- Introduce options for specifying public runner base URLs (`SOLSTICE_RUNNER_BASE_URL`) and orchestrator contact addresses (`ORCH_CONTACT_ADDR`). - Update `.env.sample` and `compose.yml` with new configuration fields for external log streaming and runner binary serving. - Refactor runner URL handling and generation logic for improved flexibility. - Enhance `cloud-init` templates with updated runner URL environment variables (`RUNNER_SINGLE` and `RUNNER_URLS`). - Add unit tests for runner URL generation to verify various input cases. Signed-off-by: Till Wegmueller <toasterson@gmail.com> |
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|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| .env.sample | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| compose.yml | ||
| README.md | ||
Solstice CI — Production deployment with Podman Compose + Traefik
This stack deploys Solstice CI services behind Traefik with automatic TLS certificates from Let’s Encrypt. It uses upstream official images for system services and multi-stage Rust builds on official Rust/Debian images that rely on container layer caching (no sccache) for fast, reproducible builds.
Prerequisites
- Podman 4.9+ with podman-compose compatibility (podman compose)
- Public DNS records for subdomains pointing to the host running this stack
- Ports 80 and 443 open to the Internet (for ACME HTTP-01), see Rootless note below
- Email address for ACME registration
Rootless Podman note (ports 80/443)
- Rootless Podman cannot bind privileged ports (<1024). If you run this stack rootless, set high host ports in .env:
- TRAEFIK_HTTP_PORT=8080
- TRAEFIK_HTTPS_PORT=4443
- With high ports, public HTTPS will be served on 4443 and the ACME HTTP-01 challenge will not work unless you forward external port 80 to host 8080 (e.g., via a firewall/NAT) or place another reverse proxy in front.
- To use real public certificates with HTTP-01 directly on this host, either:
- Run Podman as root (rootful) for Traefik only, or
- Allow unprivileged port binding for your kernel by setting (requires root): sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start=80 and add net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start=80 to /etc/sysctl.conf to persist.
- Alternatively, switch Traefik to a DNS-01 challenge (not configured here) if you control DNS.
DNS Create A/AAAA records for the following hostnames under your base domain (no environment in hostname; env separation is logical via DB/vhost/buckets):
- traefik.svc.DOMAIN
- api.svc.DOMAIN
- grpc.svc.DOMAIN
- runner.svc.DOMAIN
- forge.svc.DOMAIN (Forge/Forgejo webhooks)
- github.svc.DOMAIN (GitHub App/webhooks)
- minio.svc.DOMAIN (console UI)
- s3.svc.DOMAIN (S3 API, TLS via TCP SNI)
- mq.svc.DOMAIN (RabbitMQ mgmt UI; AMQP remains internal)
Quick start
- Copy env template and edit secrets and settings:
cp .env.sample .env
Edit .env (ENV=staging|prod, DOMAIN, passwords, ACME email)
- (Optional) Use Let’s Encrypt staging CA to test issuance without rate limits by setting in .env: TRAEFIK_ACME_CASERVER=https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
- Bring up the stack: podman compose -f compose.yml up -d --build
- Monitor logs: podman compose logs -f traefik
Services and routing
- Traefik dashboard: https://traefik.svc.${DOMAIN} (protect with TRAEFIK_DASHBOARD_AUTH in .env)
- Orchestrator HTTP: https://api.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}
- Orchestrator gRPC (h2/TLS via SNI): grpc.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}
- Forge webhooks: https://forge.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}
- GitHub webhooks: https://github.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}
- Runner static server: https://runner.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}
- MinIO console: https://minio.svc.${DOMAIN}
- S3 API: s3.svc.${DOMAIN}
- RabbitMQ management: https://mq.svc.${DOMAIN}
Environment scoping (single infra, logical separation)
- RabbitMQ: single broker; per-environment vhosts named solstice-${ENV} (staging/prod). Services connect to amqp://.../solstice-${ENV}.
- Postgres: single cluster; databases solstice_staging and solstice_prod are created by the postgres-setup job. Services use postgres://.../solstice_${ENV}.
