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Description

Web application deployment manager, focusing on Haskell web frameworks. It mitigates downtime.

Deployment system for web applications, originally intended for hosting Yesod applications. It binds to the main port (usually port 80) and reverse proxies requests to your application based on virtual hostnames. It provides SSL support if requested. It automatically launches applications, monitors processes, and relaunches any processes which die. It also provides graceful redeployment support, which mitigates downtime.

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Deployment system for web applications, originally intended for hosting Yesod applications. Keter does the following actions for your application:

  • Binds to the main port (usually port 80) and reverse proxies requests to your application based on virtual hostnames.
  • Provides SSL support if requested.
  • Automatically launches applications, monitors processes, and relaunches any processes which die.
  • Provides graceful redeployment support, by launching a second copy of your application, performing a health check[1], and then switching reverse proxying to the new process.

Keter provides many more advanced features and extension points. It allows configuration of static hosts, redirect rules, management of PostgreSQL databases, and more. It supports a simple bundle format for applications which allows for easy management of your web apps.

[1]: The health check happens trough checking if a port is opened. If your app doesn't open a port after 30 seconds it's presumed not healthy and gets a term signal.

Quick Start

To get Keter up-and-running quickly for development purposes, on an Ubuntu system (not on your production server), run:

wget -O - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/snoyberg/keter/master/setup-keter.sh | bash

(Note: This assumes you already have keter installed via cabal.) (Note: you may need to run the above command twice, if the shell exits after apt-get but before running the rest of its instructions.) This will download and build Keter from source and get it running with a default configuration. By default Keter will be set up to support HTTPS and will require you to provide a key and certificate in /opt/keter/etc. You can disable HTTPS in /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml by commenting the certificate and key lines.

This approach is not recommended for a production system. We do not recommend installing a full GHC toolchain on a production server, nor running such ad-hoc scripts. This is intended to provide a quick way to play with Keter, especially for temporary virtual machines. For a production system, we recommend building the keter binary on a separate system, and tracking it via a package manager or similar strategy.

Bundling your app for Keter

  1. Modify your web app to check for the PORT environment variable, and have it listen for incoming HTTP requests on that port. Keter automatically assigns arbitrary ports to each web app it manages. When building an app based on the Yesod Scaffold, it may be necessary to change the port variable in config/settings.yaml from YESOD_PORT to PORT for compatibility with Keter.

  2. Create a file config/keter.yaml. The minimal file just has two settings:

    exec: ../path/to/executable
    host: mydomainname.example.com
    

    See the bundles section below for more available settings.

  3. Create a gzipped tarball with the config/keter.yaml file, your executable, and any other static resources you would like available to your application. This file should be given a .keter file extension, e.g. myapp.keter.

  4. Copy the .keter file to /opt/keter/incoming. Keter will monitor this directory for file updates, and automatically redeploy new versions of your bundle.

Examples are available in the incoming directory.

Setup

Building keter for Debian, Ubuntu and derivatives

Eventually, I hope to provide a PPA for this (please contact me if you would like to assist with this). For now, the following steps should be sufficient:

First, install PostgreSQL:

sudo apt-get install postgresql

Second, build the keter binary and place it at /opt/keter/bin. To do so, you'll need to install the Haskell Platform, and can then build with cabal. This would look something like:

sudo apt-get install haskell-platform
cabal update
cabal install keter
sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/bin
sudo cp ~/.cabal/bin/keter /opt/keter/bin

Third, create a Keter config file. You can view a sample at https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/etc/keter-config.yaml.

Optionally, you may wish to change the owner on the /opt/keter/incoming folder to your user account, so that you can deploy without sudoing.

sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/incoming
sudo chown $USER /opt/keter/incoming

Building keter for Redhat and derivatives (Centos, Fedora, etc)

First, install PostgreSQL:

sudo dnf install postgresql

Second, build the keter binary and place it at /opt/keter/bin. To do so, you'll need to install the Haskell Platform, and can then build with cabal. This would look something like:

sudo dnf install haskell-platform
cabal update
cabal install keter
sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/bin
sudo cp ~/.cabal/bin/keter /opt/keter/bin

Third, create a Keter config file. You can view a sample at https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/etc/keter-config.yaml.


