_COLS] = { [MAC_BASE] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_ESC, KC_F1, KC_F2, KC_F3, KC_F4, KC_F5, KC_F6, KC_F7, KC_F8, KC_F9, KC_F10, KC_F11, KC_F12, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_GRV, KC_1, KC_2, KC_3, KC_4, KC_5, KC_6, KC_7, KC_8, KC_9, KC_0, KC_MINS, KC_EQL, KC_BSPC, KC_PGUP, KC_TAB, KC_Q, KC_W, KC_E, KC_R, KC_T, KC_Y, KC_U, KC_I, KC_O, KC_P, KC_LBRC, KC_RBRC, KC_BSLS, KC_PGDN, KC_CAPS, KC_A, KC_S, KC_D, KC_F, KC_G, KC_H, KC_J, KC_K, KC_L, KC_SCLN, KC_QUOT, KC_ENT, KC_HOME, KC_LSFT, KC_Z, KC_X, KC_C, KC_V, KC_B, KC_N, KC_M, KC_COMM, KC_DOT, KC_SLSH, KC_RSFT, KC_UP, KC_LCTL, KC_LALT, KC_LGUI, KC_SPC, KC_RGUI, MO(MAC_FN),KC_RCTL, KC_LEFT, KC_DOWN, KC_RGHT), [MAC_FN] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_TRNS, KC_BRID, KC_BRIU, KC_F3, KC_F4, RGB_VAD, RGB_VAI, KC_MPRV, KC_MPLY, KC_MNXT, KC_MUTE, KC_VOLD, KC_VOLU, KC_DEL, KC_INS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_TOG, RGB_MOD, RGB_VAI, RGB_HUI, RGB_SAI, RGB_SPI, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_RMOD, RGB_VAD, RGB_HUD, RGB_SAD, RGB_SPD, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS), [WIN_BASE] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_ESC, KC_F1, KC_F2, KC_F3, KC_F4, KC_F5, KC_F6, KC_F7, KC_F8, KC_F9, KC_F10, KC_F11, KC_F12, KC_DEL, KC_INS, KC_GRV, KC_1, KC_2, KC_3, KC_4, KC_5, KC_6, KC_7, KC_8, KC_9, KC_0, KC_MINS, KC_EQL, KC_BSPC, KC_PGUP, KC_TAB, KC_Q, KC_W, KC_E, KC_R, KC_T, KC_Y, KC_U, KC_I, KC_O, KC_P, KC_LBRC, KC_RBRC, KC_BSLS, KC_PGDN, KC_CAPS, KC_A, KC_S, KC_D, KC_F, KC_G, KC_H, KC_J, KC_K, KC_L, KC_SCLN, KC_QUOT, KC_ENT, KC_HOME, KC_LSFT, KC_Z, KC_X, KC_C, KC_V, KC_B, KC_N, KC_M, KC_COMM, KC_DOT, KC_SLSH, KC_RSFT, KC_UP, KC_LCTL, KC_LGUI, KC_LALT, KC_SPC, KC_RALT, MO(WIN_FN),KC_RCTL, KC_LEFT, KC_DOWN, KC_RGHT), [WIN_FN] = LAYOUT_ansi_82( KC_TRNS, KC_BRID, KC_BRIU, KC_TASK, KC_FLXP, RGB_VAD, RGB_VAI, KC_MPRV, KC_MPLY, KC_MNXT, KC_MUTE, KC_VOLD, KC_VOLU, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_TOG, RGB_MOD, RGB_VAI, RGB_HUI, RGB_SAI, RGB_SPI, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, RGB_RMOD, RGB_VAD, RGB_HUD, RGB_SAD, RGB_SPD, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS, KC_TRNS) }; #+end_src Now that that's done, we need to compile to check that we didn't forget anything. #+begin_src shell $ qmk compile -kb keychron/q1/rev_0100 -km functions #+end_src We seem to have successfully compiled our now keyboard layout. **** Flashing your keyboard If you're reached this stage, you'll need to locate the ~reset~ button on your keyboard. Once located, follow your keyboard's manual on how to *reset* the board and getting ready it for flashing. Once the keyboard is ready to be flashed, you basically change one thing in your previous command. #+begin_src shell $ qmk flash -kb keychron/q1/rev_0100 -km functions #+end_src If this step succeeds, your keyboard should be ready to use in the newly configured layout. Check it out ! **** Conclusion It's pretty awesome to see keyboards like these hit the market. Whether you're fan of the mechanical switches they come with or not, one thing is certain. You cannot deny the fact that they are very customisable. If you don't like something with your keyboard, simply change it. The beauty of it all is that the firmware is open sourced. The community delivers, yet again ! ** Monitoring :@monitoring: *** DONE Simple cron monitoring with HealthChecks :healthchecks:cron: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-02-09 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-02-09 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks :CUSTOM_ID: simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks :END: In a previous post entitled "[[#automating-borg]]", I showed you how you can automate your *borg* backups with *borgmatic*. After I started using *borgmatic* for my backups and hooked it to a /cron/ running every 2 hours, I got interested into knowing what's happening to my backups at all times. My experience comes handy in here, I know I need a monitoring system. I also know that traditional monitoring systems are too complex for my use case. I need something simple. I need something I can deploy myself. #+hugo: more **** Choosing a monitoring system I already know I don't want a traditional monitoring system like /nagios/ or /sensu/ or /prometheus/. It is not needed, it's an overkill. I went through the list of hooks that *borgmatic* offers out of the box and checked each project. I came across [[https://healthchecks.io/][HealthChecks]]. **** HealthChecks The [[https://healthchecks.io/][HealthChecks]] project works in a simple manner. It simply offers syou an endpoint which you need to ping within a certain period, otherwise you get paged. It has a lot of integrations from simple emails to other third party services that will call or message you or even trigger push notifications to your phone. In my case, a simple email is enough. After all, they are simply backups and if they failed now, they will work when cron runs again in 2 hours. **** Deploy Let's create a docker-compose service configuration that looks like the following: #+BEGIN_SRC yaml healthchecks: container_name: healthchecks image: linuxserver/healthchecks:v1.12.0-ls48 restart: unless-stopped ports: - "127.0.0.1:8000:8000" volumes: - "./healthchecks/data:/config" environment: PUID: "5000" PGID: "5000" SECRET_KEY: "super-secret-key" ALLOWED_HOSTS: '["*"]' DEBUG: "False" DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL: "noreply@healthchecks.example.com" USE_PAYMENTS: "False" REGISTRATION_OPEN: "False" EMAIL_HOST: "smtp.example.com" EMAIL_PORT: "587" EMAIL_HOST_USER: "smtp@healthchecks.example.com" EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD: "super-secret-password" EMAIL_USE_TLS: "True" SITE_ROOT: "https://healthchecks.example.com" SITE_NAME: "HealthChecks" MASTER_BADGE_LABEL: "HealthChecks" PING_ENDPOINT: "https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/" PING_EMAIL_DOMAIN: "healthchecks.example.com" TWILIO_ACCOUNT: "None" TWILIO_AUTH: "None" TWILIO_FROM: "None" PD_VENDOR_KEY: "None" TRELLO_APP_KEY: "None" #+END_SRC This will create a docker container exposing it locally on =127.0.0.1:8000=. Let's point nginx to it and expose it using something similar to the following. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE server { listen 443 ssl; server_name healthchecks.example.com; ssl_certificate /path/to/the/fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /path/to/the/privkey.pem; location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000; add_header X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN; add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block"; proxy_redirect off; proxy_buffering off; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Port $server_port; proxy_read_timeout 90; } } #+END_EXAMPLE This should do nicely. **** Usage Now it's a simple matter of creating a checks. #+caption: HealthChecks monitoring for BorgBackup #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.png][file:images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.png]] This will give you a link that looks like the following #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219 #+END_EXAMPLE Let's feed it to *borgmatic*. #+BEGIN_SRC yaml hooks: healthchecks: https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219 #+END_SRC After you configure the *borgmatic* hook to keep /HealthChecks/ in the know of what's going on. We can take a look at the log to see what happened and when. #+caption: HealthChecks monitoring for BorgBackup #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.png][file:images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.png]] **** Conclusion As we saw in the blog post, now I am always in the know about my backups. If my backup fails, I get an email to notify me of a failure. I can also monitor how much time it takes my backups to run. This is a very important feature for me to have. The question of deploying one's own monitoring system is a personal choice. After all, one can use free third party services if they would like. The correct answer though is to always monitor. *** DONE Building up simple monitoring on Healthchecks :healthchecks:cron:curl: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-02-11 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-02-11 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: building-up-simple-monitoring-on-healthchecks :CUSTOM_ID: building-up-simple-monitoring-on-healthchecks :END: I talked previously in "[[#simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks]]" about deploying my own simple monitoring system. Now that it's up, I'm only using it for my backups. That's a good use, for sure, but I know I can do better. So I went digging. #+hugo: more **** Introduction I host a list of services, some are public like my blog while others private. These services are not critical, some can be down for short periods of time. Some services might even be down for longer periods without causing any loss in functionality. That being said, I'm a /DevOps engineer/. That means, I need to know. Yea, it doesn't mean I'll do something about it right away, but I'd like to be in the know. Which got me thinking... **** Healthchecks Endpoints Watching *borg* use its /healthchecks/ hook opened my eyes on another functionality of *Healthchecks*. It seems that if you ping #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219/start #+END_EXAMPLE It will start a counter that will measure the time until you ping #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219 #+END_EXAMPLE This way, you can find out how long it is taking you to check on the status of a service. Or maybe, how long a service is taking to backup. It turns out that /healthchecks/ also offers a different endpoint to ping. You can report a failure straight away by pinging #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219/fail #+END_EXAMPLE This way, you do not have to wait until the time expires before you get notified of a failure. With those pieces of knowledge, we can do a lot. **** A lot ? Yes, a lot... Let's put what we have learned so far into action. #+BEGIN_SRC sh :noeval #!/bin/bash WEB_HOST=$1 CHECK_ID=$2 HEALTHCHECKS_HOST="https://healthchecks.example.com/ping" curl -fsS --retry 3 "${HEALTHCHECKS_HOST}/${CHECK_ID}/start" > /dev/null OUTPUT=`curl -sS "${WEB_HOST}"` STATUS=$? if [[ $STATUS -eq 0 ]]; then curl -fsS --retry 3 "${HEALTHCHECKS_HOST}/${CHECK_ID}" > /dev/null else curl -fsS --retry 3 "${HEALTHCHECKS_HOST}/${CHECK_ID}/fail" > /dev/null fi #+END_SRC We start by defining a few variables for the website hostname to monitor, the check ID provided by /healthchecks/ and finally the /healthchecks/ base link for the monitors. Once those are set, we simply use =curl= with a couple of special flags to make sure that it fails properly if something goes wrong. We start the /healthchecks/ timer, run the website check and either call the passing or the failing /healthchecks/ endpoint depending on the outcomes. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ chmod +x https_healthchecks_monitor.sh $ ./https_healthchecks_monitor.sh https://healthchecks.example.com 84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219 #+END_EXAMPLE Test it out. **** Okay, that's nice but now what ! Now, let's hook it up to our cron. Start with =crontab -e= which should open your favorite text editor. Then create a cron entry (a new line) like the following: #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE */15 * * * * /path/to/https_healthchecks_monitor.sh https://healthchecks.example.com 84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219 #+END_EXAMPLE This will run the script every 15 minutes. Make sure that your timeout is 15 minutes for this check, with a grace period of 5 minutes. That configuration will guarantee that you will get notified 20 minutes after any failure, at the worst. Be aware, I said any failure. Getting notified does not guarantee that your website is down. It can only guarantee that /healthchecks/ wasn't pinged on time. Getting notified covers a bunch of cases. Some of them are: - The server running the cron is down - The cron services is not running - The server running the cron lost internet access - Your certificate expired - Your website is down You can create checks to cover most of these if you care to make it a full monitoring system. If you want to go that far, maybe you should invest in a monitoring system with more features. **** Conclusion Don't judge something by its simplicity. Somethings, out of simple components tied together you can make something interesting and useful. With a little of scripting, couple of commands and the power of cron we were able to make /healthchecks/ monitor our websites. *** DONE Upgrade your monitoring setup with Prometheus :prometheus:metrics:container: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-09-17 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-09-17 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus :CUSTOM_ID: upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus :END: After running simple monitoring for quite a while, I decided to upgrade my setup. It is about time to get some real metric gathering to see what's going on. It's also time to get some proper monitoring setup. There are a lot of options in this field and I should, probably, write a blog post on my views on the topic. For this experiment, on the other hand, the solution is already pre-chosen. We'll be running Prometheus. #+hugo: more **** Prometheus To answer the question, /what is Prometheus?/, we'll rip a page out of the Prometheus [[https://prometheus.io/docs/introduction/overview/][docs]]. #+begin_quote Prometheus is an open-source systems monitoring and alerting toolkit originally built at SoundCloud. Since its inception in 2012, many companies and organizations have adopted Prometheus, and the project has a very active developer and user community. It is now a standalone open source project and maintained independently of any company. To emphasize this, and to clarify the project's governance structure, Prometheus joined the Cloud Native Computing Foundation in 2016 as the second hosted project, after Kubernetes. Prometheus collects and stores its metrics as time series data, i.e. metrics information is stored with the timestamp at which it was recorded, alongside optional key-value pairs called labels. #+end_quote let's decypher all this jargon down to plain English. In simple terms, Prometheus is a system that scrape metrics, from your services and applications, and stores those metrics, in a time series database, ready to serve back again when queried. Prometheus also offers a way to create rules on those metrics to alert you when something goes wrong. Combined with [[https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/alertmanager/][/Alertmanager/]], you got yourself a full monitoring system. **** Configuration Now that we briefly touched on a /few/ features of *Prometheus* and before we can deploy, we need to write our configuration. This is an example of a bare configuration. #+NAME: prometheus-scraping-config #+begin_src yaml scrape_configs: - job_name: prometheus scrape_interval: 30s static_configs: - targets: - prometheus:9090 #+end_src This will make Prometheus scrape itself every 30 seconds for metrics. At least you get /some/ metrics to query later. If you want the full experience, I would suggest you enable /Prometheus metrics/ for your services. Consult the docs of the project to see if and how it can expose metrics for /Prometheus/ to scrape, then add the scrape endpoint to your configuration as shown above. Here's a an example of a couple more, /well known/, projects; [[https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/alertmanager/][/Alertmanager/]] and [[https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter][/node exporter/]]. #+NAME: prometheus-example-scraping-config #+begin_src yaml - job_name: alertmanager scrape_interval: 30s static_configs: - targets: - alertmanager:9093 - job_name: node-exporter scrape_interval: 30s static_configs: - targets: - node-exporter:9100 #+end_src A wider [[https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/exporters/][list of exporters]] can be found on the Prometheus docs. **** Deployment Now that we got ourselves a cofniguration, let's deploy *Prometheus*. Luckily for us, Prometheus comes containerized and ready to deploy. We'll be using =docker-compose= in this example to make it easier to translate later to other types of deployments. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I'm still running on =2.x= API version. I know I need to upgrade to a newer version but that's a bit of networking work. It's an ongoing work. