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cloud-runner

v0.0.0

Published

Run tasks in the cloud. Currently supports the following providers: * DigitalOcean

Downloads

2

Readme

cloud-runner

Run tasks in the cloud. Currently supports the following providers:

  • DigitalOcean

Prerequisites

cloud-runner is written in node.js and thus requires npm for installation and node.js for operation.

Installation

$ npm install -g cloud-runner

Usage

To run a task in the cloud, cloud-runner requires access to a cloud provider and a machine template.

First-Time Setup

Before using cloud-runner proper, you must first run the cloud-runner initialization:

$ cloud-runner init

This creates a .cloud-runner directory in the current user's home directory, where cloud-runner will store its configuration and other data.

Adding a Cloud Provider

A cloud provider is a service that spawns and destroys machines, either virtual or physical.

DigitalOcean

$ cloud-runner add-cloud --id=do1 --provider=DigitalOcean --credentials=<accessToken>

This registers a DigitalOcean cloud provider under the ID do1. <accessToken> must be a valid DigitalOcean API token.

Removing a Cloud Provider

$ cloud-runner remove-cloud --id=do1

Makes cloud-runner forget the details of the cloud provider with the ID do1, in this case the DigitalOcean cloud provider we registered above.

Adding a Machine Template

DigitalOcean

$ cloud-runner add-machine-template --id=small --region=tor1 --size=512mb --image=ubuntu-16-04-x64 --ssh_keys=<sshKeyFingerprint>

This registers a machine template under the ID small for use with a DigitalOcean cloud provider in the Toronto region, 512 MiB of RAM, running Ubuntu 16.04. <sshKeyFingerprint> must be the fingerprint of a SSH key add to DigitalOcean.

Removing a Machine Template

$ cloud-runner remove-machine-template --id=small

Makes cloud-runner forget the details of the machine template with the ID small, in this case the DigitalOcean-specific template we registered above.

Executing a Task

$ cloud-runner exec --cloud=do1 --machine-template=small --machine-name=test --cmd="echo 'Hello, world'"
[] Validated connectivity.
[test] Spawned droplet.
[test] Blocking until droplet becomes unlocked...
[test] has become unlocked.
[test] Connected via SSH.
[test] Ran shell command echo 'Hello, world'.

Hello, world
[test] Deleted droplet.

Spawns a machine under the cloud provider do1, with the machine specs given by the machine template small, naming it test, and running the command echo 'Hello, world'.