Difference between revisions of "OPS435 Python3 Lab 8"

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<font color='red'><u>'''This lab is currently being reviewed. The final version will be ready by November 11, 2019'''</u></font>
 
 
= LAB OBJECTIVES =
 
= LAB OBJECTIVES =
  

Revision as of 16:39, 10 November 2019

LAB OBJECTIVES

1. Use the fab program to execute administrative tasks on remote host via Python functions under the Fabric framework.
2. Create python functions using Fabric API to perform Linux system administrative tasks on controlled Linux systems.

Overview

Completing this lab will give you a taste of what is involved in automating remote system/network administration tasks. We will look at and use the Fabric package in this lab. Using Fabric you can automate monitoring, deploying software, and updating many systems at the same time repeatedly.

REFERENCE

1. These links are helpful for learning more about Fabric's features:
Category Resource Link
Official Fabric website
[1]
Official Fabric tutorial
[2]
Better Fabric tutorial
[3]
2. You should have learned the following topics in OPS235 and or OPS335. Please review them to prepare for some of the tasks in this lab:
  • Configure and allow a regular user to run the sudo command.
  • The man page on sudo
  • Configure sudoers using the configuration file: /etc/sudoers.
  • Managing critical system log files: /var/log/messages, /var/log/maillog, /var/log/secure
  • Retrieve current firewall setting using the iptables -L -n -v command

INVESTIGATION 1: Extra VM Setup

In order to experience Fabric's features in a realistic way, we're going to set up several virtual machines (You need at least one more VM). To begin with they are all going to have the same configuration. Please make sure that each VM has direct network connection with other VMs you wish to control and configure.

PART 1 - Set up your controller

In this lab you will use your existing vm centos7 as a workstation to control other VMs which we'll call workers. Later in the lab, we will try to control and monitor your vm in myvmlab using the fabfile we are going to develop.
Install fabric using yum. Once it's installed you should have a fab command available. Type the following command to get the command line option:
fab --help
You should get something similar to the following:
Usage: fab [options] <command>[:arg1,arg2=val2,host=foo,hosts='h1;h2',...] ...

Options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -d NAME, --display=NAME
                        print detailed info about command NAME
  -F FORMAT, --list-format=FORMAT
                        formats --list, choices: short, normal, nested
  -I, --initial-password-prompt
                        Force password prompt up-front
  --initial-sudo-password-prompt
                        Force sudo password prompt up-front
  -l, --list            print list of possible commands and exit
  --set=KEY=VALUE,...   comma separated KEY=VALUE pairs to set Fab env vars
  --shortlist           alias for -F short --list
  -V, --version         show program's version number and exit
  -a, --no_agent        don't use the running SSH agent
  -A, --forward-agent   forward local agent to remote end
  --abort-on-prompts    abort instead of prompting (for password, host, etc)
  -c PATH, --config=PATH
                        specify location of config file to use
  --colorize-errors     Color error output
  -D, --disable-known-hosts
                        do not load user known_hosts file
  -e, --eagerly-disconnect
                        disconnect from hosts as soon as possible
  -f PATH, --fabfile=PATH
                        python module file to import, e.g. '../other.py'
  -g HOST, --gateway=HOST
                        gateway host to connect through
  --gss-auth            Use GSS-API authentication
  --gss-deleg           Delegate GSS-API client credentials or not
  --gss-kex             Perform GSS-API Key Exchange and user authentication
  --hide=LEVELS         comma-separated list of output levels to hide
  -H HOSTS, --hosts=HOSTS
                        comma-separated list of hosts to operate on
  -i PATH               path to SSH private key file. May be repeated.
  -k, --no-keys         don't load private key files from ~/.ssh/
  --keepalive=N         enables a keepalive every N seconds
  --linewise            print line-by-line instead of byte-by-byte
  -n M, --connection-attempts=M
                        make M attempts to connect before giving up
  --no-pty              do not use pseudo-terminal in run/sudo
  -p PASSWORD, --password=PASSWORD
                        password for use with authentication and/or sudo
  -P, --parallel        default to parallel execution method
  --port=PORT           SSH connection port
  -r, --reject-unknown-hosts
                        reject unknown hosts
  --sudo-password=SUDO_PASSWORD
                        password for use with sudo only
  --system-known-hosts=SYSTEM_KNOWN_HOSTS
                        load system known_hosts file before reading user
                        known_hosts
  -R ROLES, --roles=ROLES
                        comma-separated list of roles to operate on
  -s SHELL, --shell=SHELL
                        specify a new shell, defaults to '/bin/bash -l -c'
  --show=LEVELS         comma-separated list of output levels to show
  --skip-bad-hosts      skip over hosts that can't be reached
  --skip-unknown-tasks  skip over unknown tasks
  --ssh-config-path=PATH
                        Path to SSH config file
  -t N, --timeout=N     set connection timeout to N seconds
  -T N, --command-timeout=N
                        set remote command timeout to N seconds
  -u USER, --user=USER  username to use when connecting to remote hosts
  -w, --warn-only       warn, instead of abort, when commands fail
  -x HOSTS, --exclude-hosts=HOSTS
                        comma-separated list of hosts to exclude
  -z INT, --pool-size=INT
                        number of concurrent processes to use in parallel mode