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT The =docker-compose= file should look like the following. #+begin_src yaml --- version: '2.3' services: prometheus: image: quay.io/prometheus/prometheus:v2.27.0 container_name: prometheus mem_limit: 400m mem_reservation: 300m restart: unless-stopped command: - --config.file=/etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml - --web.external-url=http://prometheus.localhost/ volumes: - "./prometheus/:/etc/prometheus/:ro" ports: - "80:9090" #+end_src A few things to *note*, especially for the new container crowd. The container image *version* is explicitly specified, do *not* use =latest= in production. To make sure I don't overload my host, I set memory limits. I don't mind if it goes down, this is a PoC (Proof of Concept) for the time being. In your case, you might want to choose higher limits to give it more room to breath. When the memory limit is reached, the container will be killed with /Out Of Memory/ error. In the *command* section, I specify the /external url/ for Prometheus to redirect me correctly. This is what Prometheus thinks its own hostname is. I also specify the configuration file, previously written, which I mount as /read-only/ in the *volumes* section. Finally, we need to port-forward =9090= to our hosts' =80= if possible to access *Prometheus*. Otherwise, figure out a way to route it properly. This is a local installation, which is suggested by the Prometheus /hostname/. If you made it so far, you should be able to run this with no issues. #+begin_src bash docker-compose up -d #+end_src **** Prometheus Rules *Prometheus* supports *two* types of rules; recording and alerting. Let's expand a little bit on those two concepts. ***** Recording Rules First, let's start off with [[https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/recording_rules/][recording rules]]. I don't think I can explain it better than the *Prometheus* documentation which says. #+begin_quote Recording rules allow you to precompute frequently needed or computationally expensive expressions and save their result as a new set of time series. Querying the precomputed result will then often be much faster than executing the original expression every time it is needed. This is especially useful for dashboards, which need to query the same expression repeatedly every time they refresh. #+end_quote Sounds pretty simple right ? Well it is. Unfortunately, I haven't needed to create recording rules yet for my setup so I'll forgo this step. ***** Alerting Rules As the name suggests, [[https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/alerting_rules/#alerting-rules][alerting rules]] allow you to define conditional expressions based on metrics which will trigger notifications to alert you. This is a very simple example of an /alert rule/ that monitors all the endpoints scraped by /Prometheus/ to see if any of them is down. If this expression return a result, an alert will fire from /Prometheus/. #+begin_src yaml groups: - name: Instance down rules: - alert: InstanceDown expr: up == 0 for: 5m labels: severity: page annotations: summary: "Instance {{ $labels.instance }} down" description: "{{ $labels.instance }} of job {{ $labels.job }} has been down for more than 5 minutes." #+end_src To be able to add this alert to *Prometheus*, we need to save it in a =rules.yml= file and then include it in the *Prometheus* configuration as follows. #+NAME: prometheus-rule-files-config #+begin_src yaml rule_files: - "rules.yml" #+end_src Making the configuration intiretly as follows. #+begin_src yaml :noweb yes <> <> <> #+end_src At this point, make sure everything is mounted into the container properly and rerun your *Prometheus*. **** Prometheus UI Congratulations if you've made it so far. If you visit http://localhost/ at stage you should get to Prometheus where you can query your metrics. #+caption: Prometheus overview #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus/01-prometheus-overview.png][file:images/upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus/01-prometheus-overview.png]] You can get all sorts of information under the /status/ drop-down menu. #+caption: Prometheus Status drop-down menu #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus/02-prometheus-status-drop-down-menu.png][file:images/upgrade-your-monitoring-setup-with-prometheus/02-prometheus-status-drop-down-menu.png]] **** Conclusion As you can see, deploying *Prometheus* is not too hard. If you're running /Kubernetes/, make sure you use the operator. It will make your life a lot easier in all sorts of things. Take your time to familiarise yourself with *Prometheus* and consult the documentation as much as possible. It is well written and in most cases your best friend. Figure out different ways to create rules for recording and alerting. Most people at this stage deploy *Grafana* to start visualizing their metrics. Well... Not in this blog post we ain't ! I hope you enjoy playing around with *Prometheus* and until the next post. ** Nikola :@nikola: *** DONE Welcome back to the old world :blog:org_mode:emacs:rst: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-01 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-08-31 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: welcome-back-to-the-old-world :CUSTOM_ID: welcome-back-to-the-old-world :END: I have recently blogged about moving to /emacs/ and the reasons behind it. Since then, I have used /Orgmode/ a lot more. And I have begun to like it even more. I had a plan to move the blog to /[[https://gohugo.io/][Hugo]]/. After giving it a try, I had inconsistent results. I must've been doing something wrong. I've spend a lot more time than I anticipated on it. At some point, it becomes an endeavor with diminishing returns. So I ditched that idea. But why did I want to move to /Hugo/ in the first place ? #+hugo: more **** Why /Hugo/ you may ask Well, the answer to that question is very simple; /Orgmode/. The long answer is that the default /Nikola/ markup language and the most worked on is /reStructuredText/. It can support other formats. /Orgmode/ also seems widely supported and can be easily manipulated. So I want to move to /Orgmode/ instead of /rst/. But what are the odds ? Damn... It has plugins and you can find an [[https://plugins.getnikola.com/v8/orgmode/][orgmode]] page where you find #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola plugin -i orgmode #+END_EXAMPLE Where the heck did that come from ? Okay that was easy. Turns out /Nikola/ supports /Orgmode/. **** Nikola /Orgmode/ plugin installation The page suggests running. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola plugin -i orgmode #+END_EXAMPLE Followed by #+BEGIN_SRC python # NOTE: Needs additional configuration in init.el file. # Add the orgmode compiler to your COMPILERS dict. COMPILERS["orgmode"] = ['.org'] # Add org files to your POSTS, PAGES POSTS = POSTS + (("posts/*.org", "posts", "post.tmpl"),) PAGES = PAGES + (("pages/*.org", "pages", "page.tmpl"),) #+END_SRC Okay, that's not too bad. Next step. **** Alright, let's run our first org post The installation was easy, running it should be just as easy. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola auto [2020-08-31 23:16:17] INFO: auto: Rebuilding the site... Scanning posts..........done! . render_taxonomies:output/archive.html . render_taxonomies:output/categories/index.html ... . copy_assets:output/assets/css/index.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/index.css.map . copy_assets:output/assets/js/index.js.map . copy_assets:output/assets/js/index.js . copy_assets:output/assets/css/rst_base.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/ipython.min.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/html4css1.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/nikola_rst.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/baguetteBox.min.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/nikola_ipython.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/rst.css . copy_assets:output/assets/css/theme.css . copy_assets:output/assets/js/justified-layout.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/html5.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/gallery.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/fancydates.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/baguetteBox.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/gallery.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/html5shiv-printshiv.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/luxon.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/js/fancydates.min.js . copy_assets:output/assets/xml/rss.xsl . copy_assets:output/assets/xml/atom.xsl . copy_assets:output/assets/css/code.css . render_posts:cache/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.html Loading /etc/emacs/site-start.d/00debian.el (source)... Loading /etc/emacs/site-start.d/50dictionaries-common.el (source)... Loading debian-ispell... Loading /var/cache/dictionaries-common/emacsen-ispell-default.el (source)... Loading /var/cache/dictionaries-common/emacsen-ispell-dicts.el (source)... Created img-url link. Created file link. Please install htmlize from https://github.com/hniksic/emacs-htmlize TaskError - taskid:render_posts:cache/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.html PythonAction Error Traceback (most recent call last): File "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/plugins/orgmode/orgmode.py", line 75, in compile subprocess.check_call(command) File "/home/user/anaconda3/envs/nikola/lib/python3.8/subprocess.py", line 364, in check_call raise CalledProcessError(retcode, cmd) subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['emacs', '--batch', '-l', '/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/plugins/orgmode/init.el', '--eval', '(nikola-html-export "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.org" "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/cache/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.html")']' returned non-zero exit status 255. During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred: Traceback (most recent call last): File "/home/user/anaconda3/envs/nikola/lib/python3.8/site-packages/doit/action.py", line 437, in execute returned_value = self.py_callable(*self.args, **kwargs) File "/home/user/anaconda3/envs/nikola/lib/python3.8/site-packages/nikola/post.py", line 711, in compile self.compile_html( File "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/plugins/orgmode/orgmode.py", line 94, in compile raise Exception('''Cannot compile {0} -- bad org-mode configuration (return code {1}) Exception: Cannot compile posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.org -- bad org-mode configuration (return code 255) The command is emacs --batch -l /home/user/blog.lazkani.io/plugins/orgmode/init.el --eval '(nikola-html-export "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.org" "/home/user/blog.lazkani.io/cache/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.html")' ######################################## render_posts:cache/posts/text-editors/emacs-and-org-mode.html : [2020-08-31 23:16:29] INFO: auto: Serving on http://127.0.0.1:8000/ ... [2020-08-31 23:16:36] INFO: auto: Server is shutting down. #+END_EXAMPLE I knew there was a catch ! You might be looking for the error message and it might take you a while. It took me a bit to find out what was wrong. The error is actually the following. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE Please install htmlize from https://github.com/hniksic/emacs-htmlize #+END_EXAMPLE It turns out that the plugin is a /python/ script that calls /emacs/ with a configuration =init.el=. I know I have /htmlize/ installed on my /doom/ system but /Nikola/ does not see it. After looking around the internet, I found the =init.el= file I'm looking for. It's in =plugins/orgmode/init.el= and it has the following few lines at the top. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (require 'package) (setq package-load-list '((htmlize t))) (package-initialize) #+END_SRC Okay, that's what's trying to load /htmlize/. Let's try to add it to the =load-path= as follows. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (require 'package) (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/.local/straight/build/htmlize") (setq package-load-list '((htmlize t))) (package-initialize) #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT In my case, the path to =htmlize= is =~/.emacs.d/.local/straight/build/htmlize=. If you don't have it installed, simply =git clone= the repository in a directory and =load-path= that path. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Now, let's try /Nikola/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola auto [2020-08-31 23:30:32] INFO: auto: Rebuilding the site... Scanning posts..........done! [2020-08-31 23:30:36] INFO: auto: Serving on http://127.0.0.1:8000/ ... #+END_EXAMPLE Woohoo ! It works. Now let's move to the next steps. Writing our first blog post. **** First /Org/ post Let's create this blog post. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT It is very important to use the =nikola= command line interface to create the post. I spent too much time trying to figure out the /header/ settings. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola new_post -1 -f orgmode -t orgmode posts/misc/welcome-back-to-the-old-world.org #+END_EXAMPLE Now edit the /org/ file and save it. /Nikola/ should pick it up and render it. **** Yes, I have made more changes ***** Theme I have moved the blog to the /[[https://themes.getnikola.com/v8/willy-theme/][willy-theme]]/ which offers /light/ and *dark* modes and good code highlighting. ***** Blog post format You might have also noticed that there were big changes to the repository. All the blog posts have been converted to /Orgmode/ now, both /pages/ and /posts/. I used [[https://pandoc.org/][pandoc]] to do the initial conversion from /rst/ to /Orgmode/ as follows. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ pandoc --from rst --to org /path/to/file.rst > /path/to/file.org #+END_EXAMPLE I know, I know. It does a pretty good initial job but you will need to touch up the posts. Fortunately, I did not have a lot of blog posts yet. Unfortunately, I had enough for the task to take a few days. For me, it was worth it. **** Conclusion This was a long overdue project, I am happy to finally put it behind me and move foward with something simple that works with my current flow. *** DONE Modifying a /Nikola/ theme :theme:blog: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-01 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-01 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: modifying-a-nikola-theme :CUSTOM_ID: modifying-a-nikola-theme :END: After publishing my /blog/ in new form yesterday night, I have received some suggestions for changes to the theme. First off, I noticed that the footer is not showing after the blog was deployed. That reminded me that I have made changes to the original theme on disk. The pipeline, though, install the theme fresh before deploying the website. I needed to fix that. Here's how I did it. #+hugo: more **** Create a new theme This might be counter intuitive but /themes/ in /Nikola/ can actually have parents. So what we need to do is clone the theme we want to modify while keeping it as parent to our theme. I'll show you. First, create your new theme. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ nikola theme --new custom-willy-theme --parent willy-theme --engine=jinja #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I had to use =--engine=jinja= because /willy-theme/ uses jinja templating. If you are using the /mako/ engine, you don't need to add thihs as the *default* is /mako/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT You will /probably/ need both themes in your =themes/= directory. The /willy-theme/ needs to be installed before creating your /custom/ theme from it. