title | published | description | tags | cover_image | canonical_url | id |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#90DaysOfDevOps - The Big Picture: DevOps and Linux - Day 14 |
false |
90DaysOfDevOps - The Big Picture DevOps and Linux |
devops, 90daysofdevops, learning |
1049033 |
Linux and DevOps share very similar cultures and perspectives; both are focused on customization and scalability. Both of these aspects of Linux are of particular importance for DevOps.
A lot of technologies start on Linux, especially if they are related to software development or managing infrastructure.
As well lots of open source projects, especially DevOps tools, were designed to run on Linux from the start.
From a DevOps perspective or any operations role perspective, you are going to come across Linux I would say mostly. There is a place for WinOps but the majority of the time you are going to be administering and deploying Linux servers.
I have been using Linux daily for several years but my go to desktop machine has always been either macOS or Windows. However, when I moved into the Cloud Native role I am in now I took the plunge to make sure that my laptop was fully Linux based and my daily driver, whilst I still needed Windows for work-based applications and a lot of my audio and video gear does not run on Linux I was forcing myself to run a Linux desktop full time to get a better grasp of a lot of the things we are going to touch on over the next 7 days.
I am not suggesting you do the same as me by any stretch as there are easier options which are less destructive but I will say that taking that full-time step forces you to learn faster how to make things work on Linux.
For the majority of these 7 days, I am going to deploy a Virtual Machine in Virtual Box on my Windows machine. I am also going to deploy a desktop version of a Linux distribution, whereas a lot of the Linux servers you will be administering will likely be servers that come with no GUI and everything is shell-based. However, as I said at the start a lot of the tools that we covered throughout this whole 90 days started on Linux I would also strongly encourage you to dive into running that Linux Desktop for that learning experience as well.
For the rest of this post, we are going to concentrate on getting a Ubuntu Desktop virtual machine up and running in our Virtual Box environment. Now we could just download Virtual Box and grab the latest Ubuntu ISO from the sites linked and go ahead and build out our desktop environment but that wouldn't be very DevOps of us, would it?
Another good reason to use most Linux distributions is that they are free and open-source. We are also choosing Ubuntu as it is probably the most widely used distribution deployed not thinking about mobile devices and enterprise RedHat Enterprise servers. I might be wrong there but with CentOS and the history there I bet Ubuntu is high on the list and it's super simple.
Vagrant is a CLI utility that manages the lifecycle of your virtual machines. We can use vagrant to spin up and down virtual machines across many different platforms including vSphere, Hyper-v, Virtual Box and also Docker. It does have other providers but we will stick with Virtual Box here so we are good to go.
The first thing we need to do is get Vagrant installed on our machine, when you go to the downloads page you will see all the operating systems listed for your choice. HashiCorp Vagrant I am using Windows so I grabbed the binary for my system and went ahead and installed this on my system.
Next up we also need to get Virtual Box installed. Again, this can also be installed on many different operating systems and a good reason to choose this and vagrant is that if you are running Windows, macOS, or Linux then we have you covered here.
Both installations are pretty straightforward and both have great communitites around them so feel free to reach out if you have issues and I can try and assist too.
If you are using m1 macOS, I recommend to use multiplass instead of Vagrant and VirtualBox. (reference : MichaelCade#365)
The VAGRANTFILE describes the type of machine we want to deploy. It also defines the configuration and provisioning for this machine.
When it comes to saving these and organizing your VAGRANTFILEs I tend to put them in their folders in my workspace. You can see below how this looks on my system. Hopefully following this you will play around with Vagrant and see the ease of spinning up different systems, it is also great for that rabbit hole known as distro hopping for Linux Desktops.
Let's take a look at that VAGRANTFILE and see what we are building.
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.box = "chenhan/ubuntu-desktop-20.04"
config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |v|
v.memory = 8096
v.cpus = 4
v.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--vram", "128"]
end
end
This is a very simple VAGRANTFILE overall. We are saying that we want a specific "box", a box being possibly either a public image or private build of the system you are looking for. You can find a long list of "boxes" publicly available here in the public catalogue of Vagrant boxes
Next line we're saying that we want to use a specific provider and in this case it's VirtualBox
. We also define our machine's memory to 8GB
and the number of CPUs to 4
. My experience tells me that you may want to also add the following line if you experience display issues. This will set the video memory to what you want, I would ramp this right up to 128MB
but it depends on your system.
v.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--vram", ""]
I have also placed a copy of this specific vagrant file in the Linux Folder
We are now ready to get our first machine up and running, in our workstation's terminal. In my case I am using PowerShell on my Windows machine. Navigate to your projects folder and where you will find your VAGRANTFILE. Once there you can type the command vagrant up
and if everything's alright you will see something like this.
Another thing to add here is that the network will be set to NAT
on your virtual machine. At this stage we don't need to know about NAT and I plan to have a whole session talking about it in the Networking session. Know that it is the easy button when it comes to getting a machine on your home network, it is also the default networking mode on Virtual Box. You can find out more in the Virtual Box documentation
Once vagrant up
is complete we can now use vagrant ssh
to jump straight into the terminal of our new VM.
This is where we will do most of our exploring over the next few days but I also want to dive into some customizations for your developer workstation that I have done and it makes your life much simpler when running this as your daily driver, and of course, are you really in DevOps unless you have a cool nonstandard terminal?
But just to confirm in Virtual Box you should see the login prompt when you select your VM.
Oh and if you made it this far and you have been asking "WHAT IS THE USERNAME & PASSWORD?"
-
Username = vagrant
-
Password = vagrant
Tomorrow we are going to get into some of the commands and what they do, The terminal is going to be the place to make everything happen.
- Learn the Linux Fundamentals - Part 1
- Linux for hackers (don't worry you don't need to be a hacker!)
There are going to be lots of resources I find as we go through and much like the Go resources I am generally going to be keeping them to FREE content so we can all partake and learn here.
As I mentioned next up we will take a look at the commands we might be using on a daily whilst in our Linux environments.
See you on Day15