Please note and study the -H, -f, -l, and --port options.

PART 2 - Create master Worker image

Create a new virtual machine, and allocate for it 1GB of RAM and 8GB of disk space. Install a Basic Web Server configuration of CentOS in that VM using the same CentOS .iso file you used for your first machine in this course.
Make sure that:
  • The hostname of the system is worker1.
  • It has a static IP address appropriate for your virtual network.
  • Create a regular user using your Seneca email name as the user name: [seneca_id].
  • Add this new regular user to the wheel group using the following command:
      usermod -a -G wheel [seneca_id]
    This will allow the user to run the sudo command.
  • After installation ensure that you can access worker1 from your main vm using the static IP address you've assigned to it.

Set up SSH key login

In order for an automated system to be able to connect to your VM and administer it - you will need to be able to connect to it using SSH keys. You've done this in both OPS235 and OPS335.
Create a new SSH key pair (one private, and one public) on your main VM with your regular user (don't do it under root). Once you have both keys, set things up so that
  • your regular user on your controller VM can SSH to the worker VM as the same regular user without prompting for a password. (ie. add the contents of your pub key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys)
  • your regular user on your controller VM can SSH to the worker VM as root without propmting for a password. (ie. add the contents of your pub key to /root/.ssh/authorized_keys)

PART 3 - Clone the Workers

We're only simulating the real world where you'd have hundreds of VMs in one or more clouds, but you can just imagine that the VMs you're creating on your computer are actually being created on an Amazon or Microsoft server.
** Optional ** Make four clones of the master worker image you've just created. Then make sure that each of them has a unique IP address. That's all you're required to change manually. All the other configuration on the workers (inlcuding the hostnames) will be set by Fabric. Normally you would have some kind of automation doing all this cloning and IP address assignment as well, but we don't have time for that this semester.
Make snapshots of all your workers so that you can easily restore them to the original state after you modify them.

INVESTIGATION 2: Fabric practice

We will start with some basics. Fabric runs python programs on the controller and the workers. You create an "instruction" file on your controller, and execute it on the controller using the fab program. When you do that - you specify which workers you want your instructions to be executed on.
The instructions are stored in a python file. Let's start with a simple one named fabfile.py (the default filename used by fab without the '-f' optino):