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT This should create =themes/custom-willy-theme/=. If we look inside, we'll see one file that describes this /theme/ with its *parent*. Go to your =conf.py= and change the /theme/ to =custom-willy-theme=. **** Let's talk hierarchy Now that we have our own /custom theme/ out of the /willy-theme/, if we rebuild the blog we can see that nothing changes. Of course, we have not made any modifications. But did you ever ask yourself the question, why did the site not change ? If your theme points to a *parent*, whatever /Nikola/ expects will have to be *your theme first* with a *failover to the parent* theme. Ok, if you've followed so far, you will need to know what /Nikola/ is expecting right ? You can dig into the /documentation/ here to find out what you can do, but I wanted to change a few things to the theme. I wanted to add a footer, for example. It turns out for /willy-theme/ that is located in the =templates/base.tmpl=. All I did was the following #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ mkdir themes/custom-willy-theme/templates $ cp themes/willy-theme/templates/base.tmpl themes/custom-willy-theme/templates/ #+END_EXAMPLE I made my modification to the =base.tmpl= and rendered the blog. It was that simple. My changes were made. **** Conclusion You can always clone the /theme repository/ and make your modifications to it. But maintenance becomes an issue. This seems to be a cleaner way for me to make modifications on the original /theme/ I'm using. This is how you can too. ** Nix :@nix: *** DONE NixOS on encrypted ZFS :@nixos:zfs:encryption: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-10-17 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-10-17 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: nixos-on-encrypted-zfs :CUSTOM_ID: nixos-on-encrypted-zfs :END: I wouldn't call myself a distro hopper. The decision of distribution is solely based on requirements. I have requirements and I want the distribution to fulfill them as much as possible. After 15 years, I know what I want and I go and find it. In this case, an unexpected project caught my eye. The idea is so radically different that I wasn't actually searching for it this time. It is one of those times where it found me first. After looking into *Nix* and *NixOS*, I decided it is going to be my distribution of choice on the desktop. I will use that as my test bed before migrating all the serious work there. That's how I got my first taste of *NixOS* outside of the deterministic virtualization layer and into the wild. #+hugo: more **** Requirements Before installing any new system, I draftdown a list of requirements I would need this system to run. These are things that are very hard to change on the fly in the future without some serious work. Also, things that simply need to be there in this day and age. ***** Filesystem I'm a big fan of ~zfs~. I've been running it on Linux, since the ~openzfs~ project successfully ported it, with no issues. It's a solid choice for a filesystem and I don't see a reason not to choose it. Is it really a requirement ? Well, yes. By now, ~openzfs~ should be accessible to all distributions but my choice of distribution is not usually for the beginner user. I need to know it's supported and documented. I can figure out the rest from there. ***** Encryption This is the first requirement, I always want encryption. The reason why I put it second in the list is that I needed to talk about ~zfs~ first. The ~zfs~ filesystem offers encryption. Unfortunately, my research have shown that ~zfs~ might not encrypt some metadata. This might not be a big deal but the choice of using Luks is there as well. With Luks, we can encrypt the whole drive. So let's do that; Luks with ~zfs~ on top. **** NixOS *NixOS* utilizes *Nix* to build you an OS from a configuration file. This configuration file is written in the ~nix~ language. It is very analogous to written an ~Ansible~ playbook but it builds an OS instead. The idea sounded appealing to me. A good friend of mine, [[https://setkeh.com/][setkeh]], gave me a quick and dirty overview, at first. That pushed me into doing more research of my own where I found out that I can spawn off a ~nix-shell~ with whatever dependencies I want without having them installed on my system. What a great concept for development or even running applications you don't really want to run. ~Java~ stuff for example. Anyway, for all of these different reasons I have chosen *NixOS* to be the OS of choice to go on the desktop. **** Installation After testing [[https://nixos.org/][*NixOS*]] in a VM a few times, I got =setkeh= on a conference session and we dug into this. ***** Filesystem partitioning For the filesystem, we're going to create two partitions. We need one, ~vfat~, for the boot and another, ~zfs~, for the rest of the filesystem. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT The assumption is that we're installing *NixOS* on an ~EFI~ enabled system. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT We can start by creating the first partition of =1GB=. #+begin_src shell sgdisk -n3:1M:+1024M -t3:EF00 /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID #+end_src Followed by the rest of the filesystem. #+begin_src shell sgdisk -n1:0:0 -t1:BF01 /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT It is usually easier to do the partitioning using =GParted=. Make sure that the partitions are unformatted, if you do so. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Do *NOT* forget to enable the boot flag on the first partition or your system will not boot. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** Filesystem formatting Now that we got our partitions creates, let's go ahead and format them properly. Starting with the ~boot~ partition first. #+begin_src shell mkfs.vfat /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID-part1 #+end_src #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT At this sage, you're formatting a partition. Make sure you're pointing to the partition and not your whole disk as in the previous section. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Then our ~zfs~ partition, but we need to encrypt it first. So, we create the Luks partition. #+begin_src shell cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID-part2 #+end_src At this stage, stage we are done with the filesystem formatting and we need to create the ~zfs~ pool. To do so, we need to mount the encrypted ~root~ filesystem; Luks. #+begin_src shell cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID-part2 crypt #+end_src This mounts the filesystem in =/dev/mapper/crypt=. We'll use that to create the pool. #+begin_src shell zpool create -O mountpoint=none rpool /dev/mapper/crypt zfs create -o mountpoint=legacy rpool/root zfs create -o mountpoint=legacy rpool/root/nixos zfs create -o mountpoint=legacy rpool/home #+end_src ***** Filesystem mounting After creating the filesystem, let's mount everything. #+begin_src shell # Mounting filesystem mount -t zfs rpool/root/nixos /mnt mkdir /mnt/home mkdir /mnt/boot # Mounting home directory mount -t zfs rpool/home /mnt/home # Mounting boot partition mount /dev/disk/by-id/VENDOR-ID-part1 /mnt/boot #+end_src ***** Generating NixOS configuration At this stage, we need a =nix= configuration to build our system from. I didn't have any configuration to start from so I generated one. #+begin_src shell nixos-generate-config --root /mnt #+end_src ***** NixOS configuration Due to the weird configuration we've had, we need to make a few adjustements to the suggested configuration layed out in the docs. The required configuration bits to be added to =/mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix= are: #+begin_src nix boot.supportedFilesystems = [ "zfs" ]; # Make sure you set the networking.hostId option, which ZFS requires: networking.hostId = ""; # See https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-networking.hostId for more. # Use the GRUB 2 boot loader. boot.loader.grub = { enable = true; version =2; device = "nodev"; efiSupport = true; enableCryptodisk = true; }; boot.initrd.luks.devices = { root = { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/VENDOR-UUID-part2"; ## Use blkid to find this UUID # Required even if we're not using LVM preLVM = true; }; }; #+end_src ***** NixOS installation If we're done with all of the configuration as described above, we should be able to build a bootable system. Let's try that out by installing *NixOS*. #+begin_src shell nixos-install #+end_src **** Conclusion It took a bit of trial and error, and a loooooooot of mounting over and over again. At the end, though, it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. I'm still trying to get myself familiarised with *NixOS* and the new way of doing things. All in all, I would recommend trying *NixOS*, or the very least *Nix*. ** Revision Control :@revision_control: *** DONE Git! First Steps... :git: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-07-23 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-07-22 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: git-first-steps :CUSTOM_ID: git-first-steps :END: The topic of /git/ came up recently a lot at work. Questions were asked about why I like to do what I do and the reasoning beind. Today, I joined =#dgplug= on [[https://freenode.net/][freenode]] and it turns out it was class time and the topic is /git/ and writing a post on it. Which got me thinking... Why not do that ? #+hugo: more **** Requirements I'd like to start my post with a requirement, /git/. It has to be installed on your machine, obviously, for you to be able to follow along. **** A Few Concepts I'm going to try to explain a few concepts in a very simple way. That means I am sacrificing accuracy for ease of understanding. ***** What is revision control? [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Version_control][Wikipedia]] describes it as: #+BEGIN_QUOTE "A component of software configuration management, version control, also known as revision control or source control, is the management of changes to documents, computer programs, large web sites, and other collections of information." #+END_QUOTE In simple terms, it keeps track of what you did and when as long as you log that on every change that deserve to be saved. This is a very good way to keep backups of previous changes, also a way to have a history documenting who changed what and for what reason (NO! Not to blame, to understand why and how to fix it). ***** What is a git commit? You can read all about what a commit is on the manual page of [[https://git-scm.com/docs/git-commit][git-commit]]. But the simple way to understand this is, it takes a snapshot of your work and names it a /SHA/ number (very long string of letters and numbers). A /SHA/ is a unique name that is derived from information from the current commit and every commit that came before since the beginning of the tree. In other words, there is an extremely low chance that 2 commits would ever have the same /SHA/. Let's not also forget the security implication from this. If you have a clone of a repository and someone changed a commit somewhere in the tree history, every commit including the one changed and newer will have to change names. At that point, your fork will have a mismatch and you can know that the history was changed. ***** What is the =git add= thingy for? Well the [[https://git-scm.com/docs/git-add][git-add]] manual page is very descriptive about the subject but, once again, I'll try to explain it in metaphors. Think of it this way, =git-commit= saves the changes, but what changes ? That's exactly the question to answer. What changes ? What if I want to commit some changes but not others ? What if I want to commit all the code in one commit and all the comments in another ? That's where the "staging area" comes in play. You use =git-add= to stage files to be committed. And whenever you run the =git-commit= command, it will commit whatever is staged to be committed, right ? **** Practice Now that we've already explained a few concepts, let's see how this all fits together. ***** Step 1: Basic git configuration The [[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Getting-Started-First-Time-Git-Setup][Getting Started - First-Time Git Setup]] has more detailed setup but I took out what's quick and easy for now. First setup your name and email. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git config --global user.name "John Doe" $ git config --global user.email johndoe@example.com #+END_EXAMPLE You're done ! ***** Step 2: Creating a repository This is easy. If you want to be able to commit, you need to create a project to work on. A "project" can be translated to a repository and everything in that directory will be tracked. So let's create a repository #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ # Navigate to where you'd like to create the repository $ cd ~/Documents/Projects/ $ # Create repository directory $ mkdir example $ # Navigate into the newly created directory $ cd example $ # Create the repository $ git init #+END_EXAMPLE Yeah, it was only one command =git init=. Told you it was easy, didn't I? ***** Step 3: Make a change Let's create a file called =README.md= in the current directory (=~/Documents/Projects/example=) and put the following in it. #+BEGIN_SRC markdown # Example This is an example repository. #+END_SRC And save it of course. ***** Step 4: Staging changes If you go back to the command line and check the following command, you'll see a similar result. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git status On branch master No commits yet Untracked files: (use "git add ..." to include in what will be committed) README.md nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track) #+END_EXAMPLE and =README.md= is in red (if you have colors enabled). This means that there is file that is not tracked in your repository. We would like to track that one, let's stage it. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git add README.md $ git status On branch master No commits yet Changes to be committed: (use "git rm --cached ..." to unstage) new file: README.md #+END_EXAMPLE And =README.md= would now become green (if you have colors enabled). This means that if you commit now, this new file will be added and tracked in the future for changes. Technically though, it is being tracked for changes right now. Let's prove it. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ echo "This repository is trying to give you a hands on experience with git to complement the post." >> README.md $ git status On branch master No commits yet Changes to be committed: (use "git rm --cached ..." to unstage) new file: README.md Changes not staged for commit: (use "git add ..." to update what will be committed) (use "git checkout -- ..." to discard changes in working directory) modified: README.md #+END_EXAMPLE As you can see, git figured out that the file has been changed. Now let's add these changes too and move forward. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git add README.md $ git status On branch master No commits yet Changes to be committed: (use "git rm --cached ..." to unstage) new file: README.md #+END_EXAMPLE ***** Step 5: Committing This will be as easy as the rest. Let's commit these changes with a good commit message to describe the changes. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git commit -m "Second commit" [master (root-commit) 0bd01aa] Second commit 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) create mode 100644 README.md #+END_EXAMPLE Very descriptive commit indeed ! #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git status On branch master nothing to commit, working tree clean #+END_EXAMPLE Of course ! There is nothing to commit ! #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log commit 0bd01aa6826675f339c3173d7665ebb44c3894a7 (HEAD -> master) Author: John Doe Date: Mon Jul 22 20:57:40 2019 +0200 Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE You can definitely see who committed it, when and what the message was. You also have access to the changes made in this commit. **** Conclusion I'm going to end this post here, and will continue to build up the knowledge in new posts to come. For now, I think it's a good idea to simply work with commits. Next concepts to cover would be branching and merging. *** DONE Git! Branching and Merging :git:branch:merge: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-08-01 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-08-01 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: git-branching-and-merging :CUSTOM_ID: git-branching-and-merging :END: In the previous post about /git/, we had a look at what /git/ is and got our feet wet with a bit of it. In this post, I will be moving forward with the topic, I will be talking about branches, how to work with them and finally what merging is and how it works. #+hugo: more **** Requirements The same requirement we had from the last post, obviously /git/. **** Branching and Merging ***** What is a branch? /git/ [[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v1/Git-Branching-What-a-Branch-Is][documentation]] describes it as: #+BEGIN_QUOTE "A branch in Git is simply a lightweight movable pointer to one of the[se] commits." #+END_QUOTE Usually, people coming from /svn/ think of *branches* differently. In /git/, a branch is simply a pointer to a commit. So let's verify that claim to see if it's true. Remember our example repository from the last post ? We'll be using it here. First let's create a new branch. