tornfish
Deploy and manage a docker ecosystem from scratch. Get setup in minutes.
Features
- out of the box docker containers:
- DNS server
- Docker private registry
- node.js easy deployment
- supports ubuntu
- monit like monitoring
The basics
Note on the documentation: tornfish takes options. An option with square brakets around
[option]
is optional. An option with angled brackets around is expecting an input-name <container_name>
-->-name "myCustomContainerName"
tornfish revolves around crud commands that apply to an object type and 'MAY' apply to an object key:
tornfish add|get|list|delete <type> [<key>]
Note that the use of the word add
instead of set
is voluntary. In some cases, tornfish will reject an
add
command if the key already exists. In which case you would need to delete the object first.
The object types are:
config
represent a configuration item. Configuration is used to define tornfish' global behaviour.server
represent an ssh'able server on which tornfish can run scriptskey
represent SSH keys used by tornfish to connect to servers. Use passphrases with your ssh keysscript
shell scripts that tornfish runs on the servers
documentation
Most of the documentation is embedded into tornfish. You can call the following command:
tornfish help [server|group|key|repository|config] [<key>]
Quick start
tornfish needs some pre-requisites before taking on your infrastructure
pre-requisites
install node.js
tornfish is written in node.js and requires it to run.
apt-get install node.js
install tornfish
sudo npm install -g tornfish
setup mongoDB
tornfish saves your commands and infrastructure configuration into mongoDB. We recommend you setup a free mongoDB instance on mongohq.
tornfish add config mongo_host <your_mongodb_host>
tornfish add config mongo_port <your_mongodb_port>
tornfish add config mongo_username <your_mongodb_username>
tornfish add config mongo_password <your_mongodb_password>
The type
config
is the only one that will silently override existing objects if you redefine them.
your first server
tornfish mainly acts on servers. Because tornfish does not yet support dynamic environments (eg: Amazon ec2) it assumes that the servers are started before it can connect to it. Tornfish will not automatically discover servers, start or stop them.
tornfish add server <host>[:<ssh_port>] server1 --username <user> --generate-key
--username
asks tornfish to always use this username with this server. You can register multiple users for one physical servers and tornfish will think that these servers are different.--generate-key
asks tornfish to generate a private key and add it to this user's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys so that tornfish will not ask for a password next time. When this option is used, tornfish will ask you for the server's password.
If you already have your own private key and would like tornfish to use it, you can use one of these two options:
--use-key <path_to_ssh_priv_key>
This will use and save the private key into tornfish. tornfish encrypts the keys with a global password.--use-external-key <path_to_ssh_priv_key>
This will ask tornfish to use the key at the given path but the key won't be saved into tornfish's database.
Commands
tornfish add config <name> --value <value>
tornfish add server <name> [--host <hostname|ip>] [--port <ssh_port>] [--user <username>] [--key <sshKeyName>] [--password <password>]
tornfish set server <name> [--key <key_name>] ...
tornfish add key [<name>] --path <path_to_priv_key> --no-save
tornfish list server|key|config|image
tornfish list key
# only display some columns
tornfish list server --view name --view host
tornfish status server <name1> <name2> --all
tornfish deploy <server> --image <image> --port <from_1>:<to_1> --port <from_2>:<to_2>
tornfish undeploy <server> --container <container>