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Kai Walter
Kai Walter

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Azure VM based on CBL-Mariner with Nix package manager

Motivation

In a previous post I was showing how to bring up a disposable CBL-Mariner* VM using cloud-init and (mostly) the dnf package manager. As I explained in that post, it takes some fiddling around to find sources for various packages and also to mix installation methods.

* when reviewing I found that I had a small typo in the post - "CBM-Mariner" - I guess my subconscious mind partially still lives in the 8-bit era

When I was coming across Nix package manager a few days back - while again distro hopping for my home experimental machine - I thought to combine both and maybe make package installation simpler and more versatile for CBL-Mariner - with its intended small repository to keep attack surface low.

This approach, to bring in Nix over cloud-init, should work with a vast amount of distros and should not be limited to CBL-Mariner only!

create.sh - Creation script

In this post I want to use a Bash script and Azure CLI to drive VM installation:

#!/bin/bash

set -e

user=admin
name=my-cblnix
location=westeurope
keyfile=~/.ssh/cblnix

az deployment sub create -f ./rg.bicep \
  -l $location \
  -p computerName=$name \
  resourceGroupName=$name \
  location=$location \
  adminUsername=$user \
  adminPasswordOrKey="$(cat $keyfile.pub)" \
  customData="$(cat ./cloud-init-cbl-nix.txt)" \
  vmSize=Standard_D2s_v3 \
  vmImagePublisher=MicrosoftCBLMariner \
  vmImageOffer=cbl-mariner \
  vmImageSku=cbl-mariner-2

fqdn=$(az network public-ip show -g $name -n $name-ip --query 'dnsSettings.fqdn' -o tsv)
echo "ssh -i $keyfile $user@$fqdn"

ssh-keygen -R $fqdn
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Key elements and assumptions:

  • Azure CLI using a set of Bicep templates (shown below) to deploy a Resource Group and a Virtual Machine with the same name
  • it is assumed that public SSH key file has the same and is in the same location than the private SSH key file, just with a .pub extension
  • after VM creation FQDN is determined and printed
  • ssh-keygen is used to clean up potentially existing entries in SSH's known_hosts

cloud-init.txt

As in the previous post a cloud-init.txt is required to bootstrap the basic installation of the VM - but now in a much cleaner shape:

#cloud-config
write_files:
  - path: /tmp/install-nix.sh
    content: |
      #!/bin/bash
      sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon --yes
    permissions: '0755'
  - path: /tmp/base-setup.nix
    content: |
        with import <nixpkgs> {}; [
          less
          curl
          git
          gh
          azure-cli
          kubectl
          nodejs_18
          rustup
          go
          dotnet-sdk_7
          zsh
          oh-my-zsh
        ]
    permissions: '0644'
runcmd:
- export USER=$(awk -v uid=1000 -F":" '{ if($3==uid){print $1} }' /etc/passwd)

- sudo -H -u $USER bash -c '/tmp/install-nix.sh'

- /nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin/nix-env -if /tmp/base-setup.nix

- - sudo -H -u $USER bash -c '/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin/rustup default stable'
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Gotchas:

  • daemon installation of Nix package manager needs to be executed in the context of the VM main user
  • after daemon installation nix-env and all installed binaries reside in /nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin folder but as shell has not been restarted links to those binaries are not available to the session and have to be started from that location

do not forget to sudo tail -f /var/log/cloud-init-output.log to check or observe the finalization of the installation which will take some time after the VM is deployed

rg.bicep

To achieve VM installation including its Resource Group, installation is framed with this Bicep template:

targetScope = 'subscription' // Resource group must be deployed under 'subscription' scope

param location string
param resourceGroupName string
param computerName string
param vmSize string = 'Standard_DS1_v2'
param adminUsername string = 'admin'
@secure()
param adminPasswordOrKey string
param customData string

param vmImagePublisher string
param vmImageOffer string
param vmImageSku string

resource rg 'Microsoft.Resources/resourceGroups@2021-01-01' = {
  name: resourceGroupName
  location: location
}

module vm 'vm.bicep' = {
  name: 'vm'
  scope: rg
  params: {
    location: location
    computerName: computerName
    vmSize: vmSize
    vmImagePublisher: vmImagePublisher
    vmImageOffer: vmImageOffer
    vmImageSku: vmImageSku
    adminUsername: adminUsername
    adminPasswordOrKey: adminPasswordOrKey
    customData: customData
  }
}
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vm.bicep

