#+TITLE: ROSA Ruby On Rails Workshop #+AUTHOR: James Blair, Shawn Gerrard #+DATE: <2023-08-18 Fri 13:30> * Introduction This document captures the setup steps for a 90-minute, hands-on [[https://rubyonrails.org/][Ruby On Rails]] workshop on [[https://www.redhat.com/en/technologies/cloud-computing/openshift][Openshift]]. Within the session, participants will: - Work with a Ruby codebase in [[https://bitbucket.org/product/][Bitbucket]]. - Deploy the application on Openshift. - Create continuous delivery pipelines with [[https://tekton.dev/docs/][Tekton]]. * Pre-requisites This guide assumes you have an existing Openshift 4.10+ cluster with cluster admin permissions. In my case I have a Red Hat OpenShift on AWS (ROSA) cluster provisioned * 1 - Preparing the cluster 1. Log in to the cluster in your terminal with the ~oc~ cli. #+begin_src bash oc login --server --token #+end_src * 2 - Deploy Bitbucket Now that we're logged into the cluster, let's create the namespace to deploy Bitbucket into. #+begin_src bash :results output oc new-project bitbucket #+end_src #+RESULTS: #+begin_example Already on project "bitbucket" on server "https://api.rosa-7lpn7.2pqm.p1.openshiftapps.com:6443". You can add applications to this project with the 'new-app' command. For example, try: oc new-app rails-postgresql-example to build a new example application in Ruby. Or use kubectl to deploy a simple Kubernetes application: kubectl create deployment hello-node --image=k8s.gcr.io/e2e-test-images/agnhost:2.33 -- /agnhost serve-hostname #+end_example Once the namespace is created we can deploy Bitbucket using the official Bitbucket image from Atlassian. #+begin_src bash :results output oc --namespace bitbucket new-app --image docker.io/atlassian/bitbucket-server --name bitbucket #+end_src #+RESULTS: #+begin_example --> Found container image 525a6bc (3 days old) from docker.io for "docker.io/atlassian/bitbucket-server" ,* An image stream tag will be created as "bitbucket:latest" that will track this image --> Creating resources ... imagestream.image.openshift.io "bitbucket" created deployment.apps "bitbucket" created service "bitbucket" created --> Success Application is not exposed. You can expose services to the outside world by executing one or more of the commands below: 'oc expose service/bitbucket' Run 'oc status' to view your app. #+end_example Now, let's verify that the Bitbucket pod started successfully. #+begin_src bash :results output oc --namespace bitbucket get pods #+end_src #+RESULTS: : NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE : bitbucket-56d9849bbf-7922z 1/1 Running 0 2m36s As this is running successfully, let's expose it with a ~route~ so that we can access it from our web browser. #+begin_src bash :results output oc --namespace bitbucket create route edge bitbucket --service=bitbucket --port=7990 oc --namespace bitbucket get route #+end_src #+RESULTS: : route.route.openshift.io/bitbucket created : NAME HOST/PORT PATH SERVICES PORT TERMINATION WILDCARD : bitbucket bitbucket-bitbucket.apps.rosa-7lpn7.2pqm.p1.openshiftapps.com bitbucket 7990 edge None Once we open the Bitbucket route in our browser, we need to follow a short setup process manually before we can continue with the rest of our automation. 1. Select your language ~English~. 2. Select ~internal~ and click ~Next~. You'll then be prompted for an Atlassian license key. For the purposes of this workshop, we'll be generating a new trial license [[https://my.atlassian.com/license/evaluation][here]]. Copy the ~Server ID~ into the Bitbucket setup screen and click ~Generate License~. Copy the generated license key into the text box for the Bitbucket license key and click ~Next~. On the Bitbucket setup screen enter details for your administrative user and click ~Go to Bitbucket~. * 3 - Configure Bitbucket With our Bitbucket server successfully deployed, let's configure it for the workshop. First step is to create additional users. #+begin_src bash :results none source .env for user in {1..30}; do bitbucket_route=$(oc get route --namespace bitbucket | awk '{print $2}' | tail -n 1) echo curl --user "admin:${bitbucket_password}" \ --header "'Content-Type: application/json'" \ --data "" "\"https://${bitbucket_route}/rest/api/latest/admin/users?name=user${user}&displayName=user${user}&emailAddress=user${user}%40example.com&password=${bitbucket_user_password}\"" >> users.sh cat users.sh done chmod +x users.sh && ./users.sh && rm users.sh #+end_src Each of these users will be forking a copy of a Ruby on Rails codebase, so let's now create that codebase now. #+begin_src bash :results none source .env bitbucket_route=$(oc get route --namespace bitbucket | awk '{print $2}' | tail -n 1) echo curl --user "admin:${bitbucket_password}" \ --header "'Content-Type: application/json'" \ --data "'{ \"key\": \"MSD\", \"name\": \"Rails Team\", \"description\": \"Rails!\"}'" \ "https://${bitbucket_route}/rest/api/latest/projects" > project.sh echo curl --user "admin:${bitbucket_password}" \ --header "'Content-Type: application/json'" \ --data "'{\"name\": \"openstreetmap-website\",\"scmId\": \"git\", \"forkable\": true, \"public\": true }'" \ "https://${bitbucket_route}/rest/api/latest/projects/${project_key}/repos" >> project.sh chmod +x project.sh && ./project.sh && rm project.sh git clone https://github.com/openstreetmap/openstreetmap-website.git cd openstreetmap-website git remote set-url origin "https://admin:${bitbucket_password}@${bitbucket_route}/scm/msd/openstreetmap-website.git" git push -u origin HEAD:master && cd ../ && rm -rf openstreetmap-website #+end_src