About LEAP command line interface ================================= This gem installs an executable 'leap' that allows you to manage servers using the leap platform. Installation ================================= To install the gem: gem install leap_cli To run from a clone of the git repo, see "Development", below. Usage ================================= This tool is incomplete, so most commands don't yet work. Run `leap help` for a usage instructions. Here is an example usage: leap init provider cd provider edit configuration files (see below) leap compile Directories and Files ================================= The general structure of leap project looks like this: my_leap_project/ # the 'root' directory leap_platform/ # a clone of the leap_platform puppet recipes provider/ # your provider-specific configurations The "leap" command should be run from within the "provider" directory. You can name these directories whatever you like. The leap command will walk up the directory tree until it finds a directory that looks like a 'root' directory. Within the "provider" directory: nodes/ # one configuration file per node (i.e. server) services/ # nodes inherit from these files if specified in node config. tags/ # nodes inherit from these files if specified in node config. files/ # text and binary files needed for services and nodes, including keypairs users/ # crypto key material for sysadmins common.yaml # all nodes inherit these options provider.yaml # global service provider definition Configuration Files ================================= All configuration files are in JSON format. For example { "key1": "value1", "key2": "value2" } Keys should match /[a-z0-9_]/ Unlike traditional JSON, comments are allowed. If the first non-whitespace character is '#' the line is treated as a comment. # this is a comment { # this is a comment "key": "value" # this is an error } Options in the configuration files might be nested. For example: { "openvpn": { "ip_address": "1.1.1.1" } } If the value string is prefixed with an '=' character, the value is evaluated as ruby. For example { "domain": { "public": "domain.org" } "api_domain": "= 'api.' + domain.public" } In this case, "api_domain" will be set to "api.domain.org". The following methods are available to the evaluated ruby: * nodes -- A list of all nodes. This list can be filtered. * global.services -- A list of all services. * global.tags -- A list of all tags. * file(file_path) -- Inserts the full contents of the file. If the file is an erb template, it is rendered. The file is searched for by first checking platform and then provider/files, * variable -- Any variable inherited by a particular node is available by just referencing it using either hash notation or object notation (i.e. self['domain']['public'] or domain.public). Circular references are not allowed, but otherwise it is ok to nest evaluated values in other evaluated values. Node Configuration ================================= The name of the file will be the hostname of the node. An example configuration "nodes/dns-europe.json" { "services": "dns", "tags": ["production", "europe"], "ip_address": "1.1.1.1" } This node will have hostname "dns-europe" and it will inherit from the following files (in this order): common.json services/dns.json tags/europe.json tags/production.json Development ================================= prerequisites: * rubygems (``apt-get install rubygems``) * bundler (``gem install bundler``) Install command line ``leap``: git clone git://leap.se/leap_cli # clone leap cli code cd leap_cli bundle # install required gems ln -s `pwd`/bin/leap ~/bin # link executable somewhere in your bin path You can experiment using the example provider in the test directory cd test/provider leap Alternately, you can create your own provider for testing: mkdir ~/dev/example.org cd ~/dev/example.org git clone git://leap.se/leap_platform leap init provider cd provider leap