Configuring startup

For versions of Ubuntu and derivatives 15.04 or greater and Redhat and derivatives (Centos, Fedora, etc) use systemd

# /etc/systemd/system/keter.service
[Unit]
Description=Keter
After=network.service

[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=/opt/keter/bin/keter /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Finally, enable and start the unit (Note: You may need to disable SELinux):

sudo systemctl enable keter
sudo systemctl start keter

Verify that it's actually running with:

sudo systemctl status keter

Optionally, you may wish to change the owner on the /opt/keter/incoming folder to your user account, so that you can deploy without sudoing.

sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/incoming
sudo chown $USER /opt/keter/incoming

Additionally, you may want to enable logging to stderr by disabling rotate-logs in config/keter.yaml, since systemd will automatically capture and manage stderr output for you:

rotate-logs: false

For versions of Ubuntu and derivatives less than 15.04, configure an Upstart job.

# /etc/init/keter.conf
start on (net-device-up and local-filesystems and runlevel [2345])
stop on runlevel [016]
respawn

# NB: keter writes logs to /opt/keter/log, but some exceptions occasionally
# escape to standard error. This ensures they show up in system logs.
console output

exec /opt/keter/bin/keter /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml

Finally, start the job for the first time:

sudo start keter

NixOS

Keter is integrated within nixos:

https://search.nixos.org/options?channel=22.11&show=services.keter.keterPackage&from=0&size=50&sort=relevance&type=packages&query=keter

There is an example that integrates yesod into keter with NixOS here: https://github.com/jappeace/yesod-keter-nix


Bundles

An application needs to be set up as a keter bundle. This is a GZIPed tarball with a .keter filename extension and which has one special file: config/keter.yaml. A sample file is available at https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/incoming/foo1_0/config/keter.yaml.

Keter also supports wildcard subdomains and exceptions, as in this example configuration:

exec: ../com.example.app
args:
    - Hello
    - World
    - 1
host: www.example.com
extra-hosts:
    - "*.example.com"
    - foo.bar.example.com
static-hosts:
    - host: static.example.com
      root: ../static
redirects:
    - from: example.com
      to: www.example.com

Due to YAML parsing, wildcard hostnames will need to be quoted as above. Wildcard hostnames are not recursive, so foo.bar.example.com must be explicitly added as an extra hostname in the above example, or alternatively, *.*.example.com would cover all host names two levels deep. It would not cover host names only one level deep, such as qux.example.com. In this manner, wildcard hostnames correspond to the manner in which SSL certificates are handled per RFC2818. Wildcards may be used in only one level of a hostname, as in foo.*.example.com.

Full RFC2818 compliance is not present - f*.example.com will not be handled as a wildcard with a prefix.

A sample Bash script for producing a Keter bundle is:

#!/bin/bash -ex

cabal build
strip dist/build/yesodweb/yesodweb
rm -rf static/tmp
tar czfv yesodweb.keter dist/build/yesodweb/yesodweb config static

For users of Yesod, The yesod executable provides a keter command for creating the bundle, and the scaffolded site provides a keter.yaml file.

Deploying

In order to deploy, you simply copy the keter bundle to /opt/keter/incoming. To update an app, copy in the new version. The old process will only be terminated after the new process has started answering requests. To stop an application, delete the file from incoming.

PostgreSQL support

Keter ships by default with a PostgreSQL plugin, which will handle management of PostgreSQL databases for your application. To use this, make the following changes:

  • Add the following lines to your config/keter.yaml file:
plugins:
  postgres: true
  • Keter can be configured to connect to a remote postgres server using the following syntax:
plugins:
  postgres: 
     - server: remoteServerNameOrIP
       port: 1234

Different webapps can be configured to use different servers using the above syntax. It should be noted that keter will prioritize it's own postgres.yaml record for an app. So if moving an existing app from a local postgres server to a remote one (or switching remote servers), the postgres.yaml file will need to be updated manually.

Keter will connect to the remote servers using the postgres account. This setup assumes the remote server's pg_hba.conf file has been configured to allow connections from the keter-server IP using the trust method.

