Drop $ for better copy/pasta
continuous-integration/drone/push Build is passing Details

Closes https://git.autonomic.zone/coop-cloud/docs.coopcloud.tech/issues/7.
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decentral1se 2021-05-31 21:52:33 +02:00
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5 changed files with 37 additions and 37 deletions

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@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ Here is an example CSS config which hides the local login and makes space for a
We normally do something like the following.
```bash
$ ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C drone@swarm.autonomic.zone
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C drone@swarm.autonomic.zone
```
When you're loading them into Drone, make sure to use the right name of the organisation when using `drone orgsecret add`.
@ -126,16 +126,16 @@ When you're loading them into Drone, make sure to use the right name of the orga
First, get your Drone CLI tool downloaded and the environment configured.
```bash
$ export DRONE_SERVER=https://drone.example.com
$ export DRONE_TOKEN=$(pass show your-pass-store-path)
$ curl -L https://github.com/drone/drone-cli/releases/latest/download/drone_linux_amd64.tar.gz | tar zx
export DRONE_SERVER=https://drone.example.com
export DRONE_TOKEN=$(pass show your-pass-store-path)
curl -L https://github.com/drone/drone-cli/releases/latest/download/drone_linux_amd64.tar.gz | tar zx
```
Then you can do things like:
```
$ ./drone orgsecret ls
$ ./drone orgsecret add someorg my_deploy_key @my_private_key_file
./drone orgsecret ls
./drone orgsecret add someorg my_deploy_key @my_private_key_file
```
#### How to enable build failure notifications

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@ -7,13 +7,13 @@ Co-op Cloud stores per-app configuration in the `$USER/.abra/servers` directory,
The format of these configuration files is the same environment variable syntax used by Docker (with the `env_file:` statement in a `docker-compose.yml` file, or the `--env-file` option to `docker run`) and `direnv`:
```
$ abra app example_wordpress config
TYPE=wordpress
abra app example_wordpress config
TYPE=wordpress
DOMAIN=wordpress.example.com
## Domain aliases
EXTRA_DOMAINS=', `www.wordpress.example.com`'
LETS_ENCRYPT_ENV=production
## Domain aliases
EXTRA_DOMAINS=', `www.wordpress.example.com`'
LETS_ENCRYPT_ENV=production
...
```
@ -51,18 +51,18 @@ git commit -m "Initial import"
!!! warning "Test your revision-control self-discipline"
`abra` does not yet help keep your app definitions are up-to-date.
`abra` does not yet help keep your app definitions are up-to-date.
Make sure to run `git add` / `git commit` after making configuration changes, and `cd ~/.abra/servers && git pull` before running `abra app...` commands.
Make sure to run `git add` / `git commit` after making configuration changes, and `cd ~/.abra/servers && git pull` before running `abra app...` commands.
Patches to add some safety checks and auto-updates would be very welcome! 🙏
Patches to add some safety checks and auto-updates would be very welcome! 🙏
## Collaborating with multiple teams
In a more complex situation, where you're using Co-op Cloud to manage several servers, and you're collaborating with different people on different servers, you can set up **a separate repository for each subdirectory in `~/.abra/servers`**, or even a mixture of single-server and multi-server repositories:
```
$ ls -l ~/.abra/servers
ls -l ~/.abra/servers
# Example.com's own app configuration:
lrwxrwxrwx. 1 user user 49 Oct 30 22:42 swarm.example.com -> /home/user/Example/coop-cloud-apps/swarm.example.com
# Configuration for one of Example.com's clients part of the same repository:
@ -77,29 +77,30 @@ We don't have a public example of this yet, but something like this should do th
1. Save this as `Makefile` in your repository:
```
# -s symlink, -f force creation, -F don't create symlink in the target dir
link:
@mkdir -p ~/.abra/servers/
@for SERVER in $$(find -maxdepth 1 -type d -name "[!.]*"); do \
echo ln -sfF "$$(pwd)/$${SERVER#./}" ~/.abra/servers/ ; \
ln -sfF "$$(pwd)/$${SERVER#./}" ~/.abra/servers/ ; \
done
```
This will set up symlinks from each directory in your repository to a correspondingly-named directory in `~/.abra/servers` if your repository has a `swarm.example.com` directory, it'll be linked as `~/.abra/servers/swarm.example.com`.
```
# -s symlink, -f force creation, -F don't create symlink in the target dir
link:
@mkdir -p ~/.abra/servers/
@for SERVER in $$(find -maxdepth 1 -type d -name "[!.]*"); do \
echo ln -sfF "$$(pwd)/$${SERVER#./}" ~/.abra/servers/ ; \
ln -sfF "$$(pwd)/$${SERVER#./}" ~/.abra/servers/ ; \
done
```
This will set up symlinks from each directory in your repository to a correspondingly-named directory in `~/.abra/servers` if your repository has a `swarm.example.com` directory, it'll be linked as `~/.abra/servers/swarm.example.com`.
2. Tell your collaborators (e.g. in the repository's `README`), to run `make` in their repository check-out.
!!! warning "You're on your own!"
As with the [simple repository set-up above](#version-control), `abra` doesn't yet help you update your version control system when you make changes, nor check version control to make sure you have the latest configuration.
As with the [simple repository set-up above](#version-control), `abra` doesn't yet help you update your version control system when you make changes, nor check version control to make sure you have the latest configuration.
Make sure to `commit` and `push` after you make any configuration changes, and `pull` before running any `abra app...` commands.
Make sure to `commit` and `push` after you make any configuration changes, and `pull` before running any `abra app...` commands.
## Even more granularity?
The plain-text, file-based configuration format means that you could even keep the configuration for different apps on the same server in different repositories, e.g. having `git.example.com` configuration in a separate repository to `wordpress.example.com`, using per-file symlinks.
We don't currently recommend this, because it might set inaccurate expectations about the security model remember that, by default, **any user who can deploy apps to a Docker Swarm can manage *any* apps in that swarm**.
We don't currently recommend this, because it might set inaccurate expectations about the security model remember that, by default, **any user who can deploy apps to a Docker Swarm can manage _any_ apps in that swarm**.
[symlink]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symlink

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@ -2,9 +2,8 @@
title: Credits & thanks
---
_The real Co-op Cloud was the friends we made along the way 🌠_
> _The real Co-op Cloud was the friends we made along the way 🌠_
Special thanks to:
- [Doop Coop](mailto:cluck@doop.coop), for making a transparent version of the
Co-op Cloud logo, and helping with OSX alpha testing.
- [Doop Coop](mailto:cluck@doop.coop), for making a transparent version of the Co-op Cloud logo, and helping with OSX alpha testing.

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@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ Let's take as an example, [Matomo web analytics](https://matomo.org/).
I'm feeling lazy so, luckily for me, Matomo already has an example compose file in their repository! Let's download and edit it:
```
$ mkdir matomo && cd matomo
$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/matomo-org/docker/master/.examples/apache/docker-compose.yml -O compose.yml
mkdir matomo && cd matomo
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/matomo-org/docker/master/.examples/apache/docker-compose.yml -O compose.yml
```
Open the `compose.yml` in your favourite editor and have a gander :swan: . There are a few things we're looking for -- full list to come -- but a few things we can immediately see are:

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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ title: Managing secret data
Co-op Cloud uses [Docker Secrets] to handle sensitive data, like database passwords and API keys, securely:
```
$ DOCKER_CONTEXT=swarm.example.com docker secret ls
DOCKER_CONTEXT=swarm.example.com docker secret ls
example_mediawiki_db_password_v1
example_wordpress_db_password_v1
```
@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ You will notice `v1` in the example secret names above: like Docker Configs, Doc
Because secret versions are managed per-instance by the people deploying their apps, secret versions are stored in the `.env` file for each app:
```
$ find -L ~/.abra/servers/ -name '*.env' -print0 | xargs -0 grep -h SECRET
find -L ~/.abra/servers/ -name '*.env' -print0 | xargs -0 grep -h SECRET
OIDC_CLIENT_SECRET_VERSION=v1
RPC_SECRET_VERSION=v1
CLIENT_SECRET_VERSION=v1
@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ CLIENT_SECRET_VERSION=v1
If you try and add a secret version which already exists, Docker will helpfully complain:
```
$ abra app example_wordpress secret insert db_password v1 foobar
abra app example_wordpress secret insert db_password v1 foobar
Error response from daemon: rpc error: code = AlreadyExists desc = secret example_wordpress_db_password_v1 already exists
```