# First steps with Constellation The following steps guide you through the process of creating a cluster and deploying a sample app. This example assumes that you have successfully [installed and set up Constellation](install.md), and have access to a cloud subscription. :::tip If you don't have a cloud subscription, check out [MiniConstellation](first-steps-local.md), which lets you set up a local Constellation cluster using virtualization. ::: ## Create a cluster 1. Create the configuration file for your selected cloud provider. ```bash constellation config generate azure ``` ```bash constellation config generate gcp ``` ```bash constellation config generate aws ``` This creates the file `constellation-conf.yaml` in your current working directory. 2. Fill in your cloud provider specific information. First you need to create an [IAM configuration](../workflows/config.md#creating-an-iam-configuration). The easiest way to do this is the following CLI command: ```bash constellation iam create azure --region=westus --resourceGroup=constellTest --servicePrincipal=spTest ``` This command creates IAM configuration on the Azure region `westus` creating a new resource group `constellTest` and a new service principal `spTest`. Note that CVMs are currently only supported in a few regions, check [Azure's products available by region](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/global-infrastructure/services/?products=virtual-machines®ions=all). These are: * `westus` * `eastus` * `northeurope` * `westeurope` ```bash constellation iam create gcp --projectID=yourproject-12345 --zone=europe-west2-a --serviceAccountID=constell-test ``` This command creates IAM configuration in the GCP project `yourproject-12345` on the GCP zone `europe-west2-a` creating a new service account `constell-test`. Note that only regions offering CVMs of the `N2D` series are supported. You can find a [list of all regions in Google's documentation](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/regions-zones#available), which you can filter by machine type `N2D`. ```bash constellation iam create aws --zone=eu-central-1a --prefix=constellTest ``` This command creates IAM configuration for the AWS zone `eu-central-1a` using the prefix `constellTest` for all named resources being created. Constellation OS images are currently replicated to the following regions: * `eu-central-1` * `us-east-2` * `ap-south-1` If you require the OS image to be available in another region, [let us know](https://github.com/edgelesssys/constellation/issues/new?assignees=&labels=&template=feature_request.md&title=Support+new+AWS+image+region:+xx-xxxx-x). You can find a list of all [regions in AWS's documentation](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/using-regions-availability-zones.html#concepts-available-regions). Now, fill the output values of the command into the corresponding fields of the `constellation-conf.yaml` file. :::tip To learn how to delete your IAM configuration and to get more detailed information on the IAM process and the VM types supported by Constellation, see the [Configuration workflow](../workflows/config.md). ::: 3. Create the cluster with one control-plane node and two worker nodes. `constellation create` uses options set in `constellation-conf.yaml`. :::tip On Azure, you may need to wait 15+ minutes at this point for role assignments to propagate. ::: ```bash constellation create --control-plane-nodes 1 --worker-nodes 2 -y ``` This should give the following output: ```shell-session $ constellation create ... Your Constellation cluster was created successfully. ``` 4. Initialize the cluster :::caution In this release of Constellation, initialization on **Azure** might be slow and might take up to 60 minutes to initialize all Kubernetes nodes. This has been fixed in later releases. ::: ```bash constellation init ``` This should give the following output: ```shell-session $ constellation init Your Constellation master secret was successfully written to ./constellation-mastersecret.json Initializing cluster ... Your Constellation cluster was successfully initialized. Constellation cluster identifier g6iMP5wRU1b7mpOz2WEISlIYSfdAhB0oNaOg6XEwKFY= Kubernetes configuration constellation-admin.conf You can now connect to your cluster by executing: export KUBECONFIG="$PWD/constellation-admin.conf" ``` The cluster's identifier will be different in your output. Keep `constellation-mastersecret.json` somewhere safe. This will allow you to [recover your cluster](../workflows/recovery.md) in case of a disaster. :::info Depending on your CSP and region, `constellation init` may take 10+ minutes to complete. ::: 5. Configure kubectl ```bash export KUBECONFIG="$PWD/constellation-admin.conf" ``` ## Deploy a sample application 1. Deploy the [emojivoto app](https://github.com/BuoyantIO/emojivoto) ```bash kubectl apply -k github.com/BuoyantIO/emojivoto/kustomize/deployment ``` 2. Expose the frontend service locally ```bash kubectl wait --for=condition=available --timeout=60s -n emojivoto --all deployments kubectl -n emojivoto port-forward svc/web-svc 8080:80 & curl http://localhost:8080 kill %1 ``` ## Terminate your cluster ```bash constellation terminate ``` This should give the following output: ```shell-session $ constellation terminate You are about to terminate a Constellation cluster. All of its associated resources will be DESTROYED. This action is irreversible and ALL DATA WILL BE LOST. Do you want to continue? [y/n]: ``` Confirm with `y` to terminate the cluster: ```shell-session Terminating ... Your Constellation cluster was terminated successfully. ``` Optionally, you can also [delete your IAM resources](../workflows/config.md#deleting-an-iam-configuration).