- MinIO: single server; buckets solstice-logs-staging and solstice-logs-prod are created by the minio-setup job. Set S3 bucket per service to the env-appropriate bucket.
Security notes
- Secrets are provided via podman compose secrets referencing your environment variables. Do not commit real secrets.
- Only management UIs are exposed publicly via Traefik. Data planes (Postgres, AMQP, S3 API) terminate TLS at Traefik and route internally. Adjust exposure policy as needed.
Images and builds
- System services use Chainguard images (postgres, rabbitmq). MinIO uses upstream images.
- Rust services are built with multi-stage Containerfiles using cgr.dev/chainguard/rust and run on cgr.dev/chainguard/glibc-dynamic.
- Build caches are mounted in-build for cargo registry/git and the cargo target directory (via ~/.cargo/config target-dir=/cargo/target).
Maintenance
- Upgrade images by editing tags in compose.yml and rebuilding: podman compose build --pull
- Renewals are automatic via Traefik ACME. Certificates are stored in the traefik-acme volume.
- Backups: persist volumes (postgres-data, rabbitmq-data, minio-data, traefik-acme).
Tear down
- Stop: podman compose down
- Remove volumes (DANGEROUS: destroys data): podman volume rm solstice-ci_traefik-acme solstice-ci_postgres-data solstice-ci_rabbitmq-data solstice-ci_minio-data
Troubleshooting
- Certificate issues: check Traefik logs; verify DNS and ports 80/443. For testing, use ACME staging server.
- No routes: verify labels on services and that traefik sees the podman socket.
- Healthchecks failing: inspect service logs with podman logs .
- Arch Linux/Podman DNS timeouts (ACME): If Traefik logs show errors like "dial tcp: lookup acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org on 10.89.0.1:53: i/o timeout", this is typically a Podman network DNS (netavark/aardvark-dns) issue. Fixes:
- We now set explicit public DNS resolvers for the Traefik container in compose.yml (1.1.1.1, 8.8.8.8, 9.9.9.9). Redeploy: podman compose up -d traefik.
- Ensure Podman’s network backend and DNS are installed and active (Arch): pacman -S netavark aardvark-dns; systemctl enable --now aardvark-dns.socket; verify
podman info | grep -i networkshows networkBackend: netavark. - Alternatively, mount the host resolv.conf into Traefik: add to the traefik service volumes: - /etc/resolv.conf:/etc/resolv.conf:ro
- Check firewall (nftables): allow UDP/TCP 53 from the Podman bridge (e.g., 10.89.0.0/24) to host 10.89.0.1; allow FORWARD for ESTABLISHED,RELATED.
- Inspect network: podman network inspect podman; consider creating a custom network with explicit DNS servers: podman network create --dns 1.1.1.1 --dns 8.8.8.8 solstice-net and set networks.core.name to that network in compose.yml.
- As a last resort, run Traefik with host networking: network_mode: host (then remove ports and ensure only Traefik is exposed), or switch ACME to DNS-01.
Ubuntu host setup for libvirt/KVM and image directories
These steps prepare an Ubuntu host so the orchestrator (running in a container) can control KVM/libvirt and manage VM images stored on the host.
- Install libvirt/KVM and tools
- sudo apt update
- sudo apt install -y qemu-kvm libvirt-daemon-system libvirt-clients virtinst bridge-utils genisoimage
- Ensure the libvirt service is running:
- systemctl status libvirtd
- If inactive: sudo systemctl enable --now libvirtd
- User permissions (KVM and libvirt sockets)
- Add your deployment user (the one running podman compose) to the required groups:
- sudo usermod -aG libvirt $USER
- sudo usermod -aG kvm $USER
- Log out and back in (or new shell) for group membership to take effect.
- Default libvirt network
- Make sure the default network exists and is active (compose defaults LIBVIRT_NETWORK=default):
- virsh net-list --all
- If missing, define it from the stock XML or create a new NAT network.
