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Using Terraform to Create Clients and Servers

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Using Terraform to Create Clients and Servers

Lab 2 jam universal_currency_alt 5 Kredit show_chart Menengah
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Overview

In this lab, you provision a Linux virtual machine in a private network to act as a database server. You also create a virtual machine that you can use as a bastion host to connect to the database server as an administrator. You configure the database server for remote connections and add a user account. You then install the MySQL-MariaDB client software to connect to the database server from a client machine.

Objectives

In this lab, you learn how to perform the following tasks:

  • Create client and server VMs.
  • Administer your database server.
  • Connect to the database from a client.

Setup and requirements

In this task, you use Qwiklabs and perform initialization steps for your lab.

For each lab, you get a new Google Cloud project and set of resources for a fixed time at no cost.

  1. Sign in to Qwiklabs using an incognito window.

  2. Note the lab's access time (for example, 1:15:00), and make sure you can finish within that time.
    There is no pause feature. You can restart if needed, but you have to start at the beginning.

  3. When ready, click Start lab.

  4. Note your lab credentials (Username and Password). You will use them to sign in to the Google Cloud Console.

  5. Click Open Google Console.

  6. Click Use another account and copy/paste credentials for this lab into the prompts.
    If you use other credentials, you'll receive errors or incur charges.

  7. Accept the terms and skip the recovery resource page.

Task 1. Create client and server VMs

  1. Open a new web browser window and navigate to the Google Cloud Console (console.cloud.google.com). Use the project selector to choose the first project with a leading name of 'qwiklabs-gcp.'

  2. On the Navigation menu (Navigation menu icon), click Cloud overview.

  3. In the Project info section, find your Project ID and copy and paste it into a text file. You will need it later.

The Project ID highlighted in the Project info section

  1. Click the Activate Cloud Shell (Activate Cloud Shell icon) icon in the upper right of the Console. The Cloud Shell terminal will open in a pane at the bottom of the window.

  2. Activate the Identity-Aware Proxy API which will allow you to connect to all of the Virtual Machines created within this project without configuring SSH keys. Enter the following command in the Cloud Shell:

gcloud services enable iap.googleapis.com
  1. To clone a GitHub repository that includes a completed version of the previous lab, enter the following command:
git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/training-data-analyst
  1. Change to the following folder:
cd ~/training-data-analyst/courses/db-migration/terraform-clients-servers/
  1. Type ls and you see this folder has the Terraform files completed from the last lab.

  2. Click Open Editor, and then from the training-data-analyst/courses/db-migration/terraform-clients-servers/ folder, open the terraform.tfvars file.

  3. Change the values in the terraform.tfvars file as noted below.

Item Value
project_id
gcp_region_1
gcp_zone_1



  1. Create a Debian Linux machine in the private network. Add a file named vm-mysql-server.tf, and paste the following Terraform code into it:
# Create a MySQL Server in Private VPC resource "google_compute_instance" "mysql-server" { name = "mysql-server-${random_id.instance_id.hex}" machine_type = "f1-micro" zone = var.gcp_zone_1 tags = ["allow-ssh", "allow-mysql"] boot_disk { initialize_params { image = "debian-cloud/debian-11" } } network_interface { network = google_compute_network.private-vpc.name subnetwork = google_compute_subnetwork.private-subnet_1.name # access_config { } } } output "mysql-server" { value = google_compute_instance.mysql-server.name } output "mysql-server-external-ip" { value = "NONE" } output "mysql-server-internal-ip" { value = google_compute_instance.mysql-server.network_interface.0.network_ip }
  1. Create a machine in the public network that you can use to administer that server. Add a file named vm-mysql-client.tf, and paste the following Terraform code into it:
# Create MySQL Client in Public VPC resource "google_compute_instance" "mysql-client" { name = "mysql-client-${random_id.instance_id.hex}" machine_type = "f1-micro" zone = var.gcp_zone_1 tags = ["allow-ssh"] boot_disk { initialize_params { image = "debian-cloud/debian-11" } } network_interface { network = google_compute_network.public-vpc.name subnetwork = google_compute_subnetwork.public-subnet_1.name access_config { } } } output "mysql-client" { value = google_compute_instance.mysql-client.name } output "mysql-client-external-ip" { value = google_compute_instance.mysql-client.network_interface.0.access_config.0.nat_ip } output "mysql-client-internal-ip" { value = google_compute_instance.mysql-client.network_interface.0.network_ip }
  1. Create a firewall rule to allow communication to MySQL Server from the public network. Open the vpc-firewall-rules-private.tf file, and add the following firewall rule to the end:
# allow MySQL only from public subnet resource "google_compute_firewall" "private-allow-mysql" { name = "${google_compute_network.private-vpc.name}-allow-mysql" network = google_compute_network.private-vpc.name allow { protocol = "tcp" ports = ["3306"] } source_ranges = [ "${var.subnet_cidr_public}" ] target_tags = ["allow-mysql"] }
  1. To initialize Terraform and create the plan, return to the Cloud Shell terminal and enter the following commands:
terraform init terraform plan
  1. To create the resources, run the following command:
terraform apply -auto-approve

Click Check my progress to verify the objective. Create client and server VMs

Task 2. Administer your database server

  1. When the Terraform process completes, on the Navigation menu (Navigation menu icon), click Compute Engine. Multiple machines should be listed.

