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README.md
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# node-spearhead
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This repository is part of the Joyent Triton project. See the [contribution
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guidelines](https://github.com/joyent/triton/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) --
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*Triton does not use GitHub PRs* -- and general documentation at the main
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[Triton project](https://github.com/joyent/triton) page.
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This repository holds the node-spearhead CLI tool to work with the Spearhead Cloud.
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`triton` is a CLI tool for working with the CloudAPI for Joyent's Triton [Public Cloud]
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(https://docs.joyent.com/public-cloud) and [Private Cloud] (https://docs.joyent.com/private-cloud).
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CloudAPI is a RESTful API for end users of the cloud to manage their accounts, instances,
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networks, images, and to inquire other relevant details. CloudAPI provides a single view of
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docker containers, infrastructure containers and hardware virtual machines available in the
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Triton solution.
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## Installation and configuration
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There is currently another CLI tool known as [node-smartdc](https://github.com/joyent/node-smartdc)
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for CloudAPI. `node-smartdc` CLI works off the 32-character object UUID to uniquely
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identify object instances in API requests, and returns response payload in JSON format.
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The CLI covers both basic and advanced usage of [CloudAPI](https://apidocs.joyent.com/cloudapi/).
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### Get a Spearhead Cloud account
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**The `triton` CLI is currently in beta (effectively because it does not yet
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have *complete* coverage of all commands from node-smartdc) and will be
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expanded over time to support all CloudAPI commands, eventually replacing
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`node-smartdc` as both the API client library for Triton cloud and the command
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line tool.**
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## Setup
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### User accounts, authentication, and security
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Before you can use the CLI you'll need an account on the cloud to which you are connecting and
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an SSH key uploaded. The SSH key is used to identify and secure SSH access to containers and
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other resources in Triton.
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If you do not already have an account on Joyent Public Cloud, sign up [here](https://www.joyent.com/public-cloud).
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Create an account on the Spearhead Cloud and upload your SSH key.[!TBD: docs]You can create an account [here](https://spearhead.cloud/).
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### API endpoint
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### Data-centers
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Each data center has a single CloudAPI endpoint. For Joyent Public Cloud, you can find the
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list of data centers [here](https://docs.joyent.com/public-cloud/data-centers).
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For private cloud implementations, please consult the private cloud operator for the correct URL.
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Have the URL handy as you'll need it in the next step.
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The list of available Spearhead Cloud data-centers is available [here](https://spearhead.cloud/datacenters).
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### Installation
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Install [node.js](http://nodejs.org/), then:
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npm install -g triton
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Verify that it is installed and on your PATH:
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$ triton --version
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Triton CLI 4.15.0
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https://github.com/joyent/node-triton
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To use `triton`, you'll need to configure it to talk to a Triton DataCenter
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API endpoint (called CloudAPI). Commonly that is done using a Triton profile:
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$ triton profile create
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A profile name. A short string to identify a CloudAPI endpoint to the
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`triton` CLI.
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name: sw1
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The CloudAPI endpoint URL.
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url: https://us-sw-1.api.joyent.com
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Your account login name.
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account: bob
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Available SSH keys:
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1. 2048-bit RSA key with fingerprint 4e:e7:56:9a:b0:91:31:3e:23:8d:f8:62:12:58:a2:ec
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* [in homedir] bob-20160704 id_rsa
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The fingerprint of the SSH key you want to use, or its index in the list
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above. If the key you want to use is not listed, make sure it is either saved
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in your SSH keys directory or loaded into the SSH agent.
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keyId: 1
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Saved profile "sw1".
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WARNING: Docker uses TLS-based authentication with a different security model
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from SSH keys. As a result, the Docker client cannot currently support
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encrypted (password protected) keys or SSH agents. If you continue, the
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Triton CLI will attempt to format a copy of your SSH *private* key as an
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unencrypted TLS cert and place the copy in ~/.triton/docker for use by the
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Docker client.
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Continue? [y/n] y
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Setting up profile "sw1" to use Docker.
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Setup profile "sw1" to use Docker (v1.12.3). Try this:
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eval "$(triton env --docker sw1)"
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docker info
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Set "sw1" as current profile (because it is your only profile).
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Or instead of using profiles, you can set the required environment variables
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(`triton` defaults to an "env" profile that uses these environment variables if
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no profile is set). For example:
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TRITON_URL=https://us-sw-1.api.joyent.com
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TRITON_ACCOUNT=bob
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TRITON_KEY_ID=SHA256:j2WoSeOWhFy69BQ0uCR3FAySp9qCZTSCEyT2vRKcL+s
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For compatibility with the older [sdc-* tools from
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node-smartdc](https://github.com/joyent/node-smartdc), `triton` also supports
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`SDC_URL`, `SDC_ACCOUNT`, etc. environment variables.