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout -b mybranch Switched to a new branch 'mybranch' #+END_EXAMPLE That was simple, wasn't it ? Alright, let's test our hypothesis. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log commit 643a353370d74c26d7cbf5c80a0d73988a75e09e (HEAD -> mybranch, master) Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 19:50:45 2019 +0200 Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE The commit is, of course, different because this is a different computer with a different repository from scratch. Anyway, it seems from the log message that both /mybranch/ and /master/ are pointing to same commit /SHA/. Technically they are pointing to *HEAD*. Now let's continue and add a new commit. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ echo "" >> README.md $ git add README.md $ git commit -m "Adding an empty line" [mybranch b30f4e0] Adding an empty line 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) #+END_EXAMPLE After this last commit, let's check the log #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log commit b30f4e0fa8f3b5c9f041c9ad1be982b2fed80851 (HEAD -> mybranch) Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 20:28:05 2019 +0200 Adding an empty line commit 643a353370d74c26d7cbf5c80a0d73988a75e09e (master) Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 19:50:45 2019 +0200 Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE From reading the output of log, we can see that the /master/ branch points to a different commit than /mybranch/. To visualize this, let's look at it in a different way. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log --graph --oneline --all * b30f4e0 (HEAD -> mybranch) Adding an empty line * 643a353 (master) Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE What the above suggests is that our two branches have different contents at this stage. In other words, if I switch back to the /master/ branch what do you think we will find in =README.md= ? #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout master Switched to branch 'master' $ cat README.md # Example This is an example repository. This repository is trying to give you a hands on experience with git to complement the post. $ #+END_EXAMPLE And if we switch back to /mybranch/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout mybranch Switched to branch 'mybranch' $ cat README.md # Example This is an example repository. This repository is trying to give you a hands on experience with git to complement the post. $ #+END_EXAMPLE Let's add another commit to make easier to see the changes than an empty line. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ echo "Let's add a line to mybranch." >> README.md $ git add README.md $ git commit -m "Adding more commits to mybranch" [mybranch f25dd5d] Adding more commits to mybranch 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) #+END_EXAMPLE Now let's check the tree again. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log --graph --oneline --all * f25dd5d (HEAD -> mybranch) Adding more commits to mybranch * b30f4e0 Adding an empty line * 643a353 (master) Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE Let's also check the difference between our /master/ branch and /mybranch/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git diff master mybranch diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index b4734ad..f07e71e 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -2,3 +2,5 @@ This is an example repository. This repository is trying to give you a hands on experience with git to complement the post. + +Let's add a line to mybranch. #+END_EXAMPLE The =+= suggests an addition and =-= suggests a deletion of a line. As we can see from the =+= shown before the two lines added to the =README.md= file, /mybranch/ has these additions. You can read more about /git/ branches in the /git/ [[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v1/Git-Branching-What-a-Branch-Is][documentation]] page. ***** What is merging ? That's all fine so far, but how do I get these changes from /mybranch/ to the /master/ branch ? The answer to that is also as easy as all the steps taken so far. /git/ merges *from* a branch you specify *to* the branch you are currently on. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ # Checking which branch we are on $ git branch master * mybranch $ # We are on mybranch and we need to put these changes into master $ # First we need to move to our master branch $ git checkout master Switched to branch 'master' $ # Now we can merge from mybranch $ git merge mybranch Updating 643a353..f25dd5d Fast-forward README.md | 2 ++ 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+) #+END_EXAMPLE As we can see. The changes in /mybranch/ have been merged into the /master/ branch. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log commit f25dd5da3e6f91d117177782a5811d5086f66799 (HEAD -> master, mybranch) Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 20:43:57 2019 +0200 Adding more commits to mybranch commit b30f4e0fa8f3b5c9f041c9ad1be982b2fed80851 Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 20:28:05 2019 +0200 Adding an empty line commit 643a353370d74c26d7cbf5c80a0d73988a75e09e Author: John Doe Date: Thu Aug 1 19:50:45 2019 +0200 Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE **** Merging Strategies I'll explain to you how I like to work and my personal merging strategy. I will keep out some details as they use concepts that are more advanced than what has been discussed so far. ***** /master/ branch To me, the /master/ branch stays always up to date with the *remote* /master/ branch. In other words, I do not make commits against the /master/ branch in the project I'm working on. ***** branch If I want to work on the project, I start by updating the /master/ branch and then branching it as we've seen before. The name of the branch is always indicative on what it holds, or what kind of work I am doing on it. As long as I am working on my dev branch, I keep updating the /master/ branch and then porting the changes into my dev branch. This way, at the end the code is compatible and I am testing with the latest version of the code. This is very helpful and makes merging later a breeze. ***** merging After my work is done, I push my branch to the remote server and ask for the maintainer of the project to merge my changes into the /master/ branch after reviewing it, of course. To explain this in a very simple manner, all that mumbo jumpo talk previously simply means someone else did the merge into master. **** Conclusion In this post, I talked about what are branches. We went ahead and worked a little bit with branches and then mentioned merging. At the end of the post I talked a bit about my merging strategy. In the next post, I will be talking about remotes. *** DONE Git! Remotes... :rebase:remotes:git: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-08-07 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-08-07 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: git-remotes :CUSTOM_ID: git-remotes :END: In the previous post, we talked about branching and merging. We will say a few last words on branches in this post and dive into remotes. What are remotes ? What are they for ? How are they used ? Coming right up. **** Requirements In this post, we will need another requirement. - First, you obviously need /git/. - Second, you will need a git repository on a git server. Easier way is to create an account on [[https://gitlab.com][Gitlab]], [[https://github.com][GitHub]] or other similar services. **** Branches I have a few more things I need to say about branches... If you came to the same conclusion that branches in /git/ are /cheap/, you are correct. This is very important because this encourages you to create more branches. A lot of short living branches is a great way to work. Small features added here and there. Small projects to test new features, etc... Second conclusion you can come up with from the previous post is that the /master/ branch is not a /special/ branch. People use it as a /special/ branch, or the branch of *truth* by convention /only/. I should also note that some services like *Gitlab* offer master branch protection on their own which would not allow master history overwriting. The best next topic that comes after /branches/ is a topic extremely similar to it, *remotes*. **** Remotes The description of =git-remote= from the [[https://git-scm.com/docs/git-remote][manual page]] is simply #+BEGIN_QUOTE Manage the set of repositories ("remotes") whose branches you track. #+END_QUOTE That's exactly what it is. A way to manage /remote/ repositories. Now we will be talking about managing them in a bit but let's talk about how to use them. I found the best way to think to work with them is that you can think of them as /branches/. That's exactly why I thought this would be best fit after that blog post. ***** Listing Let's list them on our project and see what's what. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git remote -v #+END_EXAMPLE Okay! Nothing... Alright, let's change that. We don't have a /remote/ repository we can manage. We need to create one. ***** Adding a remote So I went to *Gitlab* and I created a new repository. After creating the repository, you will get a box with commands that look similar to the following. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ cd existing_repo $ git remote rename origin old-origin $ git remote add origin git@gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project.git $ git push -u origin --all $ git push -u origin --tags #+END_EXAMPLE The first command is useless to us. The second is renaming a remote we do not have. Now the third command is interesting. This one is adding a remote called *origin*. We need that. The last two commands are there to push everything to the remote repository. Let's copy that command and put it in our command line. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git remote add origin git@gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project.git $ git remote -v origin git@gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project.git (fetch) origin git@gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project.git (push) #+END_EXAMPLE If you look at that output carefully, you will notice that there is a /fetch/ link and a /push/ link. Anyway, let's push. ***** Push #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git push -u origin --all Enumerating objects: 3, done. Counting objects: 100% (3/3), done. Delta compression using up to 4 threads Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done. Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 317 bytes | 317.00 KiB/s, done. Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0) To gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project.git * [new branch] master -> master Branch 'master' set up to track remote branch 'master' from 'origin'. #+END_EXAMPLE We have pushed all of our changes to the remote now. If you refresh the web page, you should see the repository. So what happens if someone else made a change and pushed to it, or maybe it was you from another computer. ***** Pulling from a remote Most people using git usually do =git pull= and call it a day. We will not, we will dissect what that command is doing. You might not know that you can configure =git pull= to do a /rebase/ instead of a /merge/. That's not important for you at this stage but what's important is the clue it gives us. There is a /merge/ in it. What =git pull= actually does is a =git fetch= followed by a =git merge=. So just like =git push=, =git fetch= will download the changes from the remote. If the /fetch/ is followed by a /merge/, then where are we fetching to and merging from ? This is where thinking about remotes as branches comes in. Think of =origin/master= as a branch, a local branch, because in some way it is. So let's fetch. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git fetch origin master From gitlab.com:elazkani/git-project * branch master -> FETCH_HEAD #+END_EXAMPLE But we don't see any changes to our code ! Ahaaa ! But it did get the new stuff. Let me show you. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git diff master origin/master diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index b4734ad..a492bbb 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -2,3 +2,7 @@ This is an example repository. This repository is trying to give you a hands on experience with git to complement the post. + +# Remote + +This is the section on git remotes. #+END_EXAMPLE See ! Told you. Now let's get those changes into our master branch. You guessed it, we only need to merge from =origin/master= #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git merge origin/master Updating 0bd01aa..4f6bb31 Fast-forward README.md | 4 ++++ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) #+END_EXAMPLE That was easy wasn't it ? **** Let's have a little chat, you and me ! You can have multiple remotes. Make a good use of them. Go through all the different methodologies online to work with /git/ and try them out. Find what works for you. Make use of branches and remotes. Make use of merging. **** Conclusion After talking about remotes in this post, you have some reading to do. I hope I've made your journey much simpler moving forward with this topic. *** DONE Git! Rebase and Strategies :git:rebase:strategies: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-08-10 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-08-10 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: git-rebase-and-strategies :CUSTOM_ID: git-rebase-and-strategies :END: In the previous topic, I talked about git remotes because it felt natural after branching and merging. Now, the time has come to talk a little bit about =rebase= and some good cases to use it for. #+hugo: more **** Requirements This has not changed people, it is still /git/. **** Rebase In /git/ there are 2 ways of integrating your changes from one branch into another. We already talked about one; =git-merge=. For more information about =git-merge= consult the [[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Basic-Branching-and-Merging#_basic_merging][git basic branching and merging]] manual. The other is =git-rebase=. While =git-rebase= has a lot of different uses, the basic use of it is described in the [[https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing][git branching rebasing]] manual as: #+BEGIN_QUOTE "With the =rebase= command, you can take all the changes that were committed on one branch and replay them on a different branch." #+END_QUOTE In other words, all the commits you have made into the branch you are on will be set aside. Then, all the changes in the branch you are rebasing from will be applied to your branch. Finally, all your changes, that were set aside previously, will be applied back to your branch. The beauty about this process is that you can keep your branch updated with upstream, while coding your changes. By the end of the process of adding your feature, your changes are ready to be merged upstream straight away. This is due to the fact that all the conflicts would've been resolved in each rebase. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Branch and branch often! if you merge, merge and merge often! or rebase, and rebase often! #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** Usage Rebase is used just like merge in our case. First, let's create a branch and make a change in that branch. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout -b rebasing-example Switched to a new branch 'rebasing-example' $ printf "\n# Rebase\n\nThis is a rebase branch.\n" >> README.md $ git add README.md $ git commit -m "Adding rebase section" [rebasing-example 4cd0ffe] Adding rebase section 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) $ #+END_EXAMPLE Now let's assume someone (or yourself) made a change to the =master= branch. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout master Switched to branch 'master' Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'. $ printf "# Master\n\nThis is a master branch" >> master.md $ git add master.md $ git commit -m "Adding master file" [master 7fbdab9] Adding master file 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) create mode 100644 master.md $ #+END_EXAMPLE I want to take a look at how the tree looks like before I attempt any changes. