Configure Terraform Service
Install Red5 Pro Terraform Software on the Instance
- Copy the
terraform-service.zip
file up to the/usr/local
directory on your server. - Within that directory, delete all
.tf
files in thered5service
folder except forcloud_controller_vsphere_dhcp.tf
- Make
red5terra.sh
andterraform
executable (chmod +x red5terra.sh terraform
)
Update red5service/application.properties
Modify the following values in the application.properties
file:
-
server.port
– the port you will be running this service on (default = 8083; make sure that this port is open in your network security group) -
api.accessToken
– the passphrase to use for making API calls to this service (to be used in the stream manager configuration) -
terra.operationTimeoutMilliseconds
– recommended to set to 360000 (6 minutes) or higher -
terra.parallelism
– the default, 10, should work well. If you are creating very large groups, you can set this to 30, but we don’t recommend going much higher -
cloud.vsphere_user
– vSphere user name -
cloud.vsphere_password
– vSphere user password -
cloud.vsphere_server
– vSphere (vCenter) server IP address or domain name -
cloud.vsphere_datacenter
– vSphere datacenter name -
cloud.vsphere_datastore
– vSphere datastore name -
cloud.vsphere_resource_pool
– vSphere resource pool -
cloud.vsphere_network
– vSphere network name -
cloud.vsphere_domain
– Domain name, to be used inside of new VMs (nodes) -
config.dbHost
— the DB Endpoint URL of your MySQL server instance, for a single SM, Terraform, DB instance this will belocalhost
-
config.dbPort
— the default MySQL port is3306
-
config.dbUser
— Database Master Username -
config.dbPass
— Database Master Password -
config.dbDriver
—com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver
– indicates MySQL -
config.dbSSL
— should be set tofalse
The Settings to maintain application health
should be left to the default settings. These are used in conjunction with the Stream Manager to ensure that the Terraform service is functional.
sample application.properties file:
#Server port configurations
server.port=8083
#Log level
logging.pattern.console=%d{yyyy-MM-dd} | %d{HH:mm:ss.SSS} | %5p | %-40.40logger{40} | %m%n
logging.level.com.red5pro.services.terraform.client.TerraformService=DEBUG
#Terraform Service Rest API token to be used by stream manager to connect to this service
api.accessToken=abc123
#Terraform configurations
terra.location=/usr/local/red5service
#set to 180000 for small groups; higher for larger groups (for Azure and vSphere recommended 320000)
terra.operationTimeoutMilliseconds=320000
terra.parallelism=10
# Cloud-specific params must start with cloud.
# Azure
# if running on Azure, be sure to remove the cloud_controller_do.tf, cloud_controller_linode.tf and cloud_controller_vsphere_dhcp.tf files
# cloud.az_subscription_id={}
# cloud.az_client_id={}
# cloud.az_client_secret={}
# cloud.az_tenant_id={}
# cloud.az_resource_group_name={}
# cloud.az_ssh_user_name={}
# cloud.az_ssh_user_password={}
# cloud.az_resource_prefix_name={}
# DigitalOcean
# if running on Digital Ocean, be sure to remove the cloud_controller_azure.tf, cloud_controller_linode.tf and cloud_controller_vsphere_dhcp.tf files
# cloud.do_api_token={}
# cloud.do_ssh_key_name={}
# Linode
# if running on Linode, be sure to remove the cloud_controller_azure.tf, cloud_controller_do.tf and cloud_controller_vsphere_dhcp.tf files
# cloud.linode_api_token={}
# cloud.linode_ssh_key_name={}
# cloud.linode_tag={}
# Oracle Cloud
# if running on OCI, be sure to remove the cloud_controller_azure.tf, cloud_controller_do.tf, and cloud_controller_vsphere_dhcp.tf
# cloud.oracle_tenancy_ocid={}
# cloud.oracle_user_ocid={}
# cloud.oracle_fingerprint={}
# cloud.oracle_private_key_path={}
# cloud.oracle_ssh_pub_path={}
# cloud.oracle_compartment_id={}
# cloud.oracle_subnet_name={}
# cloud.oracle_network_security_group={}
# vSphere
# if running on vSphere, be sure to remove the cloud_controller_azure.tf, cloud_controller_do.tf and cloud_controller_linode.tf files
cloud.vsphere_user=Administrator@vsphere.local
cloud.vsphere_password=$3cureP@ssw0rd
cloud.vsphere_server=192.168.1.100
cloud.vsphere_datacenter=dc1
cloud.vsphere_datastore=datastore1
cloud.vsphere_resource_pool=esxi1/Resources
cloud.vsphere_network=Private
cloud.vsphere_domain=sm.autoscaling
#DataBase configurations
config.dbHost=localhost
config.dbPort=3306
config.dbUser=dbadmin
config.dbPass=ABC123&!#
config.dbDriver=com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver
config.dbName=cluster
config.dbSSL=false
#Settings to maintain application health
management.endpoints.web.base-path=/admin
management.endpoints.web.exposure.include=health,restart
management.endpoint.health.show-details=always
management.endpoint.restart.enabled=true
management.health.defaults.enabled=false
management.health.ping.enabled=true
management.health.database.enabled=true
Start terraform service
From /usr/local/red5service
directory, run:
terraform init
then
red5terra.sh start
(or, you can use the START.sh
script that is in the red5services
directory)
Test terraform service
Navigate in a browser to http://{host}:8083/terraform/test?accessToken={api.accessToken}
– the response should be: Red5Pro Terraform Service is working