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### Bash completion
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Install Bash completion with
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```bash
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triton completion > /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/triton # Mac
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triton completion > /etc/bash_completion.d/triton # Linux
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```
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Alternatively, if you don't have or don't want to use a "bash\_completion.d"
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dir, then something like this would work:
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```bash
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triton completion > ~/.triton.completion
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echo "source ~/.triton.completion" >> ~/.bashrc
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```
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Then open a new shell or manually `source FILE` that completion file, and
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play with the bash completions:
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triton <TAB>
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## `triton` CLI Usage
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### Create and view instances
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$ triton instance list
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SHORTID NAME IMG STATE PRIMARYIP AGO
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We have no instances created yet, so let's create some. In order to create
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an instance we need to specify two things: an image and a package. An image
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represents what will be used as the root of the instances filesystem, and the
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package represents the size of the instance, eg. ram, disk size, cpu shares,
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etc. More information on images and packages below - for now we'll just use
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SmartOS 64bit and a small 128M ram package which is a combo available on the
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Joyent Public Cloud.
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$ triton instance create base-64 t4-standard-128M
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Without a name specified, the container created will have a generated ID. Now
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to create a container-native Ubuntu 14.04 container with 2GB of ram with the
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name "server-1"
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$ triton instance create --name=server-1 ubuntu-14.04 t4-standard-2G
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Now list your instances again
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$ triton instance list
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SHORTID NAME IMG STATE PRIMARYIP AGO
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7db6c907 b851ba9 base-64@15.2.0 running 165.225.169.63 9m
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9cf1f427 server-1 ubuntu-14.04@20150819 provisioning - 0s
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Get a quick overview of your account
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$ triton info
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login: dave.eddy@joyent.com
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name: Dave Eddy
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email: dave.eddy@joyent.com
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url: https://us-east-3b.api.joyent.com
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totalDisk: 50.5 GiB
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totalMemory: 2.0 MiB
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instances: 2
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running: 1
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provisioning: 1
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To obtain more detailed information of your instance
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$ triton instance get server-1
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{
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"id": "9cf1f427-9a40-c188-ce87-fd0c4a5a2c2c",
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"name": "251d4fd",
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"type": "smartmachine",
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"state": "running",
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"image": "c8d68a9e-4682-11e5-9450-4f4fadd0936d",
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"ips": [
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"165.225.169.54",
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"192.168.128.16"
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],
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"memory": 2048,
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"disk": 51200,
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"metadata": {
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"root_authorized_keys": "(...ssh keys...)"
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},
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"tags": {},
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"created": "2015-09-08T04:56:27.734Z",
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"updated": "2015-09-08T04:56:43.000Z",
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"networks": [
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"feb7b2c5-0063-42f0-a4e6-b812917397f7",
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"726379ac-358b-4fb4-bb7c-8bc4548bac1e"
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],
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"dataset": "c8d68a9e-4682-11e5-9450-4f4fadd0936d",
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"primaryIp": "165.225.169.54",
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"firewall_enabled": false,
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"compute_node": "44454c4c-5400-1034-8053-b5c04f383432",
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"package": "t4-standard-2G"
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}
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### SSH to an instance
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Connect to an instance over SSH
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$ triton ssh b851ba9
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Last login: Wed Aug 26 17:59:35 2015 from 208.184.5.170
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__ . .
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_| |_ | .-. . . .-. :--. |-
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|_ _| ;| || |(.-' | | |
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|__| `--' `-' `;-| `-' ' ' `-'
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/ ; Instance (base-64 15.2.0)
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`-' https://docs.joyent.com/images/smartos/base
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[root@7db6c907-2693-42bc-ea9b-f38678f2554b ~]# uptime
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20:08pm up 2:27, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.01
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[root@7db6c907-2693-42bc-ea9b-f38678f2554b ~]# logout
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Connection to 165.225.169.63 closed.
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Or non-interactively
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$ triton ssh b851ba9 uname -v
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joyent_20150826T120743Z
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### Manage an instance
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Commonly used container operations are supported in the Triton CLI:
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$ triton help instance
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...
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list (ls) List instances.
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get Get an instance.
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create Create a new instance.
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delete (rm) Delete one or more instances.
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start Start one or more instances.
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stop Stop one or more instances.
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reboot Reboot one or more instances.
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ssh SSH to the primary IP of an instance
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wait Wait on instances changing state.
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audit List instance actions.
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### View packages and images
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Package definitions and images available vary between different data centers
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and different Triton cloud implementations.
