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The documentation here is a mess. This project is basically a scratch-pad for my 
thoughts on host deployment.

The end-goal is to have an IRC/Jabber bot that can deploy vmware, linode, or ec2 
instances for me based on a yaml file or on the contents of an LDAP directory.

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Let's talk about deployments for a minute. There are a lot of frameworks out 
there that will help you create an instance of a host. Some are template driven;
Others will allow you to "kickstart" your own. But none of them are "code complete"
What I mean is they'll deploy the host just fine, but the majority of the work
in maintaining an infrastructure isn't spinning up a host at all. Here's a typical
re-deployment on a linode (http://linode.com)

 * [???] Determine if the node is in production 
 * [???] If so, migrate production services to another node, update pointers to the service
 * [???] Supress montoring of the host
 * [API] Power off the node
 * [API] Delete the node from disk
 * [???] Create a new root password and/or get your keypair ready
 * [API] Deploy a new linode from a template
 * [API] Get the IP of the new node
 * [???] Wait until SSH comes up, get the new ssh fingerprints
 * [???] Update DNS with the new SSFP / A records
 * [???] Perform any filesystem mounts that the node needs (and update /etc/fstab)
 * [???] Upgrade the kernel (if needed)
 * [API] Set the kernel to boot pv_grub on the next boot (if kernel upgraded)
 * [???] Generate a ssh-keypair for root
 * [???] Update ou=Hosts in LDAP (or whatever you use for a CMDB) with the new host information
 * [???] Update the root's key in gitosis or github (for app deployments)
 * [???] Install puppet/chef/whatever you use for actual config management
 * [???] Run your configuration management system
 * [???] Re-enable monitoring for the host

Things most APIs do well are noted with the [API] tag. Things that are done manually 
(or are not done at all) are given the [???] tag. For new deployments, you can just
start at the sixth step. There are still a great many holes to fill. (twss)

Filling those holes is what I'm trying to achieve.

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Why POE? Why Perl? Why not the new hotness I like instead? Why do you suck so bad?

Well, I already have a lot of investment in POE IRC/Jabber bots, and all these people
who tell me that their way is the "one true way" never seem to have a functioning example
of what the "better way" looks like. To quote Linus Torvalds, "Talk is cheap, show me the code."
Get me a functional example and we'll talk.


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I wanted a non-blocking way to order work, where the work progress could be queried 
along the way. The general concept would be you put the "design" of the system somewhere,
say, in LDAP or in YAML in a gist.

cat<<EOF|gist 
instance: 
  hostname: loki
  fqdn: loki.websages.com
  provider: Linode
  guestid: Debian 6
  datacenter: Atlanta
  size: 512
  gitosis-admin: '[email protected]:gitosis-admin.git
  sshpubkey: ssh-dss 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 [email protected]
EOF
https://gist.github.com/912450
and then log into irc and say:

"jarvis: deploy https://gist.github.com/912450" or "jarvis: deploy cn=loki" (in the LDAP case)

and then the bot would start doing the work, and you could then say:

"jarvis: status loki"

and jarivis would tell you at what stage (of the stages above) was currently being worked on
or jarvis would come back and tell you it failed, and at what stage, or tell you when the node
was ready. 

That's the whole concept.

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The details: 

Basically I thought about how large organizations (the eff'ed up ones) do all of
this. They create a clipboard (or a virtual one, in the case of change request forms)
and pass it around from person to person who all work in different, isolated work silos.
The server team passes of the DNS change to the networking team, then they forget to tell
the monitoring and backup teams, and the whole thing is just a mess... But I digress.

So I've re-implented this structure (who just called "Conway's Law?") in a non-blocking 
POE wraper (lib/POE/Component/Instantiate.pm) that basically just calls functions from the
independent (and blocking) modules that actually do the work. (/lib/{Linode,EC2,VMware/ESX}/Actions.pm)
this way, a blocking module may be written that does the work top-down, and then can be wrapped in
the non-blocking wrapper after the fact. Basically, just get some perl deploying your nodes, 
and we can make it bot-friendly after the fact.

We take the initial data, and put it on our "clipboard." When a method needs called from the library
that actually does work, we fork a child process from the method, and pass it the clipboard as an anonymous
data struct argument. Note that this means the child can't return values that it actively changed to the parent.

We fix this by *any* STDOUT that comes out of the function must be YAML, and it must be the entire clipboard.
Any YAML STDOUT handed back to the parent will completely replace the clipboard handed to the next task in the 
actions list on the heap.

Then when the child process returns (with 0) Instantiate calls the next task on the heap in the same manner.

We use a colon delimite moniker to allow for multiple sub modules $self->{$module}->$task($heap->{'clipboard'});

so the tasks "linode:deploy" and "dnswizard:update_host" and "ldapworker:update_host_ou" could all be in the 
task list, each corresponding to 3 separate worker modules. 

(Think: how do I deploy clusters in a coordinated fashion across EC2/Linode/ESX in one pass?)


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Now all of this is completely separate from configuration management on the host. We use  puppet for that. 


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Perl Object Environment (POE) method for host deployments.

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