Alex Vanin
2889a3fa42
* Register wallet key in FrostFS ID before issuing secret * Use issue-creds script instead of Makefile command Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <a.vanin@yadro.com> |
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adm | ||
bin | ||
http-gw | ||
ir | ||
morph | ||
s3-gw | ||
sn | ||
vendor | ||
wallets | ||
.env | ||
.gitignore | ||
docker-compose.yml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
Dockerfile.custom | ||
Dockerfile.local | ||
help.mk | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
FrostFS All-in-One
This repository contains Dockerfile for FrostFS All-in-One image and helper scripts to start container. All-in-One image contains binaries and config files for:
- neo-go
- frostfs-ir
- frostfs-storage
- frostfs-cli
- frostfs-adm
- frostfs-s3-gw
- frostfs-s3-authmate
- frostfs-http-gw
Entrypoint script starts blockchain, inner ring, storage, s3, and http gateway services and configures it in the initial start.
Service | Port |
---|---|
neo-go RPC | 30333 |
FrostFS Storage gRPC API | 8080 |
FrostFS Storage Control API | 16513 |
FrostFS HTTP Gateway | 8081 |
FrostFS S3 Gateway | 8084 |
Limitations
All-in-One image contains single storage node, so the only viable policy for
containers is REP 1
.
Prerequisites
- docker v20.10 or higher
- docker-compose v2.10 or higher
- make v3.82 or higher
Makefile script runs docker-compose with
--wait
flag, which is introduced in docker-compose v2. You can use older version of docker-compose by executing it manually.
Quick Start
Clone repository and start container with docker-compose.
$ git clone https://git.frostfs.info/TrueCloudLab/frostfs-aio.git
$ cd frostfs-aio
$ make up tick.epoch
Initial start initializes the storage configuration. Its readiness is based
on a healthcheck done by docker-compose
.
Container can be stopped with:
$ make down
Data and the system configuration is stored in container's volume. Next time container is started, it will take less time to initialize.
Before updating image version, reset frostfs-aio
by clearing its local volume
before starting container.
$ make clean
Also, you may have to make sure the storage node is in the network map.
$ docker exec -ti aio frostfs-cli netmap snapshot -c /config/cli-cfg-sn.yaml --rpc-endpoint 127.0.0.1:8080
Epoch: 45
Node 1: 022bb4041c50d607ff871dec7e4cd7778388e0ea6849d84ccbd9aa8f32e16a8131 ONLINE /dns4/localhost/tcp/8080
Continent: Europe
Country: Germany
CountryCode: DE
Deployed: Private
Location: Falkenstein
Price: 10
SubDiv: Sachsen
SubDivCode: SN
UN-LOCODE: DE FKS
If you don't see the output like this, you can wait for the new Epoch to come or force the starting of new epoch.
$ make tick.epoch
Current epoch: 1, increase to 2.
Waiting for transactions to persist...
Build images
Standard image
Build frostfs-aio image with this command.
$ make image-aio
Image with local binaries
Put all the needed pre-built binaries to the frostfs-aio/bin/
:
- neo-go
- frostfs-adm
- frostfs-cli
- frostfs-ir
- frostfs-node
- frostfs-s3-gw
- frostfs-s3-authmate
- frostfs-http-gw
Make sure they all have the x
right for the execution enabled.
Build frostfs-aio image using pre-built local binaries for all the services.
$ make image-aio-local
Image with custom binaries
This target is useful when one needs to change only a few binaries and keep the others "as is".
Put the needed binaries to frostfs-aio/bin/
. Make sure they all have the x
right for the
execution enabled. All the binaries will be copied to image.
$ make image-aio-custom
Simple storage
S3 interface
Setup S3
As soon as the storage node is in the network map (see above) you can generate S3 credentials:
$ make s3cred
{
"access_key_id": "EXArWh8x1zeHG3851s1RtoCo7dowxF6rhLGA15nbMffT0AKRSjJ5fmcqf3Ht2VCAkfmPQUVARghRB77xHCA1BoN2p",
"secret_access_key": "d70c1dba83f0f90bb231f06f1ce0e0dfbcfb122f4b4345a3c18d3869c359b79f",
"owner_private_key": "140947599afd9ca89af4b358c3176eb046e554d942a0dc99a8e06f3e43c8f4ad",
"wallet_public_key": "0324e76288fcb900100d01802a14ef977cca45ad073561230446df14b344c858b6",
"container_id": "EXArWh8x1zeHG3851s1RtoCo7dowxF6rhLGA15nbMffT"
}
Now let's configure an S3 client (AWS CLI will be used as example):
$ aws configure
AWS Access Key ID []: EXArWh8x1zeHG3851s1RtoCo7dowxF6rhLGA15nbMffT0AKRSjJ5fmcqf3Ht2VCAkfmPQUVARghRB77xHCA1BoN2p
AWS Secret Access Key []: d70c1dba83f0f90bb231f06f1ce0e0dfbcfb122f4b4345a3c18d3869c359b79f
Default region name []: us-east-1
Default output format []: json
Create a container
$ aws s3api --endpoint http://localhost:8084 create-bucket --bucket koty --acl public-read-write
Put an object
$ aws s3api --endpoint http://localhost:8084 put-object --bucket koty --key kot --body cat.jpg
{
"ETag": "8677919550a90ff7106584285f25a70ac9e7aa38bdb4ed17d34bbfb366fd71b7"
}
List objects
$ aws s3api --endpoint http://localhost:8084 list-objects --bucket koty
{
"Contents": [
{
"Key": "kot",
"LastModified": "2023-02-17T15:01:52+00:00",
"ETag": "8677919550a90ff7106584285f25a70ac9e7aa38bdb4ed17d34bbfb366fd71b7",
"Size": 174512,
"Owner": {
"DisplayName": "NWeByJPgNC97F83hTUnSbnZSBKaFvk5HNw",
"ID": "NWeByJPgNC97F83hTUnSbnZSBKaFvk5HNw"
}
}
]
}
S3 credentials from custom wallets
Credentials made by make s3cred
command are based on the private key from
s3-gw/user-wallet.json
file. If you need to create credential for different
users, use wallets from wallets
dir.
