Skip to content

pavrych/coda-automation

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Coda Logo

Repository Purpose

This repository is designed to show an opinionated example on how to operate a network of Coda Daemons. It implements the entire node lifecycle using a modern Infrastructure as Code toolset. Community contributions are warmly encouraged, please see the contribution guidelines for more details. The code is designed to be as modular as possible, allowing the end-user to "pick and choose" the parts they would like to incorporate into their own infrastructure stack.

If you have any issues setting up your testnet or have any other questions about this repository, join the public Discord Server and get help from the Coda community.

Code Structure

coda-automation
├── ansible
│   ├── tasks
│   └── wallet-keys
├── scripts
└── terraform
    ├── modules
    │   ├── coda-node
    │   └── elasticsearch
    └── testnets
        ├── testnet20190601
        └── testnet20190613

Terraform: Contains resource modules and live code to deploy a Coda Testnet.

  • Note: Currently ALL modules only support AWS, multi-cloud support is on the roadmap.
  • coda-node: A Terraform module that encapsulates a single node.
  • elasticsearch: A Terraform module that deploys an elasticsearch cluster using the AWS Elasticsearch service. Ansible: Contains runbooks that are designed to configure and run a set of Coda Daemons. Scripts: Scripts that are designed to be placed on a remote node and executed locally.

Prerequisites

For the purposes of this README we are assuming the following:

  • You have a configured AWS Account with credentials on your machine
  • You have Terraform 0.12.x installed on your machine
  • You have Ansible 2.8.x installed on your machine

Key Terms

  • Netname: The common name used to refer to a particular instance of a Test Network. (ex: "20190601")

Getting Started

There's several steps involved in setting up Coda nodes, and the setup process can vary slightly depending on your end-goal:

  1. I'd like to set up a Coda Test Network from scratch.
  2. I'd like to join my Coda Nodes to an existing Test Network.

Start Your Own Test Network From Scratch

Clone the Repository

git clone https://github.com/CodaProtocol/coda-automation.git

Create a new Testnet Terraform configuration

Note: You can totally use one of the existing example configurations, but we'll assume you want to set one up from the beginning.

$ cd coda-automation/terraform/testnets
$ mkdir testnet$(date +"%Y%m%d")
$ touch testnet$(date +"%Y%m%d")/testnet.tf

Populate it with your node configuration and (optionally) other infrastructure

Bare-Minimum testnet.tf:

locals {
  netname    = "20190601"                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
  public_key = "< INSERT SSH KEY HERE> "
}

terraform {
  required_version = "~> 0.12.0"
  backend "s3" {
    key     = "test-net/terraform-20190601.tfstate"
    encrypt = true
    region  = "us-west-2"
    bucket  = "o1labs-terraform-state"
    acl     = "bucket-owner-full-control"
  }
}

provider "aws" {
  region = "us-west-2"
}

## One Seed
module "us-west-2-seed" {
  source        = "../../modules/coda-node"
  region        = "us-west-2"
  server_count  = 1
  instance_type = "c5.xlarge"
  netname       = "${local.netname}"
  rolename      = "seed"
  public_key    = "${local.public_key}"
}

## One Snarker
module "us-west-2-snarker" {
  source        = "../../modules/coda-node"
  region        = "us-west-2"
  server_count  = 1
  instance_type = "c5.4xlarge"
  netname       = "${local.netname}"
  rolename      = "snarker"
  public_key    = "${local.public_key}"
}

# Three Proposers
module "us-west-2-proposer" {
  source        = "../../modules/coda-node"
  region        = "us-west-2"
  server_count  = 3
  instance_type = "c5.2xlarge"
  netname       = "${local.netname}"
  rolename      = "proposer"
  public_key    = "${local.public_key}"
}

If you were to terraform apply this, you would get 5 instances, all in AWS's us-west-2 region. However there are no Coda daemons installed!

Run Ansible against your Coda Testnet

Next, we need to install the Coda daemon.

  • Note: currently, the coda-init.yaml runbook installs elastic beats for log collection, more flexible runbooks are on the roadmap.
  • Note: currently the coda-init.yaml runbook installs SSH Keys for the core Coda team to debug nodes. You should modify ansible/tasks/task-sshkeys.yaml to reflect your github username before executing this runbook.
  • Note: see ansible/tasks for a detailed list of installation steps.
$ cd coda-automation/ansible
$ ansible-playbook -i ec2.py -u admin -e netname=$(date +"%Y%m%d") coda-init.yaml

The coda-init.yaml runbook will SSH to all the machines in your testnet, performing required configuration actions in order to get the nodes in a runnable state.

The actions it performs are the following:

  • Install Elastic Beats for log forwarding/metrics
  • Download and Install Proving Keys (see note below)
  • Install Coda + Dependencies
  • Install SSH Public Keys for management

Note about Proving Keys: Proving keys are generated at Daemon build time and must be fetched before running the Coda Daemon. There is currently no established location to download these keys, however once one is introduced this README will be updated with instructions on how to retrieve them.

Lastly, you must run the coda-start.yaml runbook to start the Daemons in the correct order.

$ ansible-playbook -i ec2.py -u admin -e netname=$(date +"%Y%m%d") coda-start.yaml

This step will start the seed node, then join any Snarkers to the network before joining any Proposers.

Join Your Coda Nodes to an Existing Test Network

TO DO

Next Steps

Now that you have a testnet running, there's plenty of things you can do:

About

Tools for managing coda testnets

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 63.9%
  • HCL 28.6%
  • Shell 4.2%
  • JavaScript 1.8%
  • Dockerfile 1.5%