6.4 KiB
VMware's Cloud Application Platform
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 VMware, Inc.
What is Cloud Foundry?
Cloud Foundry is an open platform-as-a-service (PaaS). The system supports multiple frameworks, multiple application infrastructure services and deployment to multiple clouds.
License
Cloud Foundry uses the Apache 2 license. See LICENSE for details.
Installation Notes
Cloud Foundry is made up of a number of system components (cloud controller, health manager, dea, router, etc.). These components can run co-located in a single vm/single os or can be spread across several machines/vm's.
For development purposes, the preferred environment is to run all of the core
components within a single vm and then interact with the system from outside of
the vm via an ssh tunnel. The pre-defined domain *.vcap.me
maps to local host,
so when you use this setup, the end result is that your development environment
is available at http://api.vcap.me.
For large scale or multi-vm deployments, the system is flexible enough to allow you to place system components on multiple vm's, run multiple nodes of a given type (e.g., 8 routers, 4 cloud controllers, etc.)
The detailed install instructions below walk you through the install process for a single vm installation.
Versions of these instructions have been used for production deployments, and for our own development purposes. many of us develop on mac laptops, so some additional instructions for this environment have been included.
Detailed Install/Run Instructions:
There are two methods for installing VCAP. One is a manual process, which you might choose to do if you want to understand the details of what goes into a bringing up a VCAP instance. The other is an automated process contributed by the community. In both cases, you need to start with a stock Ubuntu server VM.
Step 1: create a pristine VM with ssh
- setup a VM with a pristine Ubuntu 10.04.4 server 64bit image, download here
- setup your VM with 1G or more of memory
- you may wish to snapshot your VM now in case things go pear shaped (great snapshot spots are here and after step 4)
- to enable remote access (more fun than using the console), install ssh.
To install ssh:
sudo apt-get install openssh-server
Step 2: run the automated setup process
Run the install script. It'll ask for your sudo password at the beginning and towards the end. The entire process takes about half an hour, so just keep a loose eye on it.
sudo apt-get install curl
bash < <(curl -s -k -B https://raw.github.com/cloudfoundry/vcap/master/dev_setup/bin/vcap_dev_setup)
NOTE: The automated setup does not auto-start the system. Once you are done with the setup, exit your current shell, restart a new shell and continue the following steps
Step 3: start the system
~/cloudfoundry/vcap/dev_setup/bin/vcap_dev start
Step 4: Optional, mac/linux users only, create a local ssh tunnel
From your VM, run ifconfig
and note your eth0 IP address, which will look something like: 192.168.252.130
Now go to your mac terminal window and verify that you can connect with SSH:
ssh <your VM user>@<VM IP address>
If this works, create a local port 80 tunnel:
sudo ssh -L <local-port>:<VM IP address>:80 <your VM user>@<VM IP address> -N
If you are not already running a local web server, use port 80 as your local port, otherwise you may want to use 8080 or another common http port.
Once you do this, from both your mac, and from within the vm, api.vcap.me
and *.vcap.me
will map to localhost which will map to your running Cloud Foundry instance.
Trying your setup
Step 5: validate that you can connect and tests pass
From the console of your vm, or from your mac (thanks to local tunnel)
vmc target api.vcap.me
vmc info
Note: If you are using a tunnel and selected a local port other than 80 you
will need to modify the target to include it here, like api.vcap.me:8080
.
This should produce roughly the following:
VMware's Cloud Application Platform
For support visit support@cloudfoundry.com
Target: http://api.vcap.me (v0.999)
Client: v0.3.10
Play around as a user, start with:
vmc register --email foo@bar.com --passwd password
vmc login --email foo@bar.com --passwd password
To see what else you can do try:
vmc help
Testing your setup
Once the system is installed, you can run the following command Basic System Validation Tests (BVT) to ensure that major functionality is working. BVTs require additional dependencies of Maven and the JDK, which can be installed with:
sudo apt-get install default-jdk maven2
Now that you have the necessary dependencies, you can run the BVTs:
cd cloudfoundry/vcap
cd tests && bundle package; bundle install && cd ..
rake tests
Unit tests can also be run using the following.
cd cloud_controller
rake spec
cd ../dea
rake spec
cd ../router
rake spec
cd ../health_manager
rake spec
Step 6: you are done, make sure you can run a simple hello world app.
Create an empty directory for your test app (lets call it env), and enter it.
mkdir env && cd env
Cut and paste the following app into a ruby file (lets say env.rb):
require 'rubygems'
require 'sinatra'
get '/' do
host = ENV['VCAP_APP_HOST']
port = ENV['VCAP_APP_PORT']
"<h1>XXXXX Hello from the Cloud! via: #{host}:#{port}</h1>"
end
get '/env' do
res = ''
ENV.each do |k, v|
res << "#{k}: #{v}<br/>"
end
res
end
Create & push a 4 instance version of the test app, like so:
vmc push env --instances 4 --mem 64M --url env.vcap.me -n
Test it in the browser:
Note that hitting refresh will show a different port in each refresh reflecting the different active instances
Check the status of your app by running:
vmc apps
Which should yield the following output:
+-------------+----+---------+-------------+----------+
| Application | # | Health | URLS | Services |
+-------------+----+---------+-------------+----------+
| env | 1 | RUNNING | env.vcap.me | |
+-------------+----+---------+-------------+----------+