hosting ruby web apps

Post on 08-May-2015

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The options for hosting ruby web application are plentiful, all with different advantages and disadvantages, options, limitations. How to start, how to grow, what are the pitfalls? With this talk I’d first like to give a short overview of several cloud hosting alternatives such as plain VPS, AWS, EngineYard, Heroku, and provide some insights based on my experience with them – beyond just somehow getting it to run, but also how to handle continuous deployment, how to maintain and scale them. While Rails already comes with many best practices build in, there are still plenty enough traps for you. We definitely had our fair share, and I’d like to share some of them for your entertainment and learning.

TRANSCRIPT

Hosting Ruby Web Apps

Lessons learned from 8 years of

Overview

• System architecture

• Initial setup & deploy

• Keep it running and moving forward

Michael Reinsch

michael@doorkeeper.jp @mreinsch

Next Weekend! startupweekend.jp/swtokyo-personal-cloud/

Michael Reinsch

michael@doorkeeper.jp @mreinsch

Build a community through your events.

DB (psql)

memcache

nginxunicorn

unicornRails App (unicorn)

job workerMTA (postfix)

Contenders

Contenders

Contenders

Contenders

Contenders

Please Note

• Not an exhaustive list of all hosting providers(it’s not even everyone we’ve been using)

• Moving targets

Choosing Server Sizewww.flickr.com/photos/jonrb/7864016624

Choosing Server Size

• good CPU performance

• choose 2GB RAM or more

Choosing Server Size

• 1 ECU/core is a bit frustrating

• 2 ECU/core is OK

• >2 ECU/core is better

Choosing Server Size

• 3 different sizes

• choose standard size if you don’t have specific requirements

Hardware Failures

How can we make things robust?

www.flickr.com/photos/doegox/4551458930

Hardware Failures“We’re trying to prevent failures, please

make backups for worst case”

!

• provides load balancer

• fault tolerant setup example:2 web instances + 2 DB instances

• need to configure DB replication and failover yourself

Hardware Failures“Failures will happen, build your infrastructure

so they won’t impact you”

• provides load balancer (ELB)

• provides managed DB instances (RDS)

• replication support (not for psql yet)

• DB snapshots (can’t download though)

• fault tolerant setup example: 2 web instances + multi-AZ RDS

Hardware Failures“Failures will happen, let us help you build an

infrastructure so they won’t impact you”

• HA proxy on web instances

• one-click setup for DB (mysql/psql)

• replication support

• DB snapshots (downloadable)

• fault tolerant setup example:2 web instances + 2 DB instances

Hardware Failures“You don’t need to worry about failures”

!

!

• everything managed

• fault tolerant setup example: 2 dynos + premium DB (psql)

Initial Setup & Deploy

www.flickr.com/photos/thedailyenglishshow/6013713229

Initial Setup & Deploy

• manual setup feasible:

• install OS, ruby (rvm), libs, DB

• setup nginx

Initial Setup & Deploy

• let’s choose Capistrano for deploying

• Capistrano config goes into source repository

• Initial deploy:

cap deploy:setup cap deploy:cold

Initial Setup & Deploy

• let’s choose OpsWorks

• based on chef, provides predefined set of recipes

• more high level than Cloud Formation, more flexible than Elastic Beanstalk

Initial Setup & Deploy• initial deploy:

• create stack

• define layers

• create instances

• create app

• deploy

Initial Setup & Deploy

• define base layer

• assign it to all instances

• use it for any common recipes like creating swap, NewRelic, ...

Tip

Initial Setup & Deploy• you need to handle asset compilation

• use deploy hook:

Tip

# deploy/before_migrate.rb !rails_env = new_resource.environment["RAILS_ENV"] Chef::Log.info("Precompiling assets for RAILS_ENV=#{rails_env}...") !execute "rake assets:precompile" do cwd release_path command "bundle exec rake assets:precompile" environment "RAILS_ENV" => rails_env end !!

Initial Setup & Deploy• provides toolchain based on chef

• initial deploy:

• create an application

• select environment layout

• add plugins (NewRelic, ...)

• deploy

Initial Setup & Deploy

Heroku comes with its’ own toolchain:

heroku create my-awesome-app heroku addons:add … git remote add heroku … git push heroku master

What you’ll probably also need

• App configuration (for secrets and endpoints)

• Sending email

• Job queue

App Configuration

• no predefined way: DIY

• put settings.yml into shared config dir

• link it into app when deploying

App Configuration

• uses environment variables

heroku config:add MY_SECRET=topsecret heroku config

• in your code:

ENV[‘MY_SECRET’]

Sending Email

• use an email sending service (SendGrid, AWS SNS)

• EY and Heroku provide plugins for easy installation

Sending Email Yourself

• reverse IP lookup

• port 25 is restricted

• make sure your IP isn’t blacklisted

Job Queue

• DIY

• define custom layer in OpsWorks, need to get 3rd party recipe

Job Queue

• sample recipes are provided

• worker instances

Job Queue

• provides worker dynos

• requires setup in Procfile

Background mailer

• use database transaction to atomically create mailer job and related data

• rollback if something goes wrong

• reduces request response time

• job can retry sending email

Tip

Up and running :-)

Continuous Deployment

www.flickr.com/photos/layos/3743880081

Continuous Deployment

• keep deploys cheap

• automate deploy

• easy deployment trigger

• good test coverage - use CI

• use rolling / zero downtime deploy

Continuous Deployment

• deploy command:

git pull cap deploy

• unicorn for rolling deploy

Continuous Deployment

• unicorn is configured for rolling deploys

• deploy command:

aws --region=‘us-east-1’ opsworks create-deployment --stack-id=‘<STACK_UUID>’ --app-id=‘<APP_UUID>’ --instance-ids=‘[“<INSTANCE_UUID>”]’ --command='{"Name": "deploy"}

Continuous Deployment

gem 'aws-sdk' gem 'parseconfig' !PRODUCTION_APP_ID = "09afbde1-322b-4816-a1e9-xxxxxxxxxxxx" !config = ParseConfig.new(File.expand_path("~/.aws/config")) AWS.config( :access_key_id => config['default']['aws_access_key_id'], :secret_access_key => config['default']['aws_secret_access_key']) !@ops = AWS::OpsWorks.new.client @ops_app = @ops.describe_apps(app_ids: [PRODUCTION_APP_ID])[:apps].first @ops_stack = @ops.describe_stack_summary(stack_id: @ops_app[:stack_id])[:stack_summary] @ops_inst = @ops.describe_instances(stack_id: @ops_app[:stack_id])[:instances] @ops_inst_ids = @ops_instances.map do |instance| instance[:instance_id] if instance[:status] == 'online' end.compact !puts "Deploying #{@ops_app[:name]} to #{@ops_stack[:name]}" !deploy_options = { command: { name:' deploy' }, comment: "deploy from #{Socket.gethostname}", stack_id: @ops_app[:stack_id], app_id: @ops_app[:app_id], instance_ids: @ops_inst_ids } @ops.create_deployment deploy_options !!

or some simple ruby script:

Continuous Deployment

• deploy command:

ey deploy

• in config/ey.yml:

maintenance_on_migrate: false

Continuous Deployment

• deploy command:

git pull git push heroku master

• no-downtime deploys experimental:

heroku labs:enable -a myapp preboot

Continuous Deployment

• “fork” in code

• on/off switch for features

• slow rollout of new features

Tip

Rolling Deploys with!Database Migrations

www.flickr.com/photos/edwardshousemovers/6704586649

Rolling Deploys with Database Migrations

orchestrated deployment flow:

1. copy code, keep old version

2. run migrations

3. switch to new code

➜ one-step deployments

Rolling Deploys with Database Migrations

• asynchronous deployment flow

• two-step deployment

1. deploy old code + DB migrations(one instance only)

2. deploy new code(all instances)

Rolling Deploys with Database Migrations

• migrations are run via:

heroku run rake db:migrate

• two-step deployment

1. deploy old code + DB migrations

2. deploy new code

Down for!Maintenance

www.flickr.com/photos/metrolibraryarchive/4128611963

Down for Maintenance

• Maintenance page done right:

• include contact and progress info (use 3rd party service like Twitter)

• serve page with 503 error code

• use asset host or inline all assets

Tip

Down for Maintenance• add ‘capistrano-maintenance’ gem

• configure nginx

• then:

cap maintenance:enable

server { // nginx server config ! location @maintenance { rewrite ^(.*)$ /system/maintenance.html last; break; } if (-f $document_root/system/maintenance.html) { return 503; } ! error_page 503 @maintenance;

Down for Maintenance

• Need custom recipe / script

• Can use similar approach as with Capistrano

• 503 won’t pass ELB health check!

• Alternative: use Route53 to fail over to instance serving maintenance page

Down for Maintenance

• Part of the platform:

ey web disable

heroku maintenance:on

Getting Support

Getting Support

• provides ticket system for any platform related issues

• forum for anything else

Getting Support

• forums for everything

• access to tickets only available if certain health checks fail

Getting Support

• tickets for everything

• provides even hosting related help on application level

• “extension of your team”

Conclusion• there is no silver bullet

• a lot depends on your app

• be ready to get your hands dirty

• your production environment is your app

• balance ops / dev

Thank you!

Contact:

Michael Reinschmichael@doorkeeper.jp @mreinsch

Questions?More awesome events:

• ijaws.doorkeeper.jp

• Startup Weekend Tokyo Personal Cloud

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