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Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Compute Instance Terraform Module

The Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Compute Instance Terraform Module provides an easy way to launch compute instances and optionally create and attach any number of block volumes.

Please Note:

  • The subnet, the compute instances, and the block volumes all must be in the same compartment, as specified by the compartment_ocid parameter.
  • Oracle-provided images include rules that restrict access to the boot and block volumes. Oracle recommends that you do not use custom images without these rules unless you understand the security risks. See Compute Best Practices for recommendations on how to manage instances.

Prerequisites

See the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Terraform Provider docs for information about setting up and using the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Terraform Provider.

How to use this module

The examples folder contains a detailed example that shows how to use this module.

The following code example creates an Oracle Cloud Infrastructure compute instance:

module "instance" {
  source = "../../"

  compartment_ocid           = "${var.compartment_ocid}"
  instance_display_name      = "${var.instance_display_name}"
  source_ocid                = "${var.source_ocid}"
  vcn_ocid                   = "${var.vcn_ocid}"
  subnet_ocid                = "${var.subnet_ocid}"
  ssh_authorized_keys        = "${var.ssh_authorized_keys_file}"
  block_storage_sizes_in_gbs = [60, 70]
}

Following are arguments available to the Compute Instance module:

Argument Description
compartment_ocid Unique identifier (OCID) of the compartment in which the VCN is created
instance_display_name Display name of the compute instance
extended_metadata Additional metadata key/value pairs provided by the user
ipxe_script The iPXE script which initiates the boot process on the compute instance
preserve_boot_volume Specifies whether to delete or preserve the boot volume when the instance is terminated
boot_volume_size_in_gbs The size of the boot volume in GBs
shape The instance shape
assign_public_ip Specifies whether the VNIC should be assigned a public IP address
vnic_name A user-friendly name for the VNIC
hostname_label The hostname for the VNIC's primary private IP
private_ip A private IP address of your choice to assign to the VNIC
skip_source_dest_check Specifies whether the source/destination check is disabled on the VNIC
subnet_ocid Unique identifier (OCID) of the subnet in which the VNIC is created
ssh_authorized_keys Path to the public SSH keys in the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file for the default user on the instance
user_data User-defined base64-encoded data to be used by Cloud-Init to run custom scripts, or provide a custom Cloud-Init configuration
source_ocid Unique identifier (OCID) of an image or a boot volume, depending on the value of source_type. For more information, see Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Images
source_type The source type for the instance
instance_timeout Timeout setting for creating instance(Note: large instance types may need larger timeout than the default 25m)
instance_count Number of instances to launch
block_storage_sizes_in_gbs The size in GBs of block volumes created and attached to each instance
attachment_type Attachment type (Note: paravirtualized attachment may not be supported by some instance images)
use_chap Whether to use CHAP authentication for the volume attachment
resource_platform Platform in which to create resources
vcn_ocid Unique identifier (OCID) of the VCN

Windows remote scripts execution

Terraform supports using Windows Remote Management (WinRM) for connecting to Windows instances. Ensure that your Windows image has WinRM properly configured to allow remote access. Following is a sample WinRM configuration:

winrm quickconfig -q
winrm set winrm/config/winrs '@{MaxMemoryPerShellMB="300"}’'
winrm set winrm/config ‘@{MaxTimeoutms=1800000″}’
winrm set winrm/config/service '@{AllowUnencrypted="true"}'
winrm set winrm/config/service/auth '@{Basic="true"}'

netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="WinRM 5985" protocol=TCP dir=in localport=5985 action=allow
netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="WinRM 5986" protocol=TCP dir=in localport=5986 action=allow

net stop winrm
sc.exe config winrm start=auto
net start winrm

Configure iSCSI volume attachments

Following is the sample inline script for not using CHAP authentication:

# Logging for troubleshooting.
set -x
sudo -s bash -c "lsscsi -t"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console to register ISCSI device.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -o new -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port}"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console for registration to survive reboot.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -o update -T ${self.iqn} -n node.startup -v automatic"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console to log into iscsi device.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port} -l"

# troubleshooting command.
sudo -s bash -c "lsscsi -t"

# troubleshooting command.
lsscsi -t | grep disk | grep ${self.iqn} | awk '{print $1,$2,$3,$4,$5}'

# Find the specific OS level device that is associated with the iscsi volume.
device=$(lsscsi -t | grep disk | grep ${self.iqn} | awk '{print $4}')

# Create a file system on the device. In this case, we use the ext4 filesystem.
sudo -s bash -c "mkfs.ext4 -F $device"

# Find the UUID of the iscsi volume.
uuid=$(sudo blkid | grep $device | awk '{print $2}')

# Create a directory in the OS to mount the new filesystem.
sudo -s bash -c "mkdir -p ${var.volume_mount_directory}"

# Mount the filesystem so that it is available.
sudo -s bash -c "mount -t ext4 $uuid ${var.volume_mount_directory}"

# Ensure the filesystem is loaded on a reboot of the instance.
echo "$uuid ${var.volume_mount_directory} ext4 defaults,noatime,_netdev,nofail    0   2" | sudo tee --append /etc/fstab > /dev/null   

Following is the sample inline script for using CHAP authentication:

# Logging for troubleshooting.
set -x
sudo -s bash -c "lsscsi -t"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console to register ISCSI device.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -o new -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port}"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console for registration to survive reboot.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -o update -T ${self.iqn} -n node.startup -v automatic"

# Authenticate the iSCSI connection by providing the volume's CHAP credentials.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port} -o update -n node.session.auth.authmethod -v CHAP"

# Provide the volume's CHAP user name.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port} -o update -n node.session.auth.username -v ${self.chap_username}"

# Provide the volume's CHAP password.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port} -o update -n node.session.auth.password -v ${self.chap_secret}"

# Command provided in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure console to log into iscsi device.
sudo -s bash -c "iscsiadm -m node -T ${self.iqn} -p ${self.ipv4}:${self.port} -l"

# troubleshooting command.
sudo -s bash -c "lsscsi -t"

# troubleshooting command.
lsscsi -t | grep disk | grep ${self.iqn} | awk '{print $1,$2,$3,$4,$5}'

# Find the specific OS level device that is associated with the iscsi volume.
device=$(lsscsi -t | grep disk | grep ${self.iqn} | awk '{print $4}')

# Create a file system on the device. In this case, we use the ext4 filesystem.
sudo -s bash -c "mkfs.ext4 -F $device"

# Find the UUID of the iscsi volume.
uuid=$(sudo blkid | grep $device | awk '{print $2}')

# Create a directory in the OS to mount the new filesystem.
sudo -s bash -c "mkdir -p ${var.volume_mount_directory}"

# Mount the filesystem so that it is available.
sudo -s bash -c "mount -t ext4 $uuid ${var.volume_mount_directory}"

# Ensure the filesystem is loaded on a reboot of the instance.
echo "$uuid ${var.volume_mount_directory} ext4 defaults,noatime,_netdev,nofail    0   2" | sudo tee --append /etc/fstab > /dev/null   

Contributing

This project is open source. Oracle appreciates any contributions that are made by the open source community.

License

Copyright (c) 2018, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Licensed under the Universal Permissive License 1.0 or Apache License 2.0.

See LICENSE for more details.

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Terraform Module for creating Oracle Cloud Infrastructure compute instances

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