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The CLI for Sym

Project description

sym-cli

Sym CLI

Usage

Login

sym login --email rick@symops.io --org sym

Or, to run interactively: sym login

Currently, this saves the email and org name to a local configuration file that defaults to $HOME/.config/sym/config.yml. Currently, this does NOT do any kind of validation or communication with the rest of the platform. This location can be tweaked by editing the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable (replaces $HOME/.config).

Resources

sym resources

Once you run sym login, you can see the resource groups available by running sym resources.

Currently, this is based on a hard-coded list of resource groups defined in params.py. If logged in using a sym email address, then there will be exactly one resource available: test.

SSH

sym ssh RESOURCE INSTANCE

Initializes an SSH connection to an instance in the resource group.

sym ssh test i-01073e9d0438334fc

Creates an SSH connection to an instance i-01073e9d0438334fc. In order to create this connection, Sym first attempts a login via SAML using saml2aws (or aws-okta as a fallback) for the currently logged in user (the email address in config.yml set via sym login). This may require MFA.

sym --saml-client=aws-profile ssh PROFILE INSTANCE

Write Creds

sym write-creds test --profile PROFILE

It can be convenient to save temporary credentials for a sym resource into an AWS profile. Then the AWS profile can be used for other commands (with sym or other tools).

Exec

sym exec test -- COMMAND

You can use sym to execute a command or script using the credentials for the resource group.

Similar to other commands, you can use an AWS profile instead of a sym resource group:

sym --saml-client=aws-profile exec PROFILE -- COMMAND

Ansible Playbook

sym ansible-playbook test -i ec2.py docker_test.yml

There are several useful environment variables that can help with debugging:

  • SYM_LOG_DIR: Set to a directory (i.e. /tmp/sym/test) to accumulate logs from sym commands.
  • SYM_DEBUG: Set to true to turn on verbose logging from ansible and ssh

Like other commands, you can use an AWS profile instead of a sym resource group:

sym --saml-client=aws-profile ansible-playbook PROFILE -i ec2.py docker_test.yml

Send Command

As of 0.0.45, the default implementation for Ansible to communicate with EC2 instances is via SSM using send command. To do this, we ship an implementation of ansible's connection API in our Sym CLI, and that location is provided as a connection plugin argument to ansible. We provide options to that plugin implementation to manage the connection and associated dependencies (s3 bucket for copying files over to the instance, etc).

This behavior can be enabled/disabled with a flag: --send-command/--no-send-command. --send-command is not required since it is the default. Alternatively it can be toggled using the SYM_SEND_COMMAND environment variable.

SSH

When send command is not used, then ansible falls back to the normal behavior - initiating an SSM session and then opening an SSH tunnel with that session. When using SSH with sym ansible-playbook, sym will force ansible to use openssh instead of a built-in Paramiko implementation that is sometimes used, but was found to be buggy with SSM.

When using SSH, ansible needs to decide whether to persist SSH sessions, which is important for performance, but on some versions of OpenSSH and aws-cli can be unreliable. The mechanism for persisting sessions is SSH control master persistence. Sym has the following behavior:

  • If the version of OpenSSH on the local machine is lower than a min version (currently 8.1+), then it will disable control master by default; otherwise, it will enable it by default.
  • Control master can be explicitly enabled/disabled with the --control-master/--no-control-master flag, or the SYM_USE_CONTROL_MASTER env var.
  • Control master (and compression) will be automatically disabled if SYM_DEBUG or --debug are set.

Doctor

sym doctor test --mode=ansible --inventory=test/integration/docker-ansible-ld/sym/ec2.py

Use doctor to run checks against the current environment and collect all the logs (sym, ansible, ssh, etc.) from the local environment and remote instances.

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