PART 1: Simplest example

Getting the hostname on the remote worker

from fabric.api import *

# set the name of the user on the remote host
env.name = '[seneca_id]'

# Will get the hostname of this worker:

def getHostname():
    name = run("hostname")
    print(name)
To check for syntax error, run the following command in the same directory as your fabfile.py:
fab -l
you should get a list of tasks stored in your fabfile.py:
[rchan@centos7 lab8]$ fab -f fabfile.py -l
Available commands:

    getHostname
To perform the task of getHostname on the worker machine 192.168.122.169, we run it on the controller machine like this:
[rchan@centos7 lab8]$ fab -f fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169. getHostname
[192.168.122.169] Executing task 'getHostname'
[192.168.122.169] run: hostname
[192.168.122.169] out: c7-rchan
[192.168.122.169] out: 

c7-rchan

Done.
Disconnecting from 192.168.122.169... done.
All this has done is get the hostname of the worker and print it (on the controller).
In the command above we're using the fab program to import the file fabfile.py and execute the getHostname function on the worker 192.168.122.169. Note that the IP address of your first worker will likely be different.
If you did all the setup right and you get a password prompt when execute the above command, read the prompt carefully and see who's password it prompted you for. If it is not the same as your [seneca_id], verify that you have the following line in your fabfile and you can ssh to your worker vm without password:
env.user = '[seneca_id]'
In the above you have:
  • Lines with an IP address telling you which worker the output is for/from.
  • Messages from the controller (e.g. "Executing task...", and "run: ...").
  • Output from the worker ("out: ...")
  • Output on the controller from your fab file ("worker1" which came from the "print()" call)
You should get used to the above. It's a lot of output but it's important to understand where every part is coming from, so you are able to debug problems when they happen.

Part 2: Set up more administrative tasks

Let's pretend that we need collect the disk usage on several machines so that we can plan for storage maintenance. We'll set up a simple example of such a deployment here.

Getting the disk usage on remote worker

Add a getDiskUsage() function to your fabfile.py file:
# to get the disk usage on remote worker
def getDiskUsage():
    current_time = run('date')
    diskusage = run('df -H')
    header = 'Current Disk Usage at '+current_time
    print(header)
    print(diskusage)
Note that each call to "run()" will run a command on the worker. In this function we get the date/time of the remote work, and then get the disk usage. The print() function print out both the values returned.
If you try to run it the same way as before:
$ fab --fabfile=fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169 getDiskUsage
You should get the following output:
[rchan@centos7 lab8]$ fab --fabfile=fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169 getDiskUsage
[192.168.122.169] Executing task 'getDiskUsage'
[192.168.122.169] run: date
[192.168.122.169] out: Sun Nov 10 13:17:16 EST 2019
[192.168.122.169] out: 

[192.168.122.169] run: df -H
[192.168.122.169] out: Filesystem               Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
[192.168.122.169] out: devtmpfs                 947M     0  947M   0% /dev
[192.168.122.169] out: tmpfs                    964M     0  964M   0% /dev/shm
[192.168.122.169] out: tmpfs                    964M  9.7M  954M   2% /run
[192.168.122.169] out: tmpfs                    964M     0  964M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
[192.168.122.169] out: /dev/mapper/centos-root  7.7G  5.6G  2.1G  73% /
[192.168.122.169] out: /dev/vda1                1.1G  298M  766M  29% /boot
[192.168.122.169] out: tmpfs                    193M   17k  193M   1% /run/user/42
[192.168.122.169] out: tmpfs                    193M     0  193M   0% /run/user/1000
[192.168.122.169] out: 

Current Disk Usage at Sun Nov 10 13:17:16 EST 2019
Filesystem               Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
devtmpfs                 947M     0  947M   0% /dev
tmpfs                    964M     0  964M   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs                    964M  9.7M  954M   2% /run
tmpfs                    964M     0  964M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/mapper/centos-root  7.7G  5.6G  2.1G  73% /
/dev/vda1                1.1G  298M  766M  29% /boot
tmpfs                    193M   17k  193M   1% /run/user/42
tmpfs                    193M     0  193M   0% /run/user/1000

Done.
Disconnecting from 192.168.122.169... done.
You'll find that yum prompts you to answer questions, which you don't want to do in an automated environment. And also yum prints too much output, which also isn't helpful in an automated environment. We'll fix it by adding two switches to yum: "-y" and "-d1":
Notice also that all of the four commands can be run as many times as you want, the result will be the same. This is not always so easy.


