ndm makes it easy to deploy a complex service-oriented-architecture by allowing you to deploy OS-specific service-wrappers directly from an npm package.
ndm currently supports Centos, OS X, and Ubuntu.
Table of Contents:
- Installation
- What's service.json?
- Getting Information From Your User
- ndm API (create self-installing packages)
npm install ndm -g
You might need to run that as root with sudo
.
How to build an ndm-ready package:
- Install ndm:
sudo npm install ndm -g
- Create a project directory with a package.json:
npm init
- Add service dependencies to your package.json:
npm install my-service-module --save
- Generate your service.json:
ndm init
. - Edit service.json to add appropriate
args
andenvs
for your server. - When you're ready, generate service wrappers (upstart, initctl, etc):
ndm install
. - Start the service wrappers you've just generated:
ndm start
.
ndm can run a single services or a collection of services. It's structured like an npm package, with a package.json file listing its dependencies. Each service you want to run with ndm should be packaged as its own separate npm module that the ndm wrapper depends on. Then a service.json file describes how to run each service.
An ndm wrapper package looks like this:
wrapper/
package.json
service.json
logs/
node_modules/
A node-packaged service built for ndm can provide some hints in its package.json about how to run itself. Here's an example ndm-ready package.json:
{
"name": "be-awesome",
"version": "0.0.0",
"description": "a service designed to be run with ndm.",
"main": "index.js",
"author": "",
"license": "ISC",
"dependencies": {
"ssh2": "^0.2.25"
},
"devDependencies": {
"mocha": "^1.20.0"
},
"script": {
"start": "node ./bin/awesome.js"
},
"service": {
"args": {
"--verbose": "false"
},
"env": {
"PORT": "5000"
}
},
}
Note the environment
field and its subfields. environment.args
is a map of arguments that should be passed to the ndm service. ndm.env
is a map of environment variables that should be passed to your ndm service.
The ndm wrapper must also have a service.json file, which describes how to run the services. Run ndm init
to generate service.json from your installed npm dependencies. The init script will copy default values from the environment
stanza in each service's package.json. You can then edit the defaults if you need to change anything.
Here's an example:
{
"baby-animals": {
"description": "baby animal thumbnailing service",
"scripts": {
"start": "./baby-animal.js"
},
"env": {
"PORT": "8000",
"USER": "bcoe"
},
"args": {
"--kitten": "cute"
}
},
"ndm-test2": {
"description": "the awesome service",
"processes": 3,
"module": "be-awesome",
"scripts": {
"start": "./bin/foo.js"
},
"env": {
"PORT": "5000"
},
"args": {
"--verbose": "false"
}
},
"env": {
"APP": "my-test-app-%i",
"NODE_ENV": "production"
},
"args": {
"--batman": "greatest-detective"
}
}
- module: the name of the npm module that should be the working directory for the service. If no module is specified, the key of the service will be used as the module name to look for.
- description: description of the service.
- scripts: scripts that can be executed by ndm. When generating service wrappers the
start
script is used. - env: string environment variables available within the script executed by the ndm wrapper.
- args: command-line-arguments available to the script executed by the ndm wrapper.
- processes: how many copies of the service should be run.
- useful for taking advantage of multiple cpus, defaults to 1 process.
%i
:%i
is a place-holder for the process # if you're running multiple processes.- this can be useful if you want each process to bind to a different port, e.g.,
800%i
.
- this can be useful if you want each process to bind to a different port, e.g.,
Defaults for all services are in the top-level env
and args
fields. Each services can override and extend the defaults in its own options stanza.
To add new dependencies:
- Add a new dependency to the wrapper's package.json the way you would for any npm package:
npm install <new-service> --save
- Add the new service to service.json:
ndm update
.
To install your ndm-wrapped services, copy the package directory to your host system using whatever means you prefer. Then from inside the directory, run ndm install
.
On systems like Ubuntu, you'll need to run this as root so ndm has permission to add the upstart config file to /etc/init
. On OS X, you can run it as any user to create a local launch control script.
Command line arguments can be passed to the service wrapper at generation time, by appending them after --
:
ndm install -- --verbose true
You can start and stop the services manually using your host's native daemon control: upstart
, launchctl
, or initctl
. Or you can use ndm start
and ndm stop
from inside an ndm wrapper directory to start & stop all the wrapped services.
All console.log and console.error output is recorded in the logs/
directory, in files named <service-name>.log
. This is separate from whatever internally-managed logging the service might do.
Rather than providing set-in-stone default values, you can opt to interview your user. To interview a user for important variables, write your default values in this form:
"env": {
"HOST": {
"default": "localhost",
"description": "what host should I bind to?"
}
}
By running ndm interview
, a user will then be asked to fill in these values in an interactive manner:
Benjamins-MacBook-Air:ndm benjamincoe$ node ./bin/ndm.js interview
starting interview:
[?] url of front facing server: www.example.com
[?] what environment should we run the app in: test
[?] what do you think of dogs? I like 'em.
Add an .ndmrc
file to your home directory, to override ndm's default settings.
Variable names should be camel-case. As an example, the following .ndmrc
would change the default logging location:
; override ndm CLI variables by adding
; them to a .ndmrc file. Variables should be
; cammel case.
logsDirectory=/foo/bar/logs
Rather than using the ndm bin to manage services, you can use the ndm API to create a self-installable service:
- add ndm to your package.json dependencies.
- add a service.json to the root of your module with a scripts stanza which includes:
- a
start
script, which is what ndm will run by default. - any other scripts that you'd like to expose via
runScript
.
service.json example:
{
"ndm-test": {
"description": "ndm test service",
"scripts": {
"start": "node ./test.js",
"echo": "echo hello",
"node-echo": "node ./test2.js"
},
"env": {
"PORT": 8000,
"USER": {
"description": "enter a username."
}
}
}
}
- update your package's bin to look something like this (the argument passed to ndm's require is the name of the module in the sevice.json that you'd like to run):
#!/usr/bin/env node
var argv = require('yargs').argv,
ndm = require('ndm')('ndm-test');
switch(argv._[0]) {
case 'install':
ndm.install();
break;
case 'remove':
ndm.remove();
break;
case 'start':
ndm.start();
break;
case 'restart':
ndm.restart();
break;
case 'stop':
ndm.stop();
break;
case 'list-scripts':
ndm.listScripts();
break;
case 'run-script':
ndm.runScript();
break;
}
ndm-test is published to npm, try it out:
npm install ndm-test -g
ndm-test install
ndm-test start
For each service in your service.json file, you can optionally set the following flags.
maxOldSpaceSize
: sets the--max-old-space-size
flag to toN
megabytes.
{
"foo": {
"maxOldSpaceSize": "4096"
}
}
ndm is an experiment, based on ops challenges we've been facing at npm. This is a dot release. I'll be moving things around a lot in this library, as we use it for our own deployments.
The ndm
stanza is not officially supported by npm.
ISC