- If present but inactive:
- virsh net-start default
- virsh net-autostart default
- Prepare host directories for images and work data
- Base images directory (bind-mounted read/write into the orchestrator container):
- sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/solstice/images
- sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /var/lib/solstice/images
- Orchestrator work directory for overlays and console logs:
- sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/solstice-ci
- sudo chown "$USER":"$USER" /var/lib/solstice-ci
- In deploy/podman/.env(.sample), set:
- ORCH_IMAGES_DIR=/var/lib/solstice/images
- ORCH_WORK_DIR=/var/lib/solstice-ci
- Map the image list (image map YAML)
- Point ORCH_IMAGE_MAP_PATH at your production image map on the host (kept in git or ops repo):
- ORCH_IMAGE_MAP_PATH=/etc/solstice/orchestrator-image-map.yaml
- The orchestrator looks for /examples/orchestrator-image-map.yaml in the container; compose binds your host file there read-only.
- Ensure each images[*].local_path in the YAML points inside /var/lib/solstice/images (the in-container path is the same via the bind mount). The provided example already uses that prefix.
- Bring up the stack
- podman compose -f compose.yml up -d --build
- The orchestrator will, on first start, download missing base images as per the YAML into ORCH_IMAGES_DIR. Subsequent starts reuse the same files.
Notes
- Hardware acceleration: compose maps /dev/kvm into the container; verify kvm is available on the host: lsmod | grep kvm and that your CPU virtualization features are enabled in BIOS/UEFI.
- Sockets and configs: compose binds libvirt control sockets and common libvirt directories read-only so the orchestrator can read network definitions and create domains.
- If you change LIBVIRT_URI or LIBVIRT_NETWORK, update deploy/podman/.env and redeploy.
Runner binaries (served by the orchestrator)
- Purpose: Builder VMs download workflow runner binaries from the orchestrator over HTTP.
- Host directory: Set RUNNER_DIR_HOST in deploy/podman/.env. This path is bind-mounted read-only into the orchestrator at /runners.
- Example (prod default in .env): RUNNER_DIR_HOST=/var/lib/solstice/runners
- Example (dev default in .env.sample): RUNNER_DIR_HOST=../../target/runners
- URLs: Files are served at http(s)://runner.${ENV}.${DOMAIN}/runners/{filename}
- Example: https://runner.prod.${DOMAIN}/runners/solstice-runner-linux
- Orchestrator injection: The orchestrator auto-computes default runner URLs from its HTTP_ADDR and contact address and injects them into cloud-init.
- You can override via env: SOLSTICE_RUNNER_URL (single) and SOLSTICE_RUNNER_URLS (space-separated list) to point VMs at specific filenames.
- To build/place binaries:
- Build the workflow-runner crate for your target(s) and place the resulting artifacts in RUNNER_DIR_HOST with stable filenames (e.g., solstice-runner-linux, solstice-runner-illumos).
- Ensure file permissions allow read by the orchestrator user (world-readable is fine for static serving).
- Traefik routing: runner.${ENV}.${DOMAIN} routes to the orchestrator’s HTTP port (8081 by default).
Forge integration configuration
- The forge-integration service will warn if WEBHOOK_SECRET is not set: it will accept webhooks without signature validation (dev mode). Set WEBHOOK_SECRET in deploy/podman/.env to enable HMAC validation.
- To enable posting commit statuses back to Forgejo/Gitea, set FORGEJO_TOKEN and FORGEJO_BASE_URL in deploy/podman/.env. If they are not set, the service logs a warning (FORGEJO_* not set) and disables the job result consumer that reports statuses.
- The compose file passes these variables to the container. After editing .env, run: podman compose up -d forge-integration
Traefik ACME CA server note
- If you see a warning about TRAEFIK_ACME_CASERVER being unset, it is harmless. The compose file now defaults this value to empty so Traefik uses the production Let’s Encrypt endpoint. To test with staging, set TRAEFIK_ACME_CASERVER=https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory in .env and redeploy Traefik.