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nixos-servers/TODO.md
Torjus Håkestad 83de9a3ffb
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pipeline: add testing improvements for branch-based workflows
Implement dual improvements to enable efficient testing of pipeline changes
without polluting master branch:

1. Add --force flag to create-host script
   - Skip hostname/IP uniqueness validation
   - Overwrite existing host configurations
   - Update entries in flake.nix and terraform/vms.tf (no duplicates)
   - Useful for iterating on configurations during testing

2. Add branch support to bootstrap mechanism
   - Bootstrap service reads NIXOS_FLAKE_BRANCH environment variable
   - Defaults to master if not set
   - Uses branch in git URL via ?ref= parameter
   - Service loads environment from /etc/environment

3. Add cloud-init disk support for branch configuration
   - VMs can specify flake_branch field in terraform/vms.tf
   - Automatically generates cloud-init snippet setting NIXOS_FLAKE_BRANCH
   - Uploads snippet to Proxmox via SSH
   - Production VMs omit flake_branch and use master

4. Update documentation
   - Document --force flag usage in create-host README
   - Add branch testing examples in terraform README
   - Update TODO.md with testing workflow
   - Add .generated/ to gitignore

Testing workflow: Create feature branch, set flake_branch in VM definition,
deploy with terraform, iterate with --force flag, clean up before merging.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-01 16:34:28 +01:00

13 KiB

TODO: Automated Host Deployment Pipeline

Vision

Automate the entire process of creating, configuring, and deploying new NixOS hosts on Proxmox from a single command or script.

Desired workflow:

./scripts/create-host.sh --hostname myhost --ip 10.69.13.50
# Script creates config, deploys VM, bootstraps NixOS, and you're ready to go

Current manual workflow (from CLAUDE.md):

  1. Create /hosts/<hostname>/ directory structure
  2. Add host to flake.nix
  3. Add DNS entries
  4. Clone template VM manually
  5. Run prepare-host.sh on new VM
  6. Add generated age key to .sops.yaml
  7. Configure networking
  8. Commit and push
  9. Run nixos-rebuild boot --flake URL#<hostname> on host

The Plan

Phase 1: Parameterized OpenTofu Deployments COMPLETED

Status: Fully implemented and tested

Implementation:

  • Locals-based structure using for_each pattern for multiple VM deployments
  • All VM parameters configurable with smart defaults (CPU, memory, disk, IP, storage, etc.)
  • Automatic DHCP vs static IP detection based on ip field presence
  • Dynamic outputs showing deployed VM IPs and specifications
  • Successfully tested deploying multiple VMs simultaneously

Tasks:

  • Create module/template structure in terraform for repeatable VM deployments
  • Parameterize VM configuration (hostname, CPU, memory, disk, IP)
  • Support both DHCP and static IP configuration via cloud-init
  • Test deploying multiple VMs from same template

Deliverable: Can deploy multiple VMs with custom parameters via OpenTofu in a single tofu apply

Files:

  • terraform/vms.tf - VM definitions using locals map
  • terraform/outputs.tf - Dynamic outputs for all VMs
  • terraform/variables.tf - Configurable defaults
  • terraform/README.md - Complete documentation

Phase 2: Host Configuration Generator COMPLETED

Status: Fully implemented and tested Completed: 2025-02-01 Enhanced: 2025-02-01 (added --force flag)

Goal: Automate creation of host configuration files

Implementation:

  • Python CLI tool packaged as Nix derivation
  • Available as create-host command in devShell
  • Rich terminal UI with configuration previews
  • Comprehensive validation (hostname format/uniqueness, IP subnet/uniqueness)
  • Jinja2 templates for NixOS configurations
  • Automatic updates to flake.nix and terraform/vms.tf
  • --force flag for regenerating existing configurations (useful for testing)

Tasks:

  • Create Python CLI with typer framework
    • Takes parameters: hostname, IP, CPU cores, memory, disk size
    • Generates /hosts/<hostname>/ directory structure
    • Creates configuration.nix with proper hostname and networking
    • Generates default.nix with standard imports
    • References shared hardware-configuration.nix from template
  • Add host entry to flake.nix programmatically
    • Text-based manipulation (regex insertion)
    • Inserts new nixosConfiguration entry
    • Maintains proper formatting
  • Generate corresponding OpenTofu configuration
    • Adds VM definition to terraform/vms.tf
    • Uses parameters from CLI input
    • Supports both static IP and DHCP modes
  • Package as Nix derivation with templates
  • Add to flake packages and devShell
  • Implement dry-run mode
  • Write comprehensive README

Usage:

# In nix develop shell
create-host \
  --hostname test01 \
  --ip 10.69.13.50/24 \  # optional, omit for DHCP
  --cpu 4 \               # optional, default 2
  --memory 4096 \         # optional, default 2048
  --disk 50G \            # optional, default 20G
  --dry-run               # optional preview mode