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To see all the packages offered in the data center and specific package
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information, use
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$ triton package list
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$ triton package get ID|NAME
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Similarly, to find out the available images and their details, do
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$ triton image list
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$ triton images ID|NAME
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Note that docker images are not shown in `triton images` as they are
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maintained in Docker Hub and other third-party registries configured to be
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used with Joyent's Triton clouds. **In general, docker containers should be
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provisioned and managed with the regular
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[`docker` CLI](https://docs.docker.com/installation/#installation)**
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(Triton provides an endpoint that represents the _entire datacenter_
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as a single `DOCKER_HOST`. See the [Triton Docker
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documentation](https://apidocs.joyent.com/docker) for more information.)
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## `TritonApi` Module Usage
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Node-triton can also be used as a node module for your own node.js tooling.
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A basic example appropriate for a command-line tool is:
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```javascript
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var mod_bunyan = require('bunyan');
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var mod_triton = require('triton');
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var log = mod_bunyan.createLogger({name: 'my-tool'});
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// See the `createClient` block comment for full usage details:
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// https://github.com/joyent/node-triton/blob/master/lib/index.js
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mod_triton.createClient({
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log: log,
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// Use 'env' to pick up 'TRITON_/SDC_' env vars. Or manually specify a
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// `profile` object.
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profileName: 'env',
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unlockKeyFn: mod_triton.promptPassphraseUnlockKey
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}, function (err, client) {
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if (err) {
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// handle err
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}
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client.listImages(function (err, images) {
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client.close(); // Remember to close the client to close TCP conn.
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if (err) {
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console.error('listImages err:', err);
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} else {
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console.log(JSON.stringify(images, null, 4));
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}
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});
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});
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```
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See the following for more details:
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- The block-comment for `createClient` in [lib/index.js](lib/index.js).
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- Some module-usage examples in [examples/](examples/).
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- The lower-level details in the top-comment in
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[lib/tritonapi.js](lib/tritonapi.js).
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## Configuration
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This section defines all the vars in a TritonApi config. The baked in defaults
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are in "etc/defaults.json" and can be overriden for the CLI in
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"~/.triton/config.json" (on Windows: "%APPDATA%/Joyent/Triton/config.json").
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| Name | Description |
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| ---- | ----------- |
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| profile | The name of the triton profile to use. The default with the CLI is "env", i.e. take config from `SDC_*` envvars. |
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| cacheDir | The path (relative to the config dir, "~/.triton") where cache data is stored. The default is "cache", i.e. the `triton` CLI caches at "~/.triton/cache". |
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## node-triton differences with node-smartdc
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- There is a single `triton` command instead of a number of `sdc-*` commands.
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- `TRITON_*` environment variables are preferred to the `SDC_*` environment
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variables. However the `SDC_*` envvars are still supported.
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- Node-smartdc still has more complete coverage of the Triton
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[CloudAPI](https://apidocs.joyent.com/cloudapi/). However, `triton` is
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catching up and is much more friendly to use.
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## Development Hooks
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Before commiting be sure to, at least:
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make check # lint and style checks
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make test-unit # run unit tests
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A good way to do that is to install the stock pre-commit hook in your
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clone via:
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make git-hooks
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Also please run the full (longer) test suite (`make test`). See the next
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section.
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## Test suite
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node-triton has both unit tests (`make test-unit`) and integration tests (`make
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test-integration`). Integration tests require a config file, by default at
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"test/config.json". For example:
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$ cat test/config.json
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{
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"profileName": "east3b",
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"allowWriteActions": true,
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"image": "minimal-64",
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"package": "g4-highcpu-128M",
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"resizePackage": "g4-highcpu-256M"
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}
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See "test/config.json.sample" for a description of all config vars. Minimally
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just a "profileName" or "profile" is required.
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*Warning:* Running the *integration* tests will create resources and could
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incur costs if running against a public cloud.
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Run all tests:
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make test
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You can use `TRITON_TEST_CONFIG` to override the test file, e.g.:
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$ cat test/coal.json
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{
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"profileName": "coal",
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"allowWriteActions": true
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}
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$ TRITON_TEST_CONFIG=test/coal.json make test
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where "coal" here refers to a development Triton (a.k.a SDC) ["Cloud On A
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Laptop"](https://github.com/joyent/sdc#getting-started) standup.
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## Release process
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Here is how to cut a release:
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1. Make a commit to set the intended version in "package.json#version" and changing `## not yet released` at the top of "CHANGES.md" to:
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```
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## not yet released
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## $version
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```
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2. Get that commit approved and merged via <https://cr.joyent.us>, as with all
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commits to this repo. See the discussion of contribution at the top of this
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readme.
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3. Once that is merged and you've updated your local copy, run:
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```
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make cutarelease
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```
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This will run a couple checks (clean working copy, versions in package.json
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and CHANGES.md match), then will git tag and npm publish.
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npm install -g spearhead
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Now you ca use `spearhead` to interact with our Public Cloud. More details about installation and configuration are available [here](https://docs.spearhead.cloud).
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## License
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Reference in New Issue
Block a user