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log --graph --oneline --all * 7fbdab9 (HEAD -> master) Adding master file | * 4cd0ffe (rebasing-example) Adding rebase section |/ * 4f6bb31 (origin/master) Adding the git remote section * 0bd01aa Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE After both of our commits, the tree diverged. We are pointing to the *master* branch, I know that because =HEAD= points to /master/. That commit is different than the commit that =rebase-example= branch points to. These changes were introduced by someone else while I was adding the rebase section in the =README.md= file and they might be crucial for my application. In short, I was those changes in the code I am working on right now. Let's do that. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git checkout rebasing-example Switched to branch 'rebasing-example' $ git rebase master First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it... Applying: Adding rebase section #+END_EXAMPLE And, let's look at the tree of course. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git log --graph --oneline --all * 1b2aa4a (HEAD -> rebasing-example) Adding rebase section * 7fbdab9 (master) Adding master file * 4f6bb31 (origin/master) Adding the git remote section * 0bd01aa Second commit #+END_EXAMPLE The tree lookr linear now. =HEAD= is pointing to our branch. That commit points to the =7fbdab9= commit which the /master/ branch also points to. So rebase set aside =1b2aa4a= to apply =7fbdab9= and then re-applied it back. Pretty neat huh ?! **** My Strategy I'm going to be honest with you. I do not know the different kinds of merge strategies. I've glazed at names of a few but I've never looked at them closely enough to see which one is what. What I use, I've used for a while. I learned it from somewhere and changed a few things in it to make it work for me. First of all, I always fork a repository. I tend to stay away from creating a branch on the upstream repository unless it's my own personal project. On my fork, I freely roam. I am the king of my own fork and I create as many branches as I please. I start with an assumption. The assumption is that my /master/ branch is, for all intents and purposes, upstream. This means I keep it up to date with upstream's main branch. When I make a branch, I make a branch from /master/, this way I know it's up to date with upstream. I do my work on my branch. Every few hours, I update my /master/ branch. After I update my /master/ branch, I /rebase/ the /master/ branch into my branch and voilà I'm up to date. By the time my changes are ready to be merged back into upstream for any reason, they are ready to go. That *MR* is gonna be ready to be merged in a jiffy. **** Conclusion From what I've read, I use one of those strategies described on some website. I don't know which one. But to me, it doesn't matter because it works for me. And if I need to adapt that for one reason or another, I can. *** DONE Git binary clean up :git:git_filter_repo:git_lfs: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-02 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: git-binary-clean-up :CUSTOM_ID: git-binary-clean-up :END: When I first started this blog, I simply started with experiments. The first iteration was a /wordpress/ which was followed, very fast, by /joomla/. Neither of them lasted long. They are simply not for me. I am lucky to be a part of a small group started in =#dgplug= on /Freenode/. In mentioned group, I have access to a lot of cool and awesome people who can put me to shame in development. On the flip side, I live by a /motto/ that says: #+BEGIN_QUOTE Always surround yourself with people smarter than yourself. #+END_QUOTE It's the best way to learn. Anyway, back to the topic at hand, they introduced me to /static blog generators/. There my journey started but it started with a trial. I didn't give too much thought to the repository. It moved from /GitHub/ to /Gitlab/ and finally /here/. But, of course, you know how projects go, right ? Once you start with one, closely follows other ones that crop up along the way. I put them on my *TODO*, literally. One of those items was that I committed all the images to the repository. It wasn't until a few days ago until I added a =.gitattributes= file. Shameful, I know. No more ! Today it all changed. #+hugo: more **** First step first Let's talk about what we need to do a little bit before we start. Plan it out in our head before doing the actual work. I will itemize them here to make it easy to follow: - Clone a fresh repository to do the work in - Remove all the images from the /git/ repository - Add the images again to /git lfs/ Sounds simple enough, doesn't it ? #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT If you follow along this blog post, here's what you can expect. - You *WILL* lose /all the files you delete from disk/, as well, so make a copy - You *WILL* re-write history. This means that the /SHA/ of every commit since the first image was committed *WILL* mostly likely change. - You *WILL* end up essentially with a new repository that shares very little similarities with the original, so *BACKUP*!. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT Now that we got the /warning/ out of the way, let's begin the serious work. **** Clone the repository I bet you can do this with your eyes closed by now. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ # Backup your directory ! $ mv blog.lazkani.io blog-archive $ git clone git@git.project42.io:Elia/blog.lazkani.io.git blog.lazkani.io $ cd blog.lazkani.io #+END_EXAMPLE Easy peasy, lemon squeezy. **** Remove images from history Now, this is a tough one. Alright, let's browse. Oh what is that thing [[https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo][git-filter-repo]] ! Alright looks good. We can install it in different ways, check the project documentation but what I did, /in a python virtual environment/, was. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ pip install git-filter-repo #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT *BEWARE THE DRAGONS* #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT /git-filter-repo/ makes this job pretty easy to do. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git filter-repo --invert-paths --path images/ Parsed 43 commits New history written in 0.08 seconds; now repacking/cleaning... Repacking your repo and cleaning out old unneeded objects HEAD is now at 17d3f5c Modifying a Nikola theme Enumerating objects: 317, done. Counting objects: 100% (317/317), done. Delta compression using up to 2 threads Compressing objects: 100% (200/200), done. Writing objects: 100% (317/317), done. Total 317 (delta 127), reused 231 (delta 88), pack-reused 0 Completely finished after 0.21 seconds. #+END_EXAMPLE That took almost no time. Nice ! Let's check the directory and fair eonugh it no longer has =images/=. **** Add the images back ! Okay, for this you will need [[https://git-lfs.github.com/][git-lfs]]. It should be easy to find your package manager. This is a /debian 10/ machine so I did. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ sudo apt-get install git-lfs #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Before you commit to using /git-lfs/, make sure that your /git/ server supports it. If you have a pipeline, make sure it doesn't break it. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT I already stashed our original project like a big boy, so now I get to use it. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ cp -r ../blog-archive/images . #+END_EXAMPLE Then we can initialize /git-lfs/. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git lfs install Updated git hooks. Git LFS initialized. #+END_EXAMPLE Okay ! We are good to go. Next step, we need to tell /git-lfs/ where are the files we care about. In my case, my needs are very simple. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git lfs track "*.png" Tracking "*.png" #+END_EXAMPLE I've only used /PNG/ images so far, so now that they are tracked you should see a =.gitattributes= file created if you didn't have one already. From this step onward, /git-lfs/ doesn't differ too much from regular /git/. In this case it was. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git add .gitattributes $ git add images/ $ git status On branch master Changes to be committed: (use "git restore --staged ..." to unstage) modified: .gitattributes new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/01-add-cluster.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/02-custom-cluster.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/03-calico-networkProvider.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/04-nginx-ingressDisabled.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/05-customize-nodes.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/06-registered-nodes.png new file: images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/07-kubernetes-cluster.png new file: images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/flexible-encryption.png new file: images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/full-encryption.png new file: images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/too-many-redirects.png new file: images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.png new file: images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.png new file: images/weechat-ssh-and-notification/01-weechat-weenotify.png #+END_EXAMPLE Now that the files are staged, we shall commit. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git commit -v [master 6566fd3] Re-adding the removed images to git-lfs this time 14 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/01-add-cluster.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/02-custom-cluster.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/03-calico-networkProvider.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/04-nginx-ingressDisabled.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/05-customize-nodes.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/06-registered-nodes.png create mode 100644 images/local-kubernetes-cluster-on-kvm/07-kubernetes-cluster.png create mode 100644 images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/flexible-encryption.png create mode 100644 images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/full-encryption.png create mode 100644 images/my-path-down-the-road-of-cloudflare-s-redirect-loop/too-many-redirects.png create mode 100644 images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.png create mode 100644 images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.png create mode 100644 images/weechat-ssh-and-notification/01-weechat-weenotify.png #+END_EXAMPLE Yes, I use =-v= when I commit from the shell, try it. The interesting part from the previous step is that /git-filter-repo/ left us without a /remote/. As I said, this repository resembles very little the original one so the decision made by /git-filter-repo/ is correct. Let's add a *new empty repository* /remote/ to our new repository and push. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ git remote add origin git@git.project42.io:Elia/blog.lazkani.io.git $ git push -u origin master Locking support detected on remote "origin". Consider enabling it with: $ git config lfs.https://git.project42.io/Elia/blog.lazkani.io.git/info/lfs.locksverify true Enumerating objects: 338, done./13), 1.0 MB | 128 KB/s Counting objects: 100% (338/338), done. Delta compression using up to 2 threads Compressing objects: 100% (182/182), done. Writing objects: 100% (338/338), 220.74 KiB | 24.53 MiB/s, done. Total 338 (delta 128), reused 316 (delta 127), pack-reused 0 remote: Resolving deltas: 100% (128/128), done. remote: . Processing 1 references remote: Processed 1 references in total To git.project42.io:Elia/blog.lazkani.io.git * [new branch] master -> master Branch 'master' set up to track remote branch 'master' from 'origin'. #+END_EXAMPLE And the deed is done. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT If you were extremely observant so war, you might've noticed that I used the same link again while I said a *new repository*. Indeed, I did. The old repository was renamed and archived [[https://gitea.project42.io/Elia/blog.lazkani.io-20200902-historical][here]]. A new one with the name of the previous one was created instead. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Conclusion After I pushed the repository you can notice the change in size. It's not insignificant. I think it's clearner now. The *1.2MB* size on the /repository/ is no longer bothering me. *** DONE When is Gitea for you ? :gitea:git: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-08-13 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-08-13 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: when-is-gitea-for-you :CUSTOM_ID: when-is-gitea-for-you :END: As a /platform engineer/, you aim to choose the best tool for the job. Your goal is to minimize complexity as much as possible to minimize breakages and make it easier to recover. And when you think it's that simple, you get hit by the fact that the best tool for the job is determined out of a list of requirements. Dive down with me on a thought experiment that made me choose the hidden diamond behind a lot of my projects; *Gitea*. #+hugo: more **** Gitea ?! What is that ? [[https://gitea.io/en-us/][Gitea]] is advertised as #+begin_quote Gitea is a community managed lightweight code hosting solution written in Go. It is published under the MIT license. #+end_quote It is worth mentioning the bold statement the *Gitea* team proudly displays on the front page of the project. It reads... #+begin_quote Gitea - Git with a cup of tea A painless self-hosted Git service. #+end_quote /Why would they choose that to advertise over other things ?/ If you dig in deeper into the project, you'll find that it is a /golang/ project. It is written to be fully compiled into one binary, making deployments a breeze. It is also offered in container form. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT Yeah ? You read that ? I said /container/ ! You're ears are ringing now, something inside your head started making plans on what you can do with that. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Worth mentioning projects While talking about /revision control/ self-hosted servers, I know most of you will shout at me if I don't talk about other options. If you already did that, great job. Let's talk options. ***** Gogs We can't talk about /Gitea/ without mentioning [[https://gogs.io/][Gogs]], where the foremore was forked from. The differences between both revolve, mostly, around features. They are both great projects and choosing between them goes down to what /features/ do you *need* to have. But what we mention about /Gitea/ deployment and configuration can be, mostly, applied to /Gogs/. One of the main missing /features/ in /Gogs/ is native integration with CI/CD. Hooks can be configured, though, to run pipelines if that's your preferred methond of triggering pipelines. ***** Gitlab [[https://about.gitlab.com/stages-devops-lifecycle/][Gitlab]] as you can see from their webpage at date is a /beast/. It offers a lot more /features/ and promises to handle your workflow. It comes with its own CI/CD. It also offers integration with a bootload of different projects right and left. You might, also, be interested to hear more if you're running /Kubernetes/. It is also worth mentioning the slew of options offered to run /Gitlab/ in the cloud. Making deployment and management a lot easier. After reading all that, you might want to ask what the catch is. Well the catch is, unfortunately, complexity. It also requires more resources. This needs to be taken into account, especially in the cloud. Bottom line is, it will cost more. **** Requirements We, finally, get to the most important part of our project. We need to sit down and figure out our requirements. It is impossible to start /any/ project without defining the requirements and the resources at our disposal. A few good questions to find answers to. - What do I need this server for ? - How big is my company ? - How big is this server supposed to be ? - How many repositories is it supposed to hold ? - Where am I going to be deploying it ? - What kind of integration do I need out of it ? - How do I back it up ? - How do I recover it ? - How do I monitor it ? - What can I afford ? #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT If you're not thinking about how to *back* your server *up*, *recover* it and *monitor* it, you're doing it wrong ! #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** Small company If you're an /individual/ or a /small company/, you probably have a small set of repositories. Your needs depend on the /features/ you require, at that point. If you want a simple server that "/just works/", with reservations on the term. Then I would suggest /Gogs/ or /Gitea/. They require limited resources and can handle a good amount of beating. There is *nothing* stopping you from going with /Gitlab/, but know that you will have to deal with the complexity of its management. Only /you/ can decide whether this is worth it and how much complexity your team can handle among other /infrastructure services/ they have to offer. If you require native integration with CI/CD, then your choices go down to /Gitea/ and /Gitlab/. If you want to be able to offer *pages* feature or native /Kubernetes/ integration, then your option is limited to one; /Gitea/. But if those are not required and you have free rein over CI/CD and your requirement set is met by the integration offered by /Gitea/, there is no reason to choose anything else at that point simply because "everyone is using that tool". That's a bad reason ! Let's not forget the cost ! This is a big factor for small companies. If you can go by with a smaller instance running /Gitea/, it wouldn't make financial sense to run something that would require bigger tiers and thus cost more. ***** Medium to big company Now, we're talking more complex requirements. We might be talking one big monolith for the whole company. We are definitely talking more features and more integrations with different tools. The options in this case can range from a bare git server all the way to propiarty tools. If we're going to stick with the /open source/ projects we mentioned so far. /Gitea/ could squeeze into the medium company with all of its features but /Gitlab/ definitely hits spot for most cases. If you're medium to big, you already made peace with the fact that you will handle complexity here. I would say try to study the case out of curiosity but you already know my answer. You know you have one choice here and the choice is /Gitlab/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT It is worth noting here that I am assuming integration with LDAP (or some other authentication system), complex CI/CD, Kubernetes integration and much more. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT If you're at this level, I'm assuming cost has a bigger margin than with smaller companies. You understand that the infrastructure needed is bigger to accomodate all of your engineers and the increase in cost is also expected. Entertaining the idea of limiting cost at this point is still valid, you have the best interest of your company as well after all. **** Deployment At this stage, you're already decided on the tool you'll be using moving forward. It meets all the requirements derived from the needs of the teams that are going to be using. It also meets your standards of complexity and stability. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT It is worth mentioning here that you should test the tools you're considering in a few POC trials. Get familiarised with it and the way it works. How is it configured, and if it suits your configuration method of choice. You'll get the chance to test it thoroughly during the UAT round. You'll be attempting to break it and determine it's breaking point and behaviour. It is crucial to get familiarised with the system you'll be managing. Get comfortable with it. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT After that ramble, let's look at a few options of deploying each. I'm sure there are many different ways I will not think of, but they are all determined by the enviornment they are going to be deployed in. ***** Gitea/Gogs These two projects come in binary form, easy to =curl= and run. It can also be deployed in a /container/ format. One can use =docker-compose= or /configuration management/ to manage the containers. You can automate the deployment, the backup, the restore and the monitoring easily. It can be done on a single box with external storage, it can also be done in /Kubernetes/ with /Persisent Volumes/. If you're big enough, you can even entertain the idea of offering it as a service for teams to deploy on their own. These two projects offer a versatility of deployments, choose which one fits your environment and workflow best. ***** Gitlab If we want to dig into the different methods in which you can deploy /Gitlab/, we'll need pages. In fact, /Gitlab/ already *has* [[https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/install/][pages]] written on the different ways to deploy it. They also have ways to do /backup/, /restore/ and a way to /monitor/ it. The documentation is extensive and so are the different ways of deployment, from bare metal all the way to /Kubernetes/. Give yourself a bit more time to get familiarised with /Gitlab/ before you jump in. Get comfortable with it, take your time. Find your comfort zone. Always refer to the documentation. **** My choice If you've been following [[https://blog.lazkani.io/][this]] blog for a while, you already know I chose /Gitea/. From the previous thought experiment, I deduced that /Gitea/ or /Gogs/ both fit my needs as an individual. They offer me all the features I require from a /revision control server/. They are simple and don't require too much maintenance. They are also cheap to run. I don't need a big server to run them, I save on my pocket ! The reason I chose /Gitea/ over /Gogs/ was the CI/CD native integration. I wanted to use CI/CD pipelines for my projects. In fact, this very blog is built using a pipeline integrated with /Gitea/. I've been running /Gitea/ for a few years now. I've grown fond of it. Upgrading is a breeze, it's basically changing a number. It has been rock solid all of these years and haven't given me grief. In fact, the only time I had issues with it was when I was determining the memory requirements of the database and the database kept crashing. To top it off, backup is easy and so is restoration. I've, also, done a few migrations on the server over the years as it grew. I've got comfortable with it. And to answer your final question, yes, I am monitoring it. /Gitea/ exports /Prometheus/ metrics. And yes, I get paged for it when it gets down. Why ? Because I can. And because I am that kind of engineer. **** Conclusion When deciding on a tool to use, don't let your preference cloud your judgement. Be analytical in your approach and base it on requirements. Make your requirements clear and known as they are your guidance towards the right tool. Do not be afraid to take your time with it, run a few POCs. Play around with the project a bit, this time is valuable and could save you loads of headaches later on. Gather as much information as possible and assess how well this tool fits your needs. The best tool is the one that fits your needs best. End of story ! ** RSS :@rss: *** DONE Yet Another RSS Reader Move ? :emacs:org_mode:configuration: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-15 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-14 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: yet-another-rss-reader-move :CUSTOM_ID: yet-another-rss-reader-move :END: The more I get comfortable with /emacs/ and /doom/, the more I tend to move things to it. This means that I am getting things done faster, without the need to get bogged down in the weeds of things. This also means that, sometimes, I get to decommission a service that I host for my own personal use. If I can do it with a /text file/ in /git/, why would I host a full-on service to do it for me ? You might say, well, then you can access it from anywhere ! Security much ?! if I don't have my machine, I will not access my passwords. In practice, the reality is that I am tied to my own machine. On one hand, I cannot access my services online without my machine and if I am on the move it is highly unlikely for me to access my /rss/. Oh yeah ! /rss/ ! That's what we are here for right ? Let's dive in... #+hugo: more **** Introduction I hosted an instance of /[[https://miniflux.app/][miniflux]]/ on a /vps/ for my /rss/. /Miniflux/ is a great project, I highly recommend it. I have used it for a number of years without any issues at all; hassle free. I love it ! But with time, we have to move on. I have had my eye on the /rss/ configuration in the /doom/ ~init.el~ since I installed it. Now comes the time for me to try it out. I will go with my process with you so you can see what I did. There might be better ways of doing things than this, if you know how ping me ! **** Doom documentation The nice thing about /doom/ is that it is documented. The ~rss~ is a /doom/ ~module~ so we will look in the /doom/ ~modules~ manual. We can achieve this by hitting ~SPC h d m~ and then searching for ~rss~. The documentation will give us a bit of informaton to get started, like for example that it uses ~elfeed~ as a package. **** Elfeed The creators of [[https://github.com/skeeto/elfeed][elfeed]] describe it as. #+BEGIN_QUOTE ... an extensible web feed reader for Emacs, supporting both Atom and RSS. #+END_QUOTE The project looks well documented, that's very good. It has extensions, /org/ one... wait /org/ one ? What does it do ? **** Elfeed Org What is this thing [[https://github.com/remyhonig/elfeed-org][elfeed-org]] ? #+BEGIN_QUOTE Configure the Elfeed RSS reader with an Orgmode file #+END_QUOTE Sweet ! That's what I'm talking about. A neatly written /org/ file as configuration. It is always a good idea to go through documentation, at least quickly. Skim it over, you don't know what you would miss in there. I've been doing this for a long time, there is no way I can miss any... oh wait... I missed this... ***** Import/Export OPML? Whaaaat ? #+BEGIN_QUOTE Use ~elfeed-org-import-opml~ to import an OPML file to an elfeed-org structured tree. #+END_QUOTE Alright, that sounds easy. Let's export from /miniflux/ and import in /elfeed/. **** Configuration Before we import and whatnot, let's figure out what we are importing and where. After reading the documentation of both ~elfeed~ and ~elfeed-org~, it says we need to set ~rmh-elfeed-org-files~ which is a /list/. In my /doom/ configuration, I think I need to do the following. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (after! elfeed (elfeed-org) (setq rmh-elfeed-org-files (list "~/path/to/elfeed.org"))) #+END_SRC This way we can guarantee where the file is, or we can go digging where the default is and copy from there. This is just another file in my /org/ collection. Nothing special about it, it gets tagged and searched like everything else. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT I added the ~(elfeed-org)~ in the block to load ~elfeed-org~ after I had to load it manually a few times. This made it work on my system, I might be doing it wrong so your milage may vary. The ~after!~ section is /doom/ specific. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT I also added the following line above the ~rmh-elfeed-org-files~ line. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq elfeed-search-filter "@1-month-ago") #+END_SRC I simply wanted to see a span of /a month/ instead of the default /2 weeks/. The end result configuration is as follows. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (after! elfeed (elfeed-org) (setq elfeed-search-filter "@1-month-ago") (setq rmh-elfeed-org-files (list "~/path/to/elfeed.org"))) #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT This is the time where you /reload/ your configuration, /reload/ emacs and then /reload/ the world. If you are not using /doom/, only ~setq~ lines and do not forget to manually load the /packages/ before callind them. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Importing I think this is going to be a nightmare. It says on the page ~M-x~ then ~elfeed-org-import-opml~, yeah right ! Alright let's do that. It prompts for the file, we give it the file and nothing happens... Let's look in our ~elfeed.org~ file and whaaaa ! It's all here. That is awesome ! And here I was, the doubter, all along. Now, let's move things around, tag them properly and categorize them as we please. For all of you who are not /importing/, here's how mine, snippitized, looks like. #+BEGIN_SRC org * Elfeeds :elfeed: ** Bloggers :blog: *** [[https://blog.lazkani.io/rss.xml][The DevOps Blog]] :personal: ** Websites *** News :news: **** General :general: ***** [[https://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/.rss][Reddit: World News]] :world:reddit: ***** [[https://www.reddit.com/r/europe/.rss][Reddit: Europe News]] :europe:reddit: **** Technology :technology: ***** [[https://www.reddit.com/r/technology/.rss][Reddit: Technology]] :reddit: *** [[https://xkcd.com/rss.xml][xkcd]] :xkcd: #+END_SRC Granted, it is not much the looker in this mode but a picutre will reveal far better results, I presume. Don't you think ? #+caption: Elfeed Org Configuration #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/yet-another-rss-reader-move/01-elfeed-org-configuration.png][file:images/yet-another-rss-reader-move/01-elfeed-org-configuration.png]] Oh yeah, now we're talking ! ***** Why the hierarchy ? /Elfeed-org/ by default *inherits tagging* and *ignores text*. In this way, I can cascade /tags/ and when it's time to sort I can search for ~+xkcd~ and I get only /xkcd/ posts. I can also do something similar to filter on ~+general +europe~ for specifically getting /Europe/'s /Reddit news/. The other reason for the /org/ integration is the documentation aspect for the future. I have only recently migrated to /elfeed/ so the documentation is still somewhat lacking, even for me. Not to worry though, as is the custom with the other migrations so far I ended up documenting a lot of it in better ways. **** The big finish ? Okay, okay ! That's a lot of babbling let's get to it, shall we ? Now that everything is configured the way we like. Let's /reload/ everything and try ~M-x~ ~elfeed~. Yeah, I know not very impressive huh ? We didn't add any /hooks/ to update and fetch things. I like to do that manually. The documentation, though, describes how to do that, if you like. For now, let's do it ourselves ~M-x~ ~elfeed-update~. You should be greeted with something like this. #+caption: Elfeed Search Buffer #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/yet-another-rss-reader-move/02-elfeed-search.png][file:images/yet-another-rss-reader-move/02-elfeed-search.png]] Looks nice huh ?! Not bad at all. **** Conclusion There was nothing hard about the setup, whatsoever. It took me a bit to go through the relevant bits of the documentation for /my use cases/ which are, I admit, simple. I can now decommission my /miniflux/ instance as I have already found my future /rss/ reader. ** IRC :@irc: *** DONE Weechat, SSH and Notification :weechat:notification:ssh: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2019-07-02 :EXPORT_DATE: 2019-01-01 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: weechat-ssh-and-notification :CUSTOM_ID: weechat-ssh-and-notification :END: I have been on IRC for as long as I have been using /Linux/ and that is a long time. Throughout the years, I have moved between /terminal IRC/ clients. In this current iteration, I am using [[https://weechat.org/][Weechat]]. #+hugo: more There are many ways one can use /weechat/ and the one I chose is to run it in /tmux/ on a /cloud server/. In other words, I have a /Linux/ server running on one of the many cloud providers on which I have /tmux/ and /weechat/ installed and configured the way I like them. If you run a setup like mine, then you might face the same issue I have with IRC notifications. **** Why? /Weechat/ can cause a terminal bell which will show on some /terminals/ and /window managers/ as a notification. But you only know that /weechat/ pinged. Furthermore, if this is happening on a server that you are /ssh/'ing to, and with various shell configurations, this system might not even work. I wanted something more useful than that so I went on the hunt for the plugins available to see if any one of them could offer me a solution. I found many official plugins that did things in a similar fashion and each in a different and interesting way but none the way I want them to work. **** Solution After trying multiple solutions offered online which included various plugins, I decided to write my own. That's when /weenotify/ was born. If you know my background then you know, already, that I am big on open source so /weenotify/ was first released on [[https://gitlab.com/elazkani/weenotify][Gitlab]]. After a few changes, requested by a weechat developer (*FlashCode* in *#weechat* on [[https://freenode.net/][Freenode]]), /weenotify/ became as an [[https://weechat.org/scripts/source/weenotify.py.html/][official weechat plugin]]. **** Weenotify Without getting into too many details, /weenotify/ acts as both a weechat plugin and a server. The main function is to intercept weechat notifications and patch them through the system's notification system. In simple terms, if someone mentions your name, you will get a pop-up notification on your system with information about that. The script can be configured to work locally, if you run weechat on your own machine, or to open a socket and send the notification to /weenotify/ running as a server. In the latter configuration, /weenotify/ will display the notification on the system the server is running on. **** Configuration Let's look at the configuration to accomplish this... As mentioned in the beginning of the post, I run weechat in /tmux/ on a server. So I /ssh/ to the server before attaching /tmux/. The safest way to do this is to *port forward over ssh* and this can be done easily by /ssh/'ing using the following example. