* docs: remove disclaimer about resolved Azure performance issue * Update first-steps.md * Update first-steps.md
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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, and have access to a cloud subscription.
:::tip If you don't have a cloud subscription, check out MiniConstellation, which lets you set up a local Constellation cluster using virtualization. :::
Create a cluster
-
Create the configuration file for your selected cloud provider.
constellation config generate azure
constellation config generate gcp
This creates the file
constellation-conf.yaml
in your current working directory. -
Fill in your cloud provider specific information.
You need several resources for the cluster. You can use the following
az
script to create them:RESOURCE_GROUP=constellation # enter name of new resource group for your cluster here LOCATION=westus # enter location of resources here SUBSCRIPTION_ID=$(az account show --query id --out tsv) SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAME=constell az group create --name "${RESOURCE_GROUP}" --location "${LOCATION}" az group create --name "${RESOURCE_GROUP}-identity" --location "${LOCATION}" az ad sp create-for-rbac -n "${SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAME}" --role Owner --scopes "/subscriptions/${SUBSCRIPTION_ID}/resourceGroups/${RESOURCE_GROUP}" | tee azureServiceAccountKey.json az identity create -g "${RESOURCE_GROUP}-identity" -n "${SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAME}" identityID=$(az identity show -n "${SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAME}" -g "${RESOURCE_GROUP}-identity" --query principalId --out tsv) az role assignment create --assignee-principal-type ServicePrincipal --assignee-object-id "${identityID}" --role 'Virtual Machine Contributor' --scope "/subscriptions/${SUBSCRIPTION_ID}" az role assignment create --assignee-principal-type ServicePrincipal --assignee-object-id "${identityID}" --role 'Application Insights Component Contributor' --scope "/subscriptions/${SUBSCRIPTION_ID}" echo "subscription: ${SUBSCRIPTION_ID} tenant: $(az account show --query tenantId -o tsv) location: ${LOCATION} resourceGroup: ${RESOURCE_GROUP} userAssignedIdentity: $(az identity show -n "${SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAME}" -g "${RESOURCE_GROUP}-identity" --query id --out tsv) appClientID: $(jq -r '.appId' azureServiceAccountKey.json) clientSecretValue: $(jq -r '.password' azureServiceAccountKey.json)"
Fill the values produced by the script into your configuration file.
By default, Constellation uses
Standard_DC4as_v5
CVMs (4 vCPUs, 16 GB RAM) to create your cluster. Optionally, you can switch to a different VM type by modifying instanceType in the configuration file. For CVMs, any VM type with a minimum of 4 vCPUs from the DCasv5 & DCadsv5 or ECasv5 & ECadsv5 families is supported.Run
constellation config instance-types
to get the list of all supported options.-
subscription: The UUID of your Azure subscription, e.g.,
8b8bd01f-efd9-4113-9bd1-c82137c32da7
.You can view your subscription UUID via
az account show
and read theid
field. For more information refer to Azure's documentation. -
tenant: The UUID of your Azure tenant, e.g.,
3400e5a2-8fe2-492a-886c-38cb66170f25
.You can view your tenant UUID via
az account show
and read thetenant
field. For more information refer to Azure's documentation. -
location: The Azure datacenter location you want to deploy your cluster in, e.g.,
westus
. CVMs are currently only supported in a few regions, check Azure's products available by region. These are:westus
eastus
northeurope
westeurope
-
resourceGroup: Create a new resource group in Azure for your Constellation cluster. Set this configuration field to the name of the created resource group.
-
userAssignedIdentity: Create a new managed identity in Azure. You should create the identity in a different resource group as all resources within the cluster resource group will be deleted on cluster termination.
Add two role assignments to the identity:
Virtual Machine Contributor
andApplication Insights Component Contributor
. Thescope
of both should refer to the previously created cluster resource group.Set the configuration value to the full ID of the created identity, e.g.,
/subscriptions/8b8bd01f-efd9-4113-9bd1-c82137c32da7/resourcegroups/constellation-identity/providers/Microsoft.ManagedIdentity/userAssignedIdentities/constellation-identity
. You can get it by opening theJSON View
from theOverview
section of the identity.The user-assigned identity is used by instances of the cluster to access other cloud resources. For more information about managed identities refer to Azure's documentation.
-
appClientID: Create a new app registration in Azure.
Set
Supported account types
toAccounts in this organizational directory only
and leave theRedirect URI
empty.Set the configuration value to the
Application (client) ID
, e.g.,86ec31dd-532b-4a8c-a055-dd23f25fb12f
.In the cluster resource group, go to
Access Control (IAM)
and set the created app registration asOwner
. -
clientSecretValue: In the previously created app registration, go to
Certificates & secrets
and create a newClient secret
.Set the configuration value to the secret value.
-
instanceType: The VM type you want to use for your Constellation nodes.