  2. Find the mysql-server- machine, and make note of its internal IP address (it is likely 10.2.2.2 or 10.2.2.3).

  3. Click SSH for the mysql-server- machine to connect to that machine.

Note: At this point, you need to install MySQL on the server. However, because the server has no external IP address, it has no access to the internet, so you can't run the command to install MySQL. You fix that by adding a NAT using the Google Cloud NAT service.
  1. Execute the following command to see that it doesn't work; it eventually fails when trying to access the internet:
sudo apt install wget
  1. The message returned in the terminal will appear as follows:
Could not connect to debian.map...
  1. Type CTRL+C to end the command.

  2. Return to the Cloud Shell Code Editor, and in the training-data-analyst/courses/db-migration/terraform-clients-servers folder, add a file called cloud-nat.tf, and then add the following Terraform code to that file:

resource "google_compute_router" "nat-router" { name = "nat-router" region = google_compute_subnetwork.private-subnet_1.region network = google_compute_network.private-vpc.id bgp { asn = 64514 } } resource "google_compute_router_nat" "private-nat" { name = "private-nat" router = google_compute_router.nat-router.name region = google_compute_router.nat-router.region nat_ip_allocate_option = "AUTO_ONLY" source_subnetwork_ip_ranges_to_nat = "ALL_SUBNETWORKS_ALL_IP_RANGES" log_config { enable = true filter = "ERRORS_ONLY" } }
  1. Return to the Cloud Shell Terminal and run the following command to confirm you have no errors:
terraform plan
  1. Then apply the plan to create the NAT:
terraform apply -auto-approve
  1. Return to your SSH window that is connected to the MySQL Server. Run the following commands to install MySQL:
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install -y default-mysql-server
  1. To ensure that MySQL-MariaDB is running, enter the following command:
sudo systemctl status mysql

The output will appear as follows:

mariadb.service - MariaDB 10.5.15 database server Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/mariadb.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled) Active: active (running) since Mon 2022-08-01 20:55:10 UTC; 33s ago
  1. Type "q" to exit.

  2. Create a password for the root user with the following command:

sudo mysql_secure_installation

The initial password will be blank.

  1. Follow the instructions to create a password for root using a password you will remember. Select Yes to all the remaining prompts.

  2. Log in to the database using the root account with the following command:

sudo mysql -u root -p
  1. Enter your newly created password when prompted.

You need a user account to log in with from the client machine.

  1. To create a user named dbops with the password password, use the following command:
CREATE USER 'dbops'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'password'; GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON * . * TO 'dbops'@'%'; FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
  1. Type exit to exit the MySQL client.

By default, the database server only listens for connections on the local machine. A quick fix to the configuration will change that.

  1. Use the following command to open the configuration file in the Nano text editor:
sudo nano /etc/mysql/mariadb.conf.d/50-server.cnf
  1. Find the line bind-address and comment it out adding a "#" to the front of the line:
#bind-address = 127.0.0.1
  1. Type CTRL+X to exit, and answer Y when prompted to save your changes.

  2. To restart the database, enter the following command:

sudo systemctl restart mariadb

Click Check my progress to verify the objective. Administer your database server

  1. Type exit again to leave the server and return to the client VM.

Task 3. Connect to the database from a client

  1. To connect to the MySQL-MariaDB database from your client machine, you must install MySQL-MariaDB client software.

  2. On the Navigation menu (Navigation menu icon), click Compute Engine. Click SSH for the mysql-client- machine to connect to that terminal.

  3. In the new SSH window, enter the following commands to complete the installation:

sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install -y default-mysql-client
  1. Return to the Navigation menu (Navigation menu icon), click Compute Engine. Find the mysql-server- machine, and make note of its internal IP address (it is likely 10.2.2.2 or 10.2.2.3).

  2. To connect to your database, use the following command (replace SERVERIP with the IP address you just verified):

mysql -h SERVERIP -u dbops -p'password'
  1. Enter "\s" at the MariaDB prompt.

  2. Details will be returned for the Database server.

  3. Type exit to exit the MySQL client.

At this point, there's no database so there's nothing else to do, but you have a complete solution in place. Your database server is in a secure network with no public access. You have a Linux machine in the public network that can be used to administer the database and connect to the machine using the MySQL-MariaDB client software.

Click Check my progress to verify the objective. Connect to the database from a client

  1. Close your SSH session, and then return to the Cloud Shell terminal.

  2. To delete everything you created earlier in the lab, enter the following command:

terraform destroy -auto-approve

Congratulations! You have provisioned a Linux virtual machine in a private network to act as a database server. You also created a virtual machine that you can use as a bastion host to connect to the database server as an administrator. You configured the database server for remote connections and added a user account. You then installed the MySQL client software to connect to the database server from a client machine.

End your lab

When you have completed your lab, click End Lab. Google Cloud Skills Boost removes the resources you’ve used and cleans the account for you.

You will be given an opportunity to rate the lab experience. Select the applicable number of stars, type a comment, and then click Submit.

The number of stars indicates the following:

  • 1 star = Very dissatisfied
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You can close the dialog box if you don't want to provide feedback.

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