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ ssh -R 5431:localhost:5431 server.example.com #+END_EXAMPLE At this point, you should have port *5431* forwarded between the server and your machine. Once the previous step is done, you can test if it works by trying to run the /weenotify/ script in server mode on your machine using the following command. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ python weenotify.py -s Starting server... Server listening locally on port 5431... #+END_EXAMPLE The server is now running, you can test port forwarding from the server to make sure everything is working as expected. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE $ telnet localhost 5431 Trying ::1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. #+END_EXAMPLE If the connection is successful then you know that port forwarding is working as expected. You can close the connection by hitting =Ctrl= + =]=. Now we are ready to install the plugin in weechat and configure it. In weechat, run the following command. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE /script search weenotify #+END_EXAMPLE At which point, you should be greeted with the buffer shown in the screenshot below. #+caption: Weenotify #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/weechat-ssh-and-notification/01-weechat-weenotify.png][file:images/weechat-ssh-and-notification/01-weechat-weenotify.png]] You can install the plugin with =Alt= + =i= and make sure it autoloads with =Alt= + =A=. You can get more information about working with weechat scripts by reading the help menu. You can get the scripts help menu by running the following in weechat. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE /help script #+END_EXAMPLE The /weenotify/ plugin is installed at this stage and only needs to be configured. The plugin has a list of values that can be configured. My configuration looks like the following. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE plugins.var.python.weenotify.enable string "on" plugins.var.python.weenotify.host string "localhost" plugins.var.python.weenotify.mode string "remote" plugins.var.python.weenotify.port string "5431" #+END_EXAMPLE Each one of those configuration options can be set as shown in the example below in weechat. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE /set plugins.var.python.weenotify.enable on #+END_EXAMPLE Make sure that the plugin *enable* value is *on* and that the *mode* is *remote*, if you're following this post and using ssh with port forwarding. Otherwise, If you want the plugin to work locally, make sure you set the *mode* to *local*. If you followed this post so far, then whenever someone highlights you on weechat you should get a pop-up on your system notifying you about it. *** DONE Weechat and Emacs :weechat:emacs:weechat_el: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-03 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-03 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: weechat-and-emacs :CUSTOM_ID: weechat-and-emacs :END: In the last few blog posts, I mentioned a few migrations caused by my /VSCode/ discovery a few weeks ago [[#emacs-and-org-mode]]. As I was configuring /Doom/, I noticed that there was a configuration for /weechat/ in there. I checked it out very briefly and found that it was a /[[https://github.com/the-kenny/weechat.el][weechat.el]]/ package for /Emacs/. #+hugo: more At the time, I didn't have too much time to spend on this so I quickly passed it over with plans to come back to it, /eventually/. The time has come for me to configure and try this at least ! I already have my /weechat/ installation running remotely behind an /nginx/ *reverse proxy*. I tried to connecting using that endpoint, unfortunately no dice. **** The Problem As I was asking in /#weechat.el/ on *freenode* for help, the very quick to help /[[https://github.com/flashcode][FlashCode]]/ sprung into action. He wasn't able to help me but he pointed me in the right direction. I asked why would /Glowing Bear/ work but not /weechat.el/ ? The answer was along the line that /Glowing Bear/ uses a /websocket/. Alright that made sense. Maybe /weechat.el/ does not do /websocket/. **** The Solution So, we are behind an /nginx/ *reverse proxy* instance. What we need to do is expose our service as a /TCP reverse proxy/ instead of our usual /HTTP/ one. We are moving down networking layers to the *TCP/IP* instead of *HTTP*. What we need to do is add a /stream/ section to our /nginx/ to accomplish this. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE stream { server { listen 9000 ssl; ssl_certificate /path/to/chain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /path/to/cert.pem; proxy_pass 127.0.0.1:9000; } } #+END_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT The =stream= section has to be outside the =http= section. If you add this configuration next to your other =server= sections, it will fail. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT In the previous block we make a few assumptions. - We are behind SSL: I use the /nginx/ reverse proxy for /SSL termination/ as it handles reloading certificates automatically. If I leave it to /weechat/, I have to reload the /certificates/ manually and often. - Weechat is listening on port 9000 locally: The /weechat/ relay needs to be configured to listen on *localhost* and on port *9000* for this configuration to work. Make sure to change it to fit your needs. Now that the configuration is out of the way, let's test it. Open emacs and run =M-x= followed by =weechat-connect=. This should get you going. **** Conclusion It was a nice path down the road of packets. It's always a good day when you learn new things. I have never used /TCP/ forwarding with /nginx/ before but I'm glad it is supported. Now that you know how to do the same as well, I hope you give both projects a try. I think they are worth it. I'm also thankful to have so many different awesome projects created by the open source community. ** Text Editors :@text_editors: *** DONE Emacs and Org-mode :emacs:org_mode:configuration: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-08-22 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-08-22 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: emacs-and-org-mode :CUSTOM_ID: emacs-and-org-mode :END: I have recently found out, late I know, that the /VSCode/ distribution of the so called /Code - OSS/ is exactly that; a distribution. Let me make it clear, the /VSCode/ binaries you download from *Microsoft* has an upstream the *GitHub repository* named [[https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode][VSCode]] but in fact is not exactly the same code. *Microsoft* has already added a few gifts for you, including *telemetry*, not cool huh ?! Well, they tell you this in the documentation, urrrmmm [[https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/wiki/Differences-between-the-repository-and-Visual-Studio-Code][somewhere]]. #+hugo: more At the same time, I was giving /Jupyter Notebook/ a try. I worked on my previous post in it before writing down the final result as a blog post. But at the back of my mind, there was always [[https://orgmode.org/][Org-mode]]. Putting one and one together, you've guessed it. I have moved to *Emacs*... again... for the umm I can't remember time. But this time, it is different ! I hope... **** Back story I was using /Jupyter Notebooks/ as a way to write down notes. Organize things. I had a work around the /output/ and was able to clean it. But let's face it, it might work but it is designed more towards other goals. I want to write notes and the best way to work with notes is to keep in the text, literally. I found a /VSCode/ extension that can handle /Org-mode/ in some capacity (I haven't tested it) so I decided to switch to /Emacs/ and keep the extention as a backup. **** Emacs Distribution of Doom Haha ! Very funny, I know. I went with [[https://github.com/hlissner/emacs-doom-themes][Doom]]. Why? You may ask. I don't really have a good answer for you except the following. * I didn't want to start from scratch, I wanted something with batteries included. * At the same time, I've tried /Doom/ before and I like how it does things. It is logical to me while at the same time very configurable. * I was able to get up and running very quickly. Granted, my needs are few. * I got /Python/ and /Golang/ auto-completion and /evil/ mode. I'm good to go ! Now let's dig down to my main focus here. Sure I switched editors but it was for a reason; *Org-mode*. **** Org-mode Configuration I will be talking about two different configuartion options here. I am new to emacs so I will try to explain everything. The two options are related to the difference between a /vanilla/ configuration and /Doom/'s version of the configuration. The differences are minor but they are worth talking about. ***** New Org File If you've used /Org-mode/ before and created /org files/, you already know that you need to set a few values at the top of the file. These include the /title/, /author/, /description/ and a different other values to change setting and/or behavior. It is a bit of a manual labor to write these few lines at the beginning of every file. I wanted to automate that. So I got inspiration from [[https://gitlab.com/shakthimaan/operation-blue-moon][shakthimaan]]. I used his method to create a small =define-skeleton= for a header. It looks something like this. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (define-skeleton generate-new-header-org "Prompt for title, description and tags" nil '(setq title (skeleton-read "Title: ")) '(setq author (skeleton-read "Author: ")) '(setq description (skeleton-read "Description: ")) '(setq tags (skeleton-read "tags: ")) "#+TITLE: " title \n "#+AUTHOR: " author \n "#+DESCRIPTION: " description \n "#+TAGS: " tags \n ) #+END_SRC You can use this later with =M-x= + =genrate-new-header-org=. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Note

#+END_EXPORT =M-x= is the *Meta* key and *x* combination. Your *Meta* key can differ between the *Alt* on /Linux/ and *Command* on /Mac OS X/. =M-x= will open a prompt for you to write in. Write the name you gave the skeleton, in this case it is =generate-new-header-org= and then hit the /Return/. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** New Task [[https://gitlab.com/shakthimaan/operation-blue-moon][shakthimaan]] already created something for this. It looks like the following. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp ;; Create a new skeleton to generate a new =Task= (define-skeleton insert-org-entry "Prompt for task, estimate and category" nil '(setq task (skeleton-read "Task: ")) '(setq estimate (skeleton-read "Estimate: ")) '(setq owner (skeleton-read "Owner: ")) '(setq category (skeleton-read "Category: ")) '(setq timestamp (format-time-string "%s")) "** " task \n ":PROPERTIES:" \n ":ESTIMATED: " estimate \n ":ACTUAL:" \n ":OWNER: " owner \n ":ID: " category "." timestamp \n ":TASKID: " category "." timestamp \n ":END:") #+END_SRC This can also be used like the one above with =M-x= + =insert-org-entry=. ***** Doom specific configuration Whatever defined so far should work if you just add it to your configuration but if you use /Doom/ it would a nice touch to integrate it with the workflow. In =~/.doom.d/config.el=, wrap the previous definitions with =(after! org)=. It's a nice touch to add these skeletons after /Org-mode/ has loaded. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (after! org ;; Create a skeleton to generate header org (define-skeleton generate-new-header-org "Prompt for title, description and tags" nil '(setq title (skeleton-read "Title: ")) '(setq author (skeleton-read "Author: ")) '(setq description (skeleton-read "Description: ")) '(setq tags (skeleton-read "tags: ")) "#+TITLE: " title \n "#+AUTHOR: " author \n "#+DESCRIPTION: " description \n "#+TAGS: " tags \n) ;; Create a new skeleton to generate a new =Task= (define-skeleton insert-org-entry "Prompt for task, estimate and category" nil '(setq task (skeleton-read "Task: ")) '(setq estimate (skeleton-read "Estimate: ")) '(setq owner (skeleton-read "Owner: ")) '(setq category (skeleton-read "Category: ")) '(setq timestamp (format-time-string "%s")) "** " task \n ":PROPERTIES:" \n ":ESTIMATED: " estimate \n ":ACTUAL:" \n ":OWNER: " owner \n ":ID: " category "." timestamp \n ":TASKID: " category "." timestamp \n ":END:") ) #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT If you modify any file in =~/.doom.d/=, do not forget to run =doom sync= and =doom doctor= to update and check your configuration respectively. #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT ***** Final touches I wanted to add it to the menu system that comes with /Doom/ so I included the following in my =(after! ...)= block. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp ;; Add keybindings with the leader menu for everything above (map! :map org-mode-map (:leader (:prefix ("m", "+") :n :desc "Generate New Header Org" "G" 'generate-new-header-org :n :desc "New Task Entry" "N" 'insert-org-entry )) ) #+END_SRC Making the final configuration look like the following. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (after! org ;; Create a skeleton to generate header org (define-skeleton generate-new-header-org "Prompt for title, description and tags" nil '(setq title (skeleton-read "Title: ")) '(setq author (skeleton-read "Author: ")) '(setq description (skeleton-read "Description: ")) '(setq tags (skeleton-read "tags: ")) "#+TITLE: " title \n "#+AUTHOR: " author \n "#+DESCRIPTION: " description \n "#+TAGS: " tags \n) ;; Create a new skeleton to generate a new =Task= (define-skeleton insert-org-entry "Prompt for task, estimate and category" nil '(setq task (skeleton-read "Task: ")) '(setq estimate (skeleton-read "Estimate: ")) '(setq owner (skeleton-read "Owner: ")) '(setq category (skeleton-read "Category: ")) '(setq timestamp (format-time-string "%s")) "** " task \n ":PROPERTIES:" \n ":ESTIMATED: " estimate \n ":ACTUAL:" \n ":OWNER: " owner \n ":ID: " category "." timestamp \n ":TASKID: " category "." timestamp \n ":END:") (map! (:when (featurep! :lang org) (:map org-mode-map (:localleader :n :desc "Generate New Header Org" "G" 'generate-new-header-org :n :desc "New Task Entry" "N" 'insert-org-entry )) )) ) #+END_SRC **** What do I do now ? You might be asking yourself at this point, what does this all mean ? What do I do with this ? Where do I go ? Well here's the thing. You find yourself wanting to create a new /org file/. You do so in emacs and follow it with =M-x= + =generate-new-header-org= (or =SPC m G= in *Doom*). /Emacs/ will ask you a few questions in the bottom left corner and once you answer then, your header should be all set. You can follow that with =M-x= + =insert-org-entry= (or =SPC m N=) to generate a task. This will also ask you for input in the bottom left corner. **** Conclusion This should help me pick up the usage of /Org-mode/ faster. It is also a good idea if you've already configured your /Emacs/ to read all your /org file/ for a wider *agenda* view. *** DONE Literate Programming Emacs Configuration :emacs:org_mode:configuration: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2020-09-12 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-12 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: literate-programing-emacs-configuration :CUSTOM_ID: literate-programing-emacs-configuration :END: I was working on a /project/ that required a lot of manual steps. I /generally/ lean towards *automating everything* but in /some cases/ that is, unfortunately, not possible. Documenting such project is not an easy task to accomplish, especially with so many moving parts and different outputs. Since I have been using /org-mode/ more frequently for /documentation/ and /organization/ in general, I gravitated towards it as a first instinct. I wasn't sure of the capabilities of /org-mode/ in such unfamiliar settings but I was really surprised by the outcome. #+hugo: more **** Introduction If you haven't checked [[https://orgmode.org/][org-mode]] already, you should. As its main capability it is to keep it simple for writing things down and organizing them, /org-mode/ is great to keep track of the steps taking along the way. The ability to quickly move between /plain text/ and into /code blocks/ is excellent. Coupling /org-mode/ with /[[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/intro.html][org-babel]]/ gives you the ability to run the /source code/ blocks and get the output back into the /org/ file itself. That is extremely neat. With those two abilities alone, I could document things as I go along. This included both the commands I am running and the output I got back. *Fantastic*. After some search online, I found out that this method is called /literal coding/. It consists of having the /plain text/ documentation and the /code/ in the same file and with the help of both previously mentioned /emacs/ packages one can get things working. That sounds like fun! **** Emacs Configuration After digesting all the information I mentioned so far, that got me thinking. What about /emacs/? A quick look online got me the answer. It is possible to do with /emacs/ as well. Alright, let's get right into it shall we ? First step, I added the following line to my /main/ configuration. In my case, my /main/ configuration file is the /doom/ distribution's configuration file. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (org-babel-load-file "~/path/to/my/configuration.org") #+END_SRC #+BEGIN_EXPORT html