Update all the rpm packages on remote worker

Let's pretend that we need to update software packages installed on several machines due to security patches. Let's name the task as 'performSoftwareUpdate()':
# to perform software update on remote worker
def performSoftwareUpdate():
    status = run('yum update -y')
    print(status)
Do a syntax check with the "fab -l" command.
When you try to run it the same way as before, you encounter some issue as shown below:
[rchan@centos7 lab8]$ fab --fabfile=fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169 performSoftwareUpdate
[192.168.122.169] Executing task 'performSoftwareUpdate'
[192.168.122.169] run: yum update -y
[192.168.122.169] out: Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks
[192.168.122.169] out: You need to be root to perform this command.
[192.168.122.169] out: 


Fatal error: run() received nonzero return code 1 while executing!

Requested: yum update -y
Executed: /bin/bash -l -c "yum update -y"

Aborting.
Disconnecting from 192.168.122.169... done.
As you already know, you need superuser privilege in order to perform software update on a Linux system. There are two ways to do it on Fabric. The first one is simple. Edit you fabfile.py and change the env.user line as shown below:
env.user = 'root'
Save the fabfile.py with the change and run it again.
If you see the password prompt again, make sure that you can ssh from your controller as a regular user to your worker vm as root without password.

Part 3: Setting and Checking Security Configuration

Recall that in our OPS courses we've been using iptables instead of firewalld, which is installed by default in CentOS. Let's make sure that our workers have that set up as well. In the same fabfile.py you've been using all along, add a new function like this:
# Will uninstall firewalld and replace it with iptables
def setupFirewall():
    run("yum -y -d1 remove firewalld")
    run("yum -y -d1 install iptables-services")
    run("systemctl enable iptables")
    run("systemctl start iptables")
That should by now look pretty obvious. On the worker you're going to uninstall firewalld, install iptables, and make sure that the iptables service is running.
Execute the function for worker1 and double-check that it worked.
**Warning** Do not do this on your vm on myvmlab. If you do, you may lock yourself out for good.

Check firewall configuration

To check your firewall configuration your remote worker, you can retrieve its current configuration by creating another Fabric task called "getFirewallConfigure(). Let's put the following code to your fabfile.py:
def getFirewallConfig():
    fw_config = run("iptables -L -n -v")
    print(fw_config)
Try to run the getFirewallConfig() task the same way as before.
Troubleshoot if you encounter any issue.

INVESTIGATION 3: Multiplying your work

After completing all the previous parts of the lab - you should have a working fabfile.py with three working functions: getDiskUsage(), performSoftwareUpdate() and getFirewallConfig().

** Optional **You were asked to test them on worker1. Now let's run these three functions on all your workers at the same time. The command is almost the same, except for the list of IP addresses:

fab --fabfile=fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169,192.168.122.170,192.168.122.171,192.168.122.172 getDiskUsage
Again - your IP addresses will be different but the command will be the same.
You can also run all three tasks on all the workers at the same time, by adding any task to your fabfile.py:
def doAllThree():
    getDiskUsage()
    getFirewallConfig()
    preformSoftwareUpdate()
And run the following command on your controller:
fab --fabfile=fabfile.py -H 192.168.122.169,192.168.122.170,192.168.122.171,192.168.122.172 doAllThree

And imagine that you might have 10 tasks to be done on 10, 50, 100 servers - could you do it without the automation?

Final Task - Apply fabfile.py to your VM on myvmlab

Since your account on your vm on myvmlab is a regular user with sudo privilege. You need to make the following changes to your fabfile.py before applying it to your vm on myvmlab:
  • Change env.user from 'root' to your account on your vm in myvmlab.
  • Change all the commands that need super user privilege from calling the run() function to instead calling the sudo() function.
Test your updated fabfile.py until you get the same result as when you apply it to your own worker VM.

LAB 8 SIGN-OFF (SHOW INSTRUCTOR)

Have Ready to Show Your Instructor:
  • Complete all the parts of the lab and upload the version of your fabfile.py which works on your vm on myvmlab to Blackboard.