Files:

  • scripts/create-host/ - Complete Python package with Nix derivation
  • scripts/create-host/README.md - Full documentation and examples

Deliverable: Tool generates all config files for a new host, validated with Nix and Terraform


Phase 3: Bootstrap Mechanism COMPLETED

Status: Fully implemented and tested Completed: 2025-02-01 Enhanced: 2025-02-01 (added branch support for testing)

Goal: Get freshly deployed VM to apply its specific host configuration

Implementation: Systemd oneshot service that runs on first boot after cloud-init

Approach taken: Systemd service (variant of Option A)

  • Systemd service nixos-bootstrap.service runs on first boot
  • Depends on cloud-config.service to ensure hostname is set
  • Reads hostname from hostnamectl (set by cloud-init via Terraform)
  • Supports custom git branch via NIXOS_FLAKE_BRANCH environment variable
  • Runs nixos-rebuild boot --flake git+https://git.t-juice.club/torjus/nixos-servers.git?ref=$BRANCH#${hostname}
  • Reboots into new configuration on success
  • Fails gracefully without reboot on errors (network issues, missing config)
  • Service self-destructs after successful bootstrap (not in new config)

Tasks:

  • Create bootstrap service module in template2
    • systemd oneshot service with proper dependencies
    • Reads hostname from hostnamectl (cloud-init sets it)
    • Checks network connectivity via HTTPS (curl)
    • Runs nixos-rebuild boot with flake URL
    • Reboots on success, fails gracefully on error
  • Configure cloud-init datasource
    • Use ConfigDrive datasource (Proxmox provider)
    • Add cloud-init disk to Terraform VMs (disks.ide.ide2.cloudinit)
    • Hostname passed via cloud-init user-data from Terraform
  • Test bootstrap service execution on fresh VM
  • Handle failure cases (flake doesn't exist, network issues)
    • Clear error messages in journald
    • No reboot on failure
    • System remains accessible for debugging

Files:

  • hosts/template2/bootstrap.nix - Bootstrap service definition
  • hosts/template2/configuration.nix - Cloud-init ConfigDrive datasource
  • terraform/vms.tf - Cloud-init disk configuration

Deliverable: VMs automatically bootstrap and reboot into host-specific configuration on first boot


Phase 4: Secrets Management Automation

Challenge: sops needs age key, but age key is generated on first boot

Current workflow:

  1. VM boots, generates age key at /var/lib/sops-nix/key.txt
  2. User runs prepare-host.sh which prints public key
  3. User manually adds public key to .sops.yaml
  4. User commits, pushes
  5. VM can now decrypt secrets

Proposed solution:

Option A: Pre-generate age keys

  • Generate age key pair during create-host-config.sh
  • Add public key to .sops.yaml immediately
  • Store private key temporarily (secure location)
  • Inject private key via cloud-init write_files or Terraform file provisioner
  • VM uses pre-configured key from first boot

Option B: Post-deployment secret injection

  • VM boots with template, generates its own key
  • Fetch public key via SSH after first boot
  • Automatically add to .sops.yaml and commit
  • Trigger rebuild on VM to pick up secrets access

Option C: Separate secrets from initial deployment

  • Initial deployment works without secrets
  • After VM is running, user manually adds age key
  • Subsequent auto-upgrades pick up secrets

Decision needed: Option A is most automated, but requires secure key handling


Phase 5: DNS Automation

Goal: Automatically generate DNS entries from host configurations

Approach: Leverage Nix to generate zone file entries from flake host configurations

Since most hosts use static IPs defined in their NixOS configurations, we can extract this information and automatically generate A records. This keeps DNS in sync with the actual host configs.

Tasks:

  • Add optional CNAME field to host configurations
    • Add networking.cnames = [ "alias1" "alias2" ] or similar option
    • Document in host configuration template
  • Create Nix function to extract DNS records from all hosts
    • Parse each host's networking.hostName and IP configuration
    • Collect any defined CNAMEs
    • Generate zone file fragment with A and CNAME records
  • Integrate auto-generated records into zone files
    • Keep manual entries separate (for non-flake hosts/services)
    • Include generated fragment in main zone file
    • Add comments showing which records are auto-generated
  • Update zone file serial number automatically
  • Test zone file validity after generation
  • Either:
    • Automatically trigger DNS server reload (Ansible)
    • Or document manual step: merge to master, run upgrade on ns1/ns2

Deliverable: DNS A records and CNAMEs automatically generated from host configs


Phase 6: Integration Script

Goal: Single command to create and deploy a new host

Tasks:

  • Create scripts/create-host.sh master script that orchestrates:
    1. Prompts for: hostname, IP (or DHCP), CPU, memory, disk
    2. Validates inputs (IP not in use, hostname unique, etc.)
    3. Calls host config generator (Phase 2)
    4. Generates OpenTofu config (Phase 2)
    5. Handles secrets (Phase 4)
    6. Updates DNS (Phase 5)
    7. Commits all changes to git
    8. Runs tofu apply to deploy VM
    9. Waits for bootstrap to complete (Phase 3)
    10. Prints success message with IP and SSH command
  • Add --dry-run flag to preview changes
  • Add --interactive mode vs --batch mode
  • Error handling and rollback on failures

Deliverable: ./scripts/create-host.sh --hostname myhost --ip 10.69.13.50 creates a fully working host


Phase 7: Testing & Documentation

Status: 🚧 In Progress (testing improvements completed)

Testing Improvements Implemented (2025-02-01):

The pipeline now supports efficient testing without polluting master branch:

1. --force Flag for create-host

  • Re-run create-host to regenerate existing configurations
  • Updates existing entries in flake.nix and terraform/vms.tf (no duplicates)
  • Skip uniqueness validation checks
  • Useful for iterating on configuration templates during testing

2. Branch Support for Bootstrap

  • Bootstrap service reads NIXOS_FLAKE_BRANCH environment variable
  • Defaults to master if not set
  • Allows testing pipeline changes on feature branches
  • Cloud-init passes branch via /etc/environment

3. Cloud-init Disk for Branch Configuration

  • Terraform generates custom cloud-init snippets for test VMs
  • Set flake_branch field in VM definition to use non-master branch
  • Production VMs omit this field and use master (default)
  • Files automatically uploaded to Proxmox via SSH

Testing Workflow:

# 1. Create test branch
git checkout -b test-pipeline

# 2. Generate or update host config
create-host --hostname testvm01 --ip 10.69.13.100/24

# 3. Edit terraform/vms.tf to add test VM with branch
# vms = {
#   "testvm01" = {
#     ip = "10.69.13.100/24"
#     flake_branch = "test-pipeline"  # Bootstrap from this branch
#   }
# }

# 4. Commit and push test branch
git add -A && git commit -m "test: add testvm01"
git push origin test-pipeline

# 5. Deploy VM
cd terraform && tofu apply

# 6. Watch bootstrap (VM fetches from test-pipeline branch)
ssh root@10.69.13.100
journalctl -fu nixos-bootstrap.service

# 7. Iterate: modify templates and regenerate with --force
cd .. && create-host --hostname testvm01 --ip 10.69.13.100/24 --force
git commit -am "test: update config" && git push

# Redeploy to test fresh bootstrap
cd terraform
tofu destroy -target=proxmox_vm_qemu.vm[\"testvm01\"] && tofu apply

# 8. Clean up when done: squash commits, merge to master, remove test VM

Files:

  • scripts/create-host/create_host.py - Added --force parameter
  • scripts/create-host/manipulators.py - Update vs insert logic
  • hosts/template2/bootstrap.nix - Branch support via environment variable
  • terraform/vms.tf - flake_branch field support
  • terraform/cloud-init.tf - Custom cloud-init disk generation
  • terraform/variables.tf - proxmox_host variable for SSH uploads

Remaining Tasks:

  • Test full pipeline end-to-end on feature branch
  • Update CLAUDE.md with testing workflow
  • Add troubleshooting section
  • Create examples for common scenarios (DHCP host, static IP host, etc.)

Open Questions

  1. Bootstrap method: Cloud-init runcmd vs Terraform provisioner vs Ansible?
  2. Secrets handling: Pre-generate keys vs post-deployment injection?
  3. DNS automation: Auto-commit or manual merge?
  4. Git workflow: Auto-push changes or leave for user review?
  5. Template selection: Single template2 or multiple templates for different host types?
  6. Networking: Always DHCP initially, or support static IP from start?
  7. Error recovery: What happens if bootstrap fails? Manual intervention or retry?

Implementation Order

Recommended sequence:

  1. Phase 1: Parameterize OpenTofu (foundation for testing)
  2. Phase 3: Bootstrap mechanism (core automation)
  3. Phase 2: Config generator (automate the boilerplate)
  4. Phase 4: Secrets (solves biggest chicken-and-egg)
  5. Phase 5: DNS (nice-to-have automation)
  6. Phase 6: Integration script (ties it all together)
  7. Phase 7: Testing & docs

Success Criteria

When complete, creating a new host should:

  • Take < 5 minutes of human time
  • Require minimal user input (hostname, IP, basic specs)
  • Result in a fully configured, secret-enabled, DNS-registered host
  • Be reproducible and documented
  • Handle common errors gracefully

Notes

  • Keep incremental commits at each phase
  • Test each phase independently before moving to next
  • Maintain backward compatibility with manual workflow
  • Document any manual steps that can't be automated