Then VM is deployed with another Bicep in the scope of the Resource Group:

param location string = resourceGroup().location
param computerName string
param vmSize string = 'Standard_D2s_v3'

param adminUsername string = 'admin'
@secure()
param adminPasswordOrKey string
param customData string = 'echo customData'

var authenticationType = 'sshPublicKey'
param vmImagePublisher string
param vmImageOffer string
param vmImageSku string

var vnetAddressPrefix = '192.168.43.0/27'

var vmPublicIPAddressName = '${computerName}-ip'
var vmVnetName = '${computerName}-vnet'
var vmNsgName = '${computerName}-nsg'
var vmNicName = '${computerName}-nic'
var vmDiagnosticStorageAccountName = '${replace(computerName, '-', '')}${uniqueString(resourceGroup().id)}'

var shutdownTime = '2200'
var shutdownTimeZone = 'W. Europe Standard Time'

var linuxConfiguration = {
  disablePasswordAuthentication: true
  ssh: {
    publicKeys: [
      {
        path: '/home/${adminUsername}/.ssh/authorized_keys'
        keyData: adminPasswordOrKey
      }
    ]
  }
}

var resourceTags = {
  vmName: computerName
}

resource vmNsg 'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups@2022-01-01' = {
  name: vmNsgName
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {
    securityRules: [
      {
        name: 'in-SSH'
        properties: {
          protocol: 'Tcp'
          sourcePortRange: '*'
          destinationPortRange: '22'
          sourceAddressPrefix: '*'
          destinationAddressPrefix: '*'
          access: 'Allow'
          priority: 1000
          direction: 'Inbound'
        }
      }
    ]
  }
}

resource vmVnet 'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks@2022-01-01' = {
  name: vmVnetName
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {
    addressSpace: {
      addressPrefixes: [
        vnetAddressPrefix
      ]
    }
  }
}

resource vmSubnet 'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/subnets@2022-01-01' = {
  name: 'vm'
  parent: vmVnet
  properties: {
    addressPrefix: vnetAddressPrefix
    networkSecurityGroup: {
      id: vmNsg.id
    }
  }
}

resource vmDiagnosticStorage 'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts@2019-06-01' = {
  name: vmDiagnosticStorageAccountName
  location: location
  sku: {
    name: 'Standard_LRS'
  }
  kind: 'Storage'
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {}
}

resource vmPublicIP 'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses@2019-11-01' = {
  name: vmPublicIPAddressName
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {
    publicIPAllocationMethod: 'Dynamic'
    dnsSettings: {
      domainNameLabel: computerName
    }
  }
}

resource vmNic 'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces@2022-01-01' = {
  name: vmNicName
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {
    ipConfigurations: [
      {
        name: 'ipconfig1'
        properties: {
          privateIPAllocationMethod: 'Dynamic'
          publicIPAddress: {
            id: vmPublicIP.id
          }
          subnet: {
            id: vmSubnet.id
          }
        }
      }
    ]
  }
}

resource vm 'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines@2022-03-01' = {
  name: computerName
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  identity: {
    type: 'SystemAssigned'
  }
  properties: {
    priority: 'Spot'
    evictionPolicy: 'Deallocate'
    billingProfile: {
      maxPrice: -1
    }
    hardwareProfile: {
      vmSize: vmSize
    }
    storageProfile: {
      imageReference: {
        publisher: vmImagePublisher
        offer: vmImageOffer
        sku: vmImageSku
        version: 'latest'
      }
      osDisk: {
        createOption: 'FromImage'
        diskSizeGB: 1024
      }
    }
    osProfile: {
      computerName: computerName
      adminUsername: adminUsername
      adminPassword: adminPasswordOrKey
      customData: base64(customData)
      linuxConfiguration: ((authenticationType == 'password') ? null : linuxConfiguration)
    }
    networkProfile: {
      networkInterfaces: [
        {
          id: vmNic.id
        }
      ]
    }
    diagnosticsProfile: {
      bootDiagnostics: {
        enabled: true
        storageUri: vmDiagnosticStorage.properties.primaryEndpoints.blob
      }
    }
  }
}

resource vmShutdown 'Microsoft.DevTestLab/schedules@2018-09-15' = {
  name: 'shutdown-computevm-${computerName}'
  location: location
  tags: resourceTags
  properties: {
    status: 'Enabled'
    taskType: 'ComputeVmShutdownTask'
    dailyRecurrence: {
      time: shutdownTime
    }
    timeZoneId: shutdownTimeZone
    notificationSettings: {
      status: 'Disabled'
    }
    targetResourceId: vm.id
  }
}
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Key elements and assumptions:

  • VM is installed with its own virtual network - in case VM would need to be integrated in an existing VNET, that part would need adaption
  • a Network Security Group is created and added to the Subnet which opens SSH-port 22 - for non-experimental use it is advised to place the VM behind a Bastion service, use Just-In-Time access or protect otherwise
  • automatic VM shutdown is achieved with a DevTestLab/schedules resource, be aware that such a resource is not available everywhere e.g. missing in Azure China; additionally time zone and point of time are hard-wired currently, please adapt to your own needs

What else can you do with Nix?

nix-shell - temporarily running packages

nix-shell can be used to bring a package temporarily - without modifying your system persistently - to your system and shell into an environment, where you can use the package until you exit:

$ nix-shell -p python311 --run python
Python 3.11.4 (main, Jun  6 2023, 22:16:46) [GCC 12.3.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>
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In the case of the Nix Python package, it can even be extended that particular Python libraries are made available temporarily:

$ nix-shell -p '((import <nixpkgs> {}).python311.withPackages (p: [p.numpy, p.pandas]))' --run python
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nix-store - managing Nix store

A useful command to clean up local packages from the store, which are no longer linked, is nix-store --gc.

A slightly advanced configuration

This configuration adds

  • activating experimental feature Nix Flakes
  • installing Docker as a service
  • separates packages I want to have system wide in /nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin (Docker, less and curl) and only for the user in ~/.nix-profile/bin (Git and Rust toolchain)
#cloud-config
write_files:
  - path: /tmp/install-nix.sh
    content: | 
      #!/bin/bash
      sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon --yes
      mkdir -p ~/.config/nix
      echo "experimental-features = nix-command" > ~/.config/nix/nix.conf
    permissions: '0755'
  - path: /tmp/root-setup.nix
    content: | 
        with import <nixpkgs> {}; [
          less
          curl
          docker
        ]
    permissions: '0644'
  - path: /tmp/user-setup.nix
    content: | 
        with import <nixpkgs> {}; [
          git
          rustup
        ]
    permissions: '0644'
  - path: /usr/lib/systemd/system/docker.service
    content: | 
        [Unit]
        Description=Docker Application Container Engine
        Documentation=https://docs.docker.com
        After=network.target

        [Service]
        Type=notify
        # the default is not to use systemd for cgroups because the delegate issues still
        # exists and systemd currently does not support the cgroup feature set required
        # for containers run by docker
        ExecStart=/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin/dockerd
        ExecReload=/bin/kill -s HUP $MAINPID
        # Having non-zero Limit*s causes performance problems due to accounting overhead
        # in the kernel. We recommend using cgroups to do container-local accounting.
        LimitNOFILE=infinity
        LimitNPROC=infinity
        LimitCORE=infinity
        # Uncomment TasksMax if your systemd version supports it.
        # Only systemd 226 and above support this version.
        #TasksMax=infinity
        TimeoutStartSec=0
        # set delegate yes so that systemd does not reset the cgroups of docker containers
        Delegate=yes
        # kill only the docker process, not all processes in the cgroup
        KillMode=process

        [Install]
        WantedBy=multi-user.target
runcmd:
- export USER=$(awk -v uid=1000 -F":" '{ if($3==uid){print $1} }' /etc/passwd)

- sudo -H -u $USER bash -c '/tmp/install-nix.sh'

# root configuration
- /nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin/nix-env -if /tmp/root-setup.nix
- systemctl enable docker
- systemctl start docker

# VM user configuration
- sudo -H -u $USER bash -c '/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin/nix-env -if /tmp/user-setup.nix'
- sudo -H -u $USER bash -c '~/.nix-profile/bin/rustup default stable'
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Conclusion

With this configuration I have a slim distribution combined with a powerful package management environment available to add and remove packages in a clean way - exactly what I need for experimental and development workloads.

I assume that Nix offers far more capabilities than just installing packages - which I will continue to explore to have an alternative for the relatively clunky and sensitive cloud-init installation approach.

P.S.

If you want start posting articles "at scale" and want to see how I post on https://dev.to, https://ops.io and https://hashnode.com in one go, check out my repo + script. It is not really elegant, has a bulky usability, it is PowerShell, but it does the trick - hence it is "me".

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