bare(-metal servers) v23
Set platform: bare
in config.yml
This platform is meant to support any server that is accessible via SSH, including bare-metal servers as well as already-provisioned servers on any cloud platform (including AWS).
You must define the IP address(es) and username for each target server:
You must ensure that
- TPA can ssh to the instance as
ansible_user
- The
ansible_user
has sudo access on the instance
SSH access
In the example above, TPA will ssh to xyzzy@192.0.2.1
to access
the instance.
By default, TPA will run ssh-keygen
to generate a new SSH keypair
in your cluster directory. The private key is named id_cluster_name
and the public key is stored in id_cluster_name.pub
.
You must either set ssh_key_file: /path/to/id_keyname
to use a
different key that the instance will accept, or configure the instance
to allow access from the generated key (e.g., use ssh-copy-id
, which
will append the contents of id_cluster_name.pub
to
~xyzzy/.ssh/authorized_keys
).
You must also ensure that ssh can verify the host key(s) of the
instance. You can either add entries to the known_hosts
file in your
cluster directory, or install the TPA-generated host keys from
hostkeys/ssh_host_*_key*
in your cluster directory into /etc/ssh
on
the instance (the generated tpa_known_hosts
file contains entries for
these keys).
For example, to ssh in with the generated user key, but keep the existing host keys, you can do:
Run tpaexec ping ~/clusters/speedy
to check if it's working. If not,
append -vvv
to the command to look at the complete ssh command-line.
(Note: Ansible will invoke ssh to execute a command like
bash -c 'python3 && sleep 0'
on the instance. If you run ssh commands
by hand while debugging, replace this with a command that produces some
output and then exits instead, e.g., 'id'
.)
For more details:
Distribution support
TPA will try to detect the distribution running on target instances,
and fail if it is not supported. TPA currently supports Debian
(8/9/10; or jessie/stretch/buster), Ubuntu (16.04/18.04/20.04; or
xenial/bionic/focal), and RHEL/CentOS/Rocky/AlmaLinux (7.x/8.x) on bare
instances.
IP addresses
You can specify the public_ip
, private_ip
, or both for any instance.
TPA uses these IP addresses in two ways: first, to ssh to the
instance to execute commands during deployment; and second, to set up
communications within the cluster, e.g., for /etc/hosts
or to set
primary_conninfo
for Postgres.
If you specify a public_ip
, it will be used to ssh to the instances
during deployment. If you specify a private_ip
, it will be used to set
up communications within the cluster. If you specify both, the
public_ip
will be used during deployment, and the private_ip
for
cluster communications.
If you specify only one or the other, the address will be used for both
purposes. For example, you could set only public_ip
for servers on
different networks, or only private_ip
if you're running TPA
inside a closed network. (Instead of using public/private, you can set
ip_address
if you need to specify only one IP address.)
- On this page
- SSH access
- Distribution support
- IP addresses