Warning

#+END_EXPORT Make sure /org-mode/ and /org-babel/ are both *installed* and *configured* on your system before trying to run ~org-babel-load-file~ #+BEGIN_EXPORT html
#+END_EXPORT **** Org-mode Conversion After I pointed my /main emacs configuration/ to the /org/ configuration file I desire to use, I copied all the content of my /main emacs configuration/ in an ~emacs-lisp~ source code block. #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp ... some code ... #+END_SRC #+END_EXAMPLE I, then, reloaded my /emacs/ to double check that everything works as expected and /it did/. ***** Document the code Now that we have everything in one /org/ file, we can go ahead and start documenting it. Let's see an example of /before/ and /after/. I started small, bits and pieces. I took a /snippet/ of my configuration that looked like the following. #+BEGIN_SRC org ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq display-line-numbers-type t) (setq display-line-numbers-type 'relative) (after! evil (map! :map evil-window-map (:leader (:prefix ("w" . "Select Window") :n :desc "Left" "" 'evil-window-left :n :desc "Up" "" 'evil-window-up :n :desc "Down" "" 'evil-window-down :n :desc "Right" "" 'evil-window-right)))) ,#+END_SRC #+END_SRC I converted it to something that looks very familiar to /org/ users out there. #+BEGIN_SRC org ,* Line Numbering ,** Enable line numbering Enabling line numbering by turning the flag on. ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq display-line-numbers-type t) ,#+END_SRC ,** Configure /relative/ line numbering Let's also make sure it's the /relative/ line numbering. This helps jumping short distances very fast. ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq display-line-numbers-type 'relative) ,#+END_SRC ,* Evil ,** Navigation I'd like to use the /arrows/ to move around. ~hjkl~ is not very helpful or pleasant on /Colemak/. ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (after! evil (map! :map evil-window-map (:leader (:prefix ("w" . "Select Window") :n :desc "Left" "" 'evil-window-left :n :desc "Up" "" 'evil-window-up :n :desc "Down" "" 'evil-window-down :n :desc "Right" "" 'evil-window-right)))) ,#+END_SRC #+END_SRC It might not be much a looker in such a block, but trust me, if you have an /org-mode/ parser it will make total sense. It will export to /html/ very well too. Most importantly, the /emacs/ configuration still works. **** Conclusion I went through my /emacs configuration/ and transformed it into a /documented org/ file. My configuration looks a little bit neater now and that's great. The capabilities of /literal programming/ goes way beyond this post, which goes without saying, and this is not the only use case for it. *** DONE Bookmark with Org-capture :org_mode:emacs:org_capture:org_web_tools:org_cliplink: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-05-27 :EXPORT_DATE: 2020-09-17 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: bookmark-with-org-capture :CUSTOM_ID: bookmark-with-org-capture :END: I was reading, and watching, [[https://cestlaz.github.io/about/][Mike Zamansky]]'s blog post [[https://cestlaz.github.io/stories/emacs/][series]] about /org-capture/ and how he manages his bookmarks. His blog and video series are a big recommendation from me, he is teaching me tons every time I watch his videos. His inspirational videos were what made me dig down on how I could do what he's doing but... my way... I stumbled across [[https://dewaka.com/blog/2020/04/08/bookmarking-with-org-mode/][this]] blog post that describes the process of using =org-cliplink= to insert the /title/ of the post into an /org-mode/ link. Basically, what I wanted to do is provide a link and get an /org-mode/ link. Sounds simple enough. Let's dig in. #+hugo: more **** Org Capture Templates I will assume that you went through Mike's [[https://cestlaz.github.io/posts/using-emacs-23-capture-1/][part 1]] and [[https://cestlaz.github.io/posts/using-emacs-24-capture-2/][part 2]] posts to understand what =org-capture-templates= are and how they work. I essentially learned it from him and I do not think I can do a better job than a teacher. Now that we understand where we need to start from, let's explain the situation. We need to find a way to call =org-capture= and provide it with a /template/. This /template/ will need to take a /url/ and add an /org-mode/ /url/ in our bookmarks. It will look something like the following. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq org-capture-templates '(("b" "Bookmark (Clipboard)" entry (file+headline "~/path/to/bookmarks.org" "Bookmarks") "** %(some-function-here-to-call)\n:PROPERTIES:\n:TIMESTAMP: %t\n:END:%?\n" :empty-lines 1 :prepend t))) #+END_SRC I formatted it a bit so it would have some properties. I simply used the =%t= to put the /timestamp/ of when I took the bookmark. I used the =%?= to drop me at the end for editing. Then =some-function-here-to-call= a function to call to generate our /bookmark section/ with a title. The blog post I eluded to earlier solved it by using [[https://github.com/rexim/org-cliplink][org-cliplink]]. While =org-cliplink= is great for getting /titles/ and manipulating them, I don't really need that functionality. I can do it manually. Sometimes, though, I would like to copy a page... Maybe if there is a project that /could/ attempt to do someth... Got it... [[https://github.com/alphapapa/org-web-tools][org-web-tools]]. ***** Configuring /org-capture/ with /org-web-tools/ You would assume that you would be able to just pop =(org-web-tools-insert-link-for-url)= in the previous block and you're all done. But uhhh.... #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE Wrong number of arguments: (1 . 1), 0 #+END_EXAMPLE No dice. What would seem to be the problem ? We look at the definition and we find this. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (defun org-web-tools-insert-link-for-url (url) "Insert Org link to URL using title of HTML page at URL. If URL is not given, look for first URL in `kill-ring'." (interactive (list (org-web-tools--get-first-url))) (insert (org-web-tools--org-link-for-url url))) #+END_SRC I don't know why, exactly, it doesn't work by calling it straight away because I do not know /emacs-lisp/ at all. If you do, let me know. I suspect it has something to do with =(interactive)= and the list provided to it as arguments. Anyway, I can see it is using =org-web-tools--org-link-for-url=, which the documentation suggests does the same thing as =org-web-tools-insert-link-for-url=, but is not exposed with =(interactive)=. Okay, we have bits and pieces of the puzzle. Let's put it together. First, we create the function. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (defun org-web-tools-insert-link-for-clipboard-url () "Extend =org-web-tools-inster-link-for-url= to take URL from clipboard or kill-ring" (interactive) (org-web-tools--org-link-for-url (org-web-tools--get-first-url))) #+END_SRC Then, we set our =org-capture-templates= variable to the list of our /only/ item. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq org-capture-templates '(("b" "Bookmark (Clipboard)" entry (file+headline "~/path/to/bookmarks.org" "Bookmarks") "** %(org-web-tools-insert-link-for-clipboard-url)\n:PROPERTIES:\n:TIMESTAMP: %t\n:END:%?\n" :empty-lines 1 :prepend t))) #+END_SRC Now if we copy a link into the /clipboard/ and then call =org-capture= with the option =b=, we get prompted to edit the following before adding it to our /bookmarks/. #+BEGIN_SRC org ** [[https://cestlaz.github.io/stories/emacs/][Using Emacs Series - C'est la Z]] :PROPERTIES: :TIMESTAMP: <2020-09-17 do> :END: #+END_SRC Works like a charm. ***** Custom URL What if we need to modify the url in some way before providing it. I have that use case. All I needed to do is create a function that takes /input/ from the user and provide it to =org-web-tools--org-link-for-url=. How hard can that be ?! uhoh! I said the curse phrase didn't I ? #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (defun org-web-tools-insert-link-for-given-url () "Extend =org-web-tools-inster-link-for-url= to take a user given URL" (interactive) (let ((url (read-string "Link: "))) (org-web-tools--org-link-for-url url))) #+END_SRC We can, then, hook the whole thing up to our =org-capture-templates= and we get. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq org-capture-templates '(("b" "Bookmark (Clipboard)" entry (file+headline "~/path/to/bookmarks.org" "Bookmarks") "** %(org-web-tools-insert-link-for-clipboard-url)\n:PROPERTIES:\n:TIMESTAMP: %t\n:END:%?\n" :empty-lines 1 :prepend t) ("B" "Bookmark (Paste)" entry (file+headline "~/path/to/bookmarks.org" "Bookmarks") "** %(org-web-tools-insert-link-for-given-url)\n:PROPERTIES:\n:TIMESTAMP: %t\n:END:%?\n" :empty-lines 1 :prepend t))) #+END_SRC if we use the =B=, this time, it will prompt us for input. ***** Configure /org-capture/ with /org-cliplink/ Recently, this setup has started to fail and I got contacted by a friend pointing me to my own blog post. So I decided to fix it. My old setup used to use /org-cliplink/ but I moved away from it for some reason. I cannot remember why. It is time to move back to it. In this setup, I got rid of the /custom function/ to get the link manually. I believe that is why I moved but I cannot be certain. Anyway, nothing worked so why keep something not working right ? All this means is that we only need to setup our =org-capture-templates=. We can do so as follows. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq org-capture-templates '(("b" "Bookmark (Clipboard)" entry (file+headline "~/path/to/bookmarks.org" "Bookmarks") "** %(org-cliplink)\n:PROPERTIES:\n:TIMESTAMP: %t\n:END:%?\n" :empty-lines 1 :prepend t) #+END_SRC Now, you should have a working setup... =org-cliplink= willing ! **** Conclusion I thought this was going to be harder to pull off but, alas, it was simple, even for someone who doesn't know /emacs-lisp/, to figure out. I hope I'd get more familiar with /emacs-lisp/ with time and be able to do more. Until next time, I recommend you hook =org-capture= into your workflow. Make sure it fits your work style, otherwise you will not use it, and make your path a more productive one. *** DONE Calendar Organization with Org :emacs:org_mode:calendar:organization: :PROPERTIES: :EXPORT_HUGO_LASTMOD: 2021-05-31 :EXPORT_DATE: 2021-05-30 :EXPORT_FILE_NAME: calendar-organization-with-org :CUSTOM_ID: calendar-organization-with-org :END: I have been having /some/ issues with my calendar. Recurring stuff have been going out of wack for some reason. In general, the setup I've had for the past few years have now become a problem I need to fix. I decided to turn to my trusted /emacs/, like I usually do. /Doom/ comes bundled with something. Let's figure out what it is and how to configure it together. #+hugo: more **** Calendar in Emacs I dug deeper into /Doom/'s /Calendar/ module and I found out that it is using [[https://github.com/kiwanami/emacs-calfw][calfw]]. I went to /GitHub/ and checked the project out. It's another emacs package, I'm going to assume you know how to install it. Let's look at the configuration example. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (require 'calfw-cal) (require 'calfw-ical) (require 'calfw-howm) (require 'calfw-org) (defun my-open-calendar () (interactive) (cfw:open-calendar-buffer :contents-sources (list (cfw:org-create-source "Green") ; orgmode source (cfw:howm-create-source "Blue") ; howm source (cfw:cal-create-source "Orange") ; diary source (cfw:ical-create-source "Moon" "~/moon.ics" "Gray") ; ICS source1 (cfw:ical-create-source "gcal" "https://..../basic.ics" "IndianRed") ; google calendar ICS ))) #+end_src That looks like an extensive example. We don't need all of it, I only need the part pertaining to /org/. **** Configuration The example looks straight forward. I'm going to keep /only/ the pieces I'm interested in. The configuration looks like the following. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (require 'calfw-cal) (require 'calfw-org) (defun my-blog-calendar () (interactive) (cfw:open-calendar-buffer :contents-sources (list (cfw:org-create-file-source "Blog" "~/blog.org" "Orange") ; our blog organizational calendar ))) #+end_src That was easy. but before we jump to the next step, let's talk a bit about what we just did. We, /basically/, created a new function which we can call later with =M-x= to open our calendar. We configured the function to include the /org/ files we want it to keep track of. In this case, we only have one. We named it *Blog* and we gave it the color *Orange*. **** Creating our org file After we have configured =calfw=, we can create the =blog.org= file. #+begin_src org ,#+TITLE: Blog ,#+AUTHOR: Who ,#+DESCRIPTION: Travels of Doctor Who ,#+TAGS: organizer organization calendar todo tasks ,* Introduction This is the /calendar/ of *Dr Who* for the next week. ,* Travels ,** DONE Travel to Earth 1504 CLOSED: <2021-07-03 za 09:18> SCHEDULED: <2021-07-02 vr> - CLOSING NOTE <2021-07-03 za 09:18> \\ The doctor already traveled to earth /1504/ for his visit to the /Mayans/. A quick visit to the /Mayan/ culture to save them from a deep lake monster stealing all their gold. ,** TODO Travel back to Earth 2021 SCHEDULED: <2021-07-04 zo> Traveling back to earth 2021 to drop the companion before running again. ,** TODO Travel to the Library SCHEDULED: <2021-07-04 zo> The doctor visits the /Library/ to save it again from paper eating bacteria. ,** TODO Travel to Midnight SCHEDULED: <2021-07-08 do> The doctor visits *Midnight* in the /Xion System/. ,** TODO Travel to Earth 2021 SCHEDULED: <2021-07-09 vr> Snatching back the companion for another travel advanture. #+end_src **** Let's get the party started Now that we have everything set into place. We can either /reload/ /emacs/ or simply run the code snippet that declares /our/ function. Next step is checking out if it works. Let's run =M-x= then call our function =my-blog-calendar=. #+caption: Calendar organization with Org #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/01-calendar-overview.png][file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/01-calendar-overview.png]] If we go to a date with =hjkl= and hit =return= or =enter=, we get to see what we have to work with. #+caption: Calendar day overview #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/02-calendar-day-overview.png][file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/02-calendar-day-overview.png]] We can take a look at closed items with /time/ too. #+caption: Calendar day with closed item #+attr_html: :target _blank [[file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/03-calendar-day-closed-item-overview.png][file:images/calendar-organization-with-org/03-calendar-day-closed-item-overview.png]] That looks pretty nice. **** Conclusion I thought it was going to be more extensive to configure the calendaring feature in /emacs/. I couldn't be further away from the truth. Not only was it a breeze to configure, it was even easier to create the calendar and maintain it. If you are already familiar with /org/, then you're already there. Point the calendar to your /org/ file, /iCal/ file or even /Google Calendar/ link and you're all set. The bottom line of working with /org/ is the ease of use, to me. If you already use it to organize some aspects of your life, you can just as easily create calendars for all these events. * Footnotes * COMMENT Local Variables :ARCHIVE: # Local Variables: # eval: (org-hugo-auto-export-mode) # eval: (auto-fill-mode 1) # End: