Lando Calrissian relies on a cyborg to keep Cloud City afloat, and now you can rely on Ciborg to get your continuous integration server running in the cloud. Ciborg is a gem that will help you spin-up, bootstrap, and install Jenkins CI for your Rails app on Amazon EC2.
- Commands for creating, starting, stopping, or destroying your CI server on EC2
- The full Travis CI environment on Ubuntu 12.04
- A Jenkins frontend for monitoring your builds
Tasks:
ciborg add_build <name> <repository> <branch> <command> # Adds a build to Ciborg
ciborg bootstrap # Configures Ciborg's master node
ciborg certificate # Dump the certificate
ciborg chef # Uploads chef recipes and runs them
ciborg config # Dumps all configuration data for Ciborg
ciborg create # Create a new Ciborg server using EC2
ciborg create_vagrant # Creates a vagrant instance
ciborg destroy_ec2 # Destroys all the ciborg resources on EC2
ciborg help [TASK] # Describe available tasks or one specific task
ciborg open # Open a browser to Ciborg
ciborg setup # Sets up ciborg through a series of questions
ciborg ssh # SSH into Ciborg
ciborg trust_certificate # Adds the current master's certificate to your OSX keychain
Read on for an explanation of what each one of these steps does.
gem install ciborg
Ciborg runs independently of your project and is not a dependency.
If this is your first time running ciborg
and you do not have configuration file, yet, run:
ciborg setup
This will ask you a series of questions that will get you up and running. You will need the following information available:
- The URL of your git repository. Jenkins needs to clone from this URL without supplying user authentication
- An SSH key that has pull access to the repository
- Any shell commands you want to run for your build
- Your AWS credentials
- The SSH key to access your EC2 instance
Your ciborg instance should now be up and running. You will be able to access it at: http://<your instance address>/ with the username and password you
chose during configuration. Or, if you are on a Mac, run ciborg open
. For more information about Jenkins CI,
see http://jenkins-ci.org.
Ciborg stores your configuration in the file config/ciborg.yml
, relative to where you ran ciborg setup
.
You can update your configuration by running ciborg chef
after editing the following keys in this file:
This section contains the basic auth credentials for your EC2 instance and your jenkins build configuration.
The jenkins.builds.command
field is the shell command that will be run for your build. Here is an example
build script for a ruby project:
#!/bin/bash -le
source .rvmrc
set -e
gem install bundler --no-ri --no-rdoc && bundle install
echo USER=$USER && ruby --version && which ruby && which bundle
bundle exec rake spec
The default chef recipes that ciborg uses are:
["pivotal_ci::jenkins", "pivotal_ci::limited_travis_ci_environment", "pivotal_ci"]
Because we're using the cookbooks from Travis CI, you can look through all the recipes Travis has available, and add any that you need.
If you need to write your own chef recipes to install your project's dependencies, you can add a cookbooks directory to
the root of your project. Make sure that your cookbook_paths
is either blank (to use the default values), or contains
./chef/project-cookbooks
. So, to include a bacon
recipe, you should have cookbooks/pork/recipes/bacon.rb
file in
your repository.
Ciborg provides a set of default EC2 configuration parameters. For example, the instance size is set to "c1.medium". You can save on EC2 costs by using a tool like projectmonitor or ylastic to schedule when your instances are online. If you want to edit these parameters, you will need to destroy and re-create your ciborg instance.
-
Launch an instance, allocate and associate an elastic IP and update config/ciborg.yml:
ciborg create
-
Bootstrap the instance using the boostrap_server.sh script. The script installs ruby prerequisites and installs RVM:
ciborg bootstrap
-
Upload the contents of Ciborg's cookbooks, create a soloistrc, and run chef:
ciborg chef
Shell access for your instance
ciborg ssh
Terminate all Ciborg instances on your account and deallocate their elastic IPs
ciborg destroy_ec2
- Check out past discussions on the google groups forum
- Send the list an email at [email protected]
- View the project backlog on Pivotal Tracker
- View the project CI status at ci.pivotallabs.com
Ciborg is MIT Licensed and © Pivotal Labs. See LICENSE.txt for details.