i am not a devops engineer. i appreciate any critique or correction.

code: gitlab github

Deploying Nextcloud on AWS ECS with Pulumi

This Pulumi programme deploys a highly-available, cost-effective Nextcloud service on AWS Fargate with a serverless Aurora PostgreSQL database.

Deployment Option 1 (GitOps)

The first few items are high-level instructions only. You can follow the instructions from the hyperlinked web pages. They include the best practices as recommended by the authors.

  1. A Pulumi account. This is for creating a Personal Access Token that is required when provisioning the AWS resources.
  2. Create a non-root AWS IAM User called pulumi-user.
  3. Create an IAM User Group called pulumi-group
  4. Add the pulumi-user to the pulumi-group User Group.
  5. Attach the IAMFullAccess policy to pulumi-group. The IAMFullAccess allows your IAM User to add the remaining required IAM policies to the IAM User Group using the automation script later.
  6. Create an access key for your non-root IAM User.
  7. On your Pulumi account, go to Personal access tokens and create a token.
  8. Also create a password for the Aurora Database. You can use a password generator.
  9. Clone this repository either to your GitLab or GitHub.
  10. This works either on GitLab CI/CD or GitHub Actions. On GitLab, go to the cloned repository settings > Settings > Variables. On GitHub, go to the cloned repository settings > Secrets and variables > Actions > Secrets.
  11. Store the credentials from steps 6-8 as AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN, and POSTGRES_PASSWORD. These will be used as environment variables by the deployment script.
  12. On AWS Console, go to EC2 > Load Balancers. The DNS name is where you access the Nextcloud Web Interface to establish your administrative credentials.

[!NOTE] The automatic deployment will be triggered if there are changes made on the main.go, .gitlab-ci.yml, or the ci.yml file upon doing a git push. On main.go, you can adjust the specifications of the resources to be manifested. Notable ones are in lines 327, 328, 571, 572, 602, 603, 640.

Deployment Option 2 (Manual)

  1. Install Go, AWS CLI, and Pulumi.
  2. Follow steps 1-8 above.
  3. Add the required IAM policies to the IAM User Group to allow Pulumi to interact with AWS resources:
printf '%s\n' "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonS3FullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonECS_FullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/ElasticLoadBalancingFullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/CloudWatchEventsFullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEC2FullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonVPCFullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/SecretsManagerReadWrite" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonElasticFileSystemFullAccess" "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonRDSFullAccess" | xargs -I {} aws iam attach-group-policy --group-name pulumi-group --policy-arn {}
  1. Add the environment variables.
export PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN="value" && export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="value" && export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="value" && export POSTGRES_PASSWORD="value"
  1. Clone the repository locally and deploy.
mkdir pulumi-aws && \
cd pulumi-aws && \
pulumi new aws-go && \
rm * && \
git clone https://gitlab.com/joevizcara/pulumi-aws.git . && \
pulumi up

Deprovisioning

pulumi destroy --yes

Local Testing

The Pulumi.aws-go-dev.yaml file contains a code block to use with Localstack for local testing.

Features

  1. Subscription-free application - Nextcloud is a free and open-source cloud storage and file-sharing platform.
  2. Serverless management - using Fargate and Aurora Serverless reduces infrastructure management.
  3. Reduced cost - can be scaled and as highly available as an AWS EKS cluster, but with cost lower per-hour.
  4. Go coding language - a popular language for cloud-native applications, eliminating syntax barriers for engineers.

Diagramme

  • loudwhisper@infosec.pub
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    19 days ago

    Well yeah, wouldn’t break the bank, but a conservative cost estimate (without considering network costs, for example, quite relevant for a data intensive app) would bring this setup to about $40/month. That is about 5 times more expensive than a VPC with 4x the resources.

    OP said this is some sort of “enterprise self-hosting” solution, which I guess then kind of makes sense. For a company providing nextcloud as a service I would never vendor lock myself and let AWS take a huge chunk of my revenue forever, but I can imagine folks have different opinions.

    • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      edit-2
      18 days ago

      A $10VPS would not be sufficient for a heavily used multi-user Nextcloud instance, and it wouldn’t come with enough storage either.

      You could cloud host this thing for less absolutely, but not a whole lot less. I have a Vultr VPS (cheaper than Digital Ocean, Linode, and other cheapo VPS providers) and all it does is reverse proxy and do some caching and it’s scraping by at a total of $24 a month. A $40 solution that’s more functional if not over-engineered for the difference in price equivalence to a Netflix subscription is not that huge a deal. Especially for someone who is doing this level of work for their job. That $16 is chump change.