For CVMs, any type with a minimum of 4 vCPUs from the DCasv5 & DCadsv5 or ECasv5 & ECadsv5 families is supported. It defaults to
Standard_DC4as_v5
(4 vCPUs, 16 GB RAM).Run
constellation config instance-types
to get the list of all supported options.
You need a service account for the cluster. You can use the following
gcloud
script to create it:SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ID=constell # enter name of service account here PROJECT_ID= # enter project id here SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL=${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ID}@${PROJECT_ID}.iam.gserviceaccount.com gcloud iam service-accounts create "${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ID}" --description="Service account used inside Constellation" --display-name="Constellation service account" --project="${PROJECT_ID}" gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "${PROJECT_ID}" --member="serviceAccount:${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" --role='roles/compute.instanceAdmin.v1' gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "${PROJECT_ID}" --member="serviceAccount:${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" --role='roles/compute.networkAdmin' gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "${PROJECT_ID}" --member="serviceAccount:${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" --role='roles/compute.securityAdmin' gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "${PROJECT_ID}" --member="serviceAccount:${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" --role='roles/compute.storageAdmin' gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "${PROJECT_ID}" --member="serviceAccount:${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" --role='roles/iam.serviceAccountUser' gcloud iam service-accounts keys create gcpServiceAccountKey.json --iam-account="${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" echo "project: ${PROJECT_ID} serviceAccountKeyPath: $(realpath gcpServiceAccountKey.json)"
Fill the values produced by the script into your configuration file.
By default, Constellation uses
n2d-standard-4
VMs (4 vCPUs, 16 GB RAM) to create your cluster. Optionally, you can switch to a different VM type by modifying instanceType in the configuration file. Supported are all machines from the N2D family. Refer to N2D machine series or runconstellation config instance-types
to get the list of all supported options.-
project: The ID of your GCP project, e.g.,
constellation-129857
.You can find it on the welcome screen of your GCP project. For more information refer to Google's documentation.
-
region: The GCP region you want to deploy your cluster in, e.g.,
us-west1
.You can find a list of all regions in Google's documentation.
-
zone: The GCP zone you want to deploy your cluster in, e.g.,
us-west1-a
.You can find a list of all zones in Google's documentation.
-
serviceAccountKeyPath: To configure this, you need to create a GCP service account with the following permissions:
Compute Instance Admin (v1) (roles/compute.instanceAdmin.v1)
Compute Network Admin (roles/compute.networkAdmin)
Compute Security Admin (roles/compute.securityAdmin)
Compute Storage Admin (roles/compute.storageAdmin)
Service Account User (roles/iam.serviceAccountUser)
Afterward, create and download a new JSON key for this service account. Place the downloaded file in your Constellation workspace, and set the config parameter to the filename, e.g.,
constellation-129857-15343dba46cb.json
. -
instanceType: The VM type you want to use for your Constellation nodes.
Supported are all machines from the N2D family. It defaults to
n2d-standard-4
(4 vCPUs, 16 GB RAM), but you can use any other VMs from the same family. Refer to N2D machine series or runconstellation config instance-types
to get the list of all supported options.
:::info
In case you don't have access to CVMs on Azure, you may use less secure trusted launch VMs instead. For this, set confidentialVM to
false
in the configuration file.:::
-
-
Download the trusted measurements for your configured image.
constellation config fetch-measurements
For details, see the verification section.
-
Create the cluster with one control-plane node and two worker nodes.
constellation create
uses options set inconstellation-conf.yaml
.:::tip
On Azure, you may need to wait 15+ minutes at this point for role assignments to propagate.
:::
constellation create --control-plane-nodes 1 --worker-nodes 2 -y
This should give the following output:
$ constellation create ... Your Constellation cluster was created successfully.
-
Initialize the cluster
constellation init
This should give the following output:
$ 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="$PWD/constellation-admin.conf"
The cluster's identifier will be different in your output. Keep
constellation-mastersecret.json
somewhere safe. This will allow you to recover your cluster in case of a disaster.:::info
Depending on your CSP and region,
constellation init
may take 10+ minutes to complete.:::
-
Configure kubectl
export KUBECONFIG="$PWD/constellation-admin.conf"
Deploy a sample application
-
Deploy the emojivoto app
kubectl apply -k github.com/BuoyantIO/emojivoto/kustomize/deployment
-
Expose the frontend service locally
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
constellation terminate
This should give the following output:
$ constellation terminate
Terminating ...
Your Constellation cluster was terminated successfully.
:::tip
On Azure, if you have used the az
script, you can keep the prerequisite resources and reuse them for a new cluster.
Or you can delete them:
RESOURCE_GROUP=constellation # name of your cluster resource group
APPID=$(jq -r '.appId' azureServiceAccountKey.json)
az ad sp delete --id "${APPID}"
az group delete -g "${RESOURCE_GROUP}-identity" --yes --no-wait
az group delete -g "${RESOURCE_GROUP}" --yes --no-wait
:::