9.3 KiB
Triton
triton
is a CLI tool for working with the CloudAPI for Joyent's Triton [Public Cloud]
(https://docs.joyent.com/public-cloud) and [Private Cloud] (https://docs.joyent.com/private-cloud).
CloudAPI is a RESTful API for end users of the cloud to manage their accounts, instances,
networks, images, and to inquire other relevant details. CloudAPI provides a single view of
docker containers, infrastructure containers and hardware virtual machines available in the
Triton solution.
There is currently another CLI tool known as node-smartdc
for CloudAPI. node-smartdc
CLI works off the 32-character object UUID to uniquely
identify object instances in API requests, and returns response payload in JSON format.
The CLI covers both basic and advanced usage of CloudAPI.
As a lightweight programmable interface for CloudAPI, the triton
CLI supports both name or
UUID identification of object instances and the use of short ID, as well as the choice
between concise tabular responses and full JSON responses. The triton
CLI is currently in
beta and will be expanded over time to support all CloudAPI commands, eventually replacing
node-smartdc
as both the API client library for Triton cloud and the command line tool.
Setup
User accounts, authentication, and security
Before you can use the CLI you'll need an account on the cloud to which you are connecting and an SSH key uploaded. The SSH key is used to identify and secure SSH access to containers and other resources in Triton.
If you do not already have an account on Joyent Public Cloud, sign up here.
API endpoint
Each data center has a single CloudAPI endpoint. For Joyent Public Cloud, you can find the list of datacenters here. For private cloud implementations, please consult the private cloud operator for the correct URL. Have the URL handy as you'll need it in the next step.
Installation
- Install node.js.
npm install -g git://github.com/joyent/node-triton
Verify that it is installed and on your PATH:
$ triton --version
Triton CLI 1.0.0
Configure the proper environmental variables that correspond to the API endpoint and account, for example:
SDC_URL=https://us-east-3b.api.joyent.com
SDC_ACCOUNT=dave.eddy@joyent.com
SDC_KEY_ID=04:0c:22:25:c9:85:d8:e4:fa:27:0d:67:94:68:9e:e9
Bash completion
You can quickly source triton
bash completions in your current
shell with:
source <(triton completion)
For a more permanent installation:
triton completion >> ~/.bashrc
# Or maybe:
triton completion > /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/triton
Examples
Create and view instances
$ triton instances
SHORTID NAME IMG STATE PRIMARYIP AGO
We have no instances created yet, so let's create some. In order to create an instance we need to specify two things: an image and a package. An image represents what will be used as the root of the instances filesystem, and the package represents the size of the instance, eg. ram, disk size, cpu shares, etc. More information on images and packages below - for now we'll just use SmartOS 64bit and a small 128M ram package which is a combo available on the Joyent Public Cloud.
$ triton create-instance base-64 t4-standard-128M
Without a name specified, the container created will have a generated ID. Now to create a container-native Ubuntu 14.04 container with 2GB of ram with the name "server-1"
$ triton create-instance --name=server-1 ubuntu-14.04 t4-standard-2G
Now list your instances again
$ triton instances
SHORTID NAME IMG STATE PRIMARYIP AGO
7db6c907 b851ba9 base-64@15.2.0 running 165.225.169.63 9m
9cf1f427 server-1 ubuntu-14.04@20150819 provisioning - 0s
Get a quick overview of your account
$ triton info
login: dave.eddy@joyent.com
name: Dave Eddy
email: dave.eddy@joyent.com
url: https://us-east-3b.api.joyent.com
totalDisk: 50.5 GiB
totalMemory: 2.0 MiB
instances: 2
running: 1
provisioning: 1
To obtain more detailed information of your instance
$ triton instance server-1
{
"id": "9cf1f427-9a40-c188-ce87-fd0c4a5a2c2c",
"name": "251d4fd",
"type": "smartmachine",
"state": "running",
"image": "c8d68a9e-4682-11e5-9450-4f4fadd0936d",
"ips": [
"165.225.169.54",
"192.168.128.16"
],
"memory": 2048,
"disk": 51200,
"metadata": {
"root_authorized_keys": "(...ssh keys...)"