$ make s3cred-custom wallet=wallet2.json
{
"access_key_id": "jHhL5B33o16R4jQsb8wm9A3RRdS6KrTB5N4bja9Jys904W7xXFNKqem2ACvTRWRYJsZMCUikYFSokN7pPJziWyDi",
"secret_access_key": "21bb64fafa32c82417fd8b97ac56cc8a085998a3852632d52fe7042453daa440",
"owner_private_key": "10f6f9d7a47bb0bf68363ad8a99fe69f1493f8b6e1665b3e4e83feb2d5c7ee39",
"wallet_public_key": "03e38759973a6bb722baabc2dd84036a39f0b2f53d32fec45a4dacde8a50fe4b70",
"container_id": "jHhL5B33o16R4jQsb8wm9A3RRdS6KrTB5N4bja9Jys9"
}
To get credentials from custom wallet, place it in wallets
dir before start.
Make sure that wallet account has empty password.
Making a custom wallet
Command line interface of neo-go
is used to create new wallets. Both neo-go
from the image or downloaded binary
can be used. We stick to the one in the image in this example.
Invoke a shell of the running container:
$ docker exec -it aio bash
Create a new wallet:
$ neo-go wallet init -a --wallet /wallets/new-wallet.json
- key
-a
means the new wallet must have an account. - key
--wallet /wallets/new-wallet.json
sets the outputh path for the new wallet. The image keeps wallets at/wallets
for simplicity.
Then neo-go
asks for the account name and its password using interactive
mode. Leave the password empty.
Enter the name of the account > Some Name
Enter new password >
Confirm password >
If everything is rigth, the stdout will show a pretty-printed contents of the wallet:
{
"version": "1.0",
"accounts": [
{
"address": "NapWfRshCv9T3UyGxSfPr6NKiTFa5sVwQx",
"key": "6PYKKPtBRuKvTqjAuUZk5hVDgG5aZ3HQvp1hSQg5jDyUF9JaP5Jcy3kWiV",
"label": "Some Name",
"contract": {
"script": "DCECGXJggQTMyMhYS9YtWzTP+3FbiGLn2h7za1zSNgMDkIxBVuezJw==",
"parameters": [
{
"name": "parameter0",
"type": "Signature"
}
],
"deployed": false
},
"lock": false,
"isDefault": false
}
],
"scrypt": {
"n": 16384,
"r": 8,
"p": 8
},
"extra": {
"Tokens": null
}
}
wallet successfully created, file location is /wallets/new-wallet.json
frostfs-cli interface
Create container with frostfs-cli
$ frostfs-cli -r localhost:8080 -w /config/user-wallet.json \
--address NWeByJPgNC97F83hTUnSbnZSBKaFvk5HNw \
container create \
--policy "REP 1" --basic-acl public-read-write --await
container ID: GfWw35kHds7gKWmSvW7Zi4U39K7NMLK8EfXBQ5FPJA46
awaiting...
container has been persisted on sidechain
Put an object with frostfs-cli
$ frostfs-cli -r localhost:8080 -w /config/user-wallet.json \
--address NWeByJPgNC97F83hTUnSbnZSBKaFvk5HNw \
object put \
--cid GfWw35kHds7gKWmSvW7Zi4U39K7NMLK8EfXBQ5FPJA46 \
--file cat.jpg
[cat.jpg] Object successfully stored
OID: HByVC9A34i22BnzW3n83z9vEMxuYZoC7nNu11ZvGeCTe
CID: GfWw35kHds7gKWmSvW7Zi4U39K7NMLK8EfXBQ5FPJA46
Get and object with frostfs-cli
$ frostfs-cli -r localhost:8080 -w /config/user-wallet.json \
--address NWeByJPgNC97F83hTUnSbnZSBKaFvk5HNw \
object get \
--cid GfWw35kHds7gKWmSvW7Zi4U39K7NMLK8EfXBQ5FPJA46 \
--oid HByVC9A34i22BnzW3n83z9vEMxuYZoC7nNu11ZvGeCTe > new_cat.jpg
Viewing logs
There are two targets for viewing logs.
You can view all the logs by replacing the desired service name:
make logs/frostfs-node
You can also make a continuous stream of logs by replacing the desired service name:
make stream-logs/frostfs-node