(Note: The plugins configuration option was added in v1.0 of the keter configuration syntax. If you are using v0.4 then use postgres: true. The remote-postgres server syntax was added in v1.4.2.)

  • Modify your application to get its database connection settings from the following environment variables:

    • PGHOST
    • PGPORT
    • PGUSER
    • PGPASS
    • PGDATABASE
  • The Yesod scaffold site is already equipped to read these environment variables when they are set.

Known issues

  • There are reports of Keter not working behind an nginx reverse proxy. From the reports, this appears to be a limitation in nginx's implementation, not a problem with Keter. Keter works fine behind other reverse proxies, including Apache and Amazon ELB.

    One possible workaround is to add the following lines to your nginx configuration:

    proxy_set_header Connection "";
    proxy_http_version 1.1;
    

    This has not yet been confirmed to work in production. If you use this, please report either its success or failure back to me.

    Additionally, to make sure that nginx does not reset the Host header (which keter uses to choose the right target), you will need to add:

    proxy_set_header Host $host;
    
  • Keter does not handle password-protected SSL key files well. When provided with such a key file, unlike Apache and Nginx, Keter will not pause to ask for the password. Instead, your https connections will merely stall.

    To get around this, you need to create a copy of the key without password and deploy this new key:

    openssl rsa -in original.key -out new.key
    

    (Back up the original key first, just in case.)

Stanza-based config files

Starting with Keter 1.0, there is an alternate format for application Keter config files, which allows much more flexibility in defining multiple functionality for a single bundle (e.g., more than one web app, multiple redirects, etc). This README will eventually be updated to reflect all various options. In the meanwhile, please see the following examples of how to use this file format:

  • https://github.com/yesodweb/yesod-scaffold/blob/postgres/config/keter.yml
  • https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/incoming/foo1_0/config/keter.yaml

Multiple SSL Certificates

Keter is able to serve different certificates for different hosts, allowing for the deployment of distinct domains using the same server. An example keter-config.yaml would look like::

root: ..
listeners:
  - host: "*4" # Listen on all IPv4 hosts
    port: 80
  - host: 127.0.0.1
    key: key.pem
    certificate: certificate1.pem
  - host: 127.0.0.2
    key: key.pem
    certificate: certificate2.pem

An alternative way to make this possible is adding the following ssl: argument to the keter.yaml file in your Yesod app's config folder as follows:

stanzas:
    - type: webapp
      exec: ../yourproject
      ssl:
        key: /opt/keter/etc/cert/yourproject.key
        certificate: /opt/keter/etc/cert/yourproject.crt
        chain-certificates: []

If you don't have your certificates bundled in one .crt file, you should add the other certificates in the following order

      ssl:
        [..]
        chain-certificates:
          - /opt/keter/etc/middle.crt
          - /opt/keter/etc/root.crt

This way you can designate certificates per Yesod App while still having one SSL certificate in your main /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml for your other Yesod apps to default to if they don't have this ssl: argument in their config/keter.yaml.

NOTE: If you get an error that a Bool was expected instead of an Object when adding the ssl: argument, then for this to work you might need to build Keter from Github, because at the time of writing the version of Keter on Hackage does not have this functionality. Just clone or download this repository and build it using stack.

FAQ

  • Keter spawns multiple failing process when run with sudo start keter.
    • This may be due to Keter being unable to find the SSL certificate and key. Try to run sudo /opt/keter/bin/keter /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml. If it fails with keter: etc/certificate.pem: openBinaryFile: does not exist or something like it, you may need to provide valid SSL certificates and keys or disable HTTPS, by commenting the key and certificate lines from /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml.

Debugging

There is a debug port option available in the global keter config:

cli-port = 1234

This allows you to attach netcat to that port, and introspect which processes are running within keter:

nc localhost 1234

Then type --help for options, currently it can only list the apps, but this approach is easily extensible if you need additional debug information.

This option is disabled by default, but can be useful to figure out what keter is doing.

Contributing

If you are interested in contributing, see https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/incoming/README.md for a complete testing workflow. If you have any questions, you can open an issue in the issue tracker, ask on the #yesod freenode irc channel, or send an email to [email protected].

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License

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