},
"tags": {},
"created": "2015-09-08T04:56:27.734Z",
"updated": "2015-09-08T04:56:43.000Z",
"networks": [
"feb7b2c5-0063-42f0-a4e6-b812917397f7",
"726379ac-358b-4fb4-bb7c-8bc4548bac1e"
],
"dataset": "c8d68a9e-4682-11e5-9450-4f4fadd0936d",
"primaryIp": "165.225.169.54",
"firewall_enabled": false,
"compute_node": "44454c4c-5400-1034-8053-b5c04f383432",
"package": "t4-standard-2G"
}
SSH to an instance
Connect to an instance over SSH
$ triton ssh b851ba9
Last login: Wed Aug 26 17:59:35 2015 from 208.184.5.170
__ . .
_| |_ | .-. . . .-. :--. |-
|_ _| ;| || |(.-' | | |
|__| `--' `-' `;-| `-' ' ' `-'
/ ; Instance (base-64 15.2.0)
`-' https://docs.joyent.com/images/smartos/base
[root@7db6c907-2693-42bc-ea9b-f38678f2554b ~]# uptime
20:08pm up 2:27, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.01
[root@7db6c907-2693-42bc-ea9b-f38678f2554b ~]# logout
Connection to 165.225.169.63 closed.
Or non-interactively
$ triton ssh b851ba9 uname -v
joyent_20150826T120743Z
Manage an instance
Commonly used container operations are supported in the Triton CLI. More operations will be added to the list over time.
$ triton help
...
instance-audit List instance actions.
start-instance (start) Start a single instance.
stop-instance (stop) Stop a single instance.
reboot-instance (reboot) Reboot a single instance.
delete-instance (delete) Delete a single instance.
wait-instance (wait) Wait on instances changing state.
...
View packages and images
Package definitions and images available vary between different datacenters and different Triton cloud implementations.
To see all the packages offered in the datacenter and specific package information, use
$ triton packages
$ triton package ID|NAME
Similarly, to find out the available images and their details, do
$ triton images
$ triton image ID|NAME
Note that docker images are not shown in triton images
as they are
maintained in Docker Hub and other third-party registries configured to be
used with Joyent's Triton clouds. In general, docker containers should be
provisioned and managed with the regular docker
CLI
(Triton provides an endpoint that represents the entire datacenter
as a single DOCKER_HOST
. See the Triton Docker
documentation for more information.)
Configuration
This section defines all the vars in a TritonApi config. The baked in defaults are in "etc/defaults.json" and can be overriden for the CLI in "~/.triton/config.json".
Name | Description |
---|---|
profile | The name of the triton profile to use. The default with the CLI is "env", i.e. take config from SDC_* envvars. |
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". |
node-triton differences with node-smartdc
- There is a single
triton
command instead of a number ofsdc-*
commands. - The
SDC_USER
env variable is accepted in preference toSDC_ACCOUNT
.
cloudapi2.js differences with node-smartdc/lib/cloudapi.js
The old node-smartdc module included an lib for talking directly to the SDC Cloud API (node-smartdc/lib/cloudapi.js). Part of this module (node-triton) is a re-write of the Cloud API lib with some backward incompatibilities. The differences and backward incompatibilities are discussed here.
- Currently no caching options in cloudapi2.js (this should be re-added in
some form). The
noCache
option to many of the cloudapi.js methods will not be re-added, it was a wart. - The leading
account
option to each cloudapi.js method has been dropped. It was redundant for the constructoraccount
option. - "account" is now "user" in the CloudAPI constructor.
- All (all? at least at the time of this writing) methods in cloudapi2.js have
a signature of
function (options, callback)
instead of the sometimes haphazard extra arguments.
Development Hooks
Before commiting be sure to:
make check # lint and style checks
make test # run unit tests
A good way to do that is to install the stock pre-commit hook in your clone via:
make git-hooks
License
MPL 2.0