Awesome
Yet Another Meteor UP
Production Quality Meteor Deployments
Yet Another Meteor UP (yamup for short) is a command line tool that allows you to deploy any Meteor app to your own server. It supports only Debian/Ubuntu flavours. (PRs are welcome)
You can install and use yamup from Linux, Mac.
Yet Another Meteor UP (yamup) does not use docker containers like all the rest MUP forks, it's based on the original MUP, but updated for modern Meteor times.
Note: I Can confirm this branch works with Meteor 1.5 Node 4.8.4 and MongoDB 3.2 and an Ubuntu 14 EC2 instance.
Note: I Can confirm this branch works with Meteor 1.6 Node 8.9.1 and MongoDB 3.2 and an Ubuntu 14/16/18 EC2 instance.
Screencast: How to deploy a Meteor app with Meteor Up (by Sacha Greif)
Table of Contents
- Features
- Server Configuration
- Installation
- Creating a yamup Project
- Example File
- Setting Up a Server
- Deploying an App
- Additional Setup/Deploy Information
- Access Logs
- Reconfiguring & Restarting
- Accessing the Database
- Multiple Deployments
- Server Specific Environment Variables
- SSL Support
- Updating
- Troubleshooting
- Additional Resources
Features
- Single command server setup
- Single command deployment
- Multi server deployment
- Environmental Variables management
- Support for
settings.json
- Password or Private Key(pem) based server authentication
- Access, logs from the terminal (supports log tailing)
- Support for multiple meteor deployments (experimental)
Server Configuration
- Auto-Restart if the app crashed (using forever)
- Auto-Start after the server reboot (using upstart/systemd)
- Stepdown User Privileges
- Revert to the previous version, if the deployment failed
- Secured MongoDB Installation (Optional)
- Pre-Installed PhantomJS (Optional)
Installation
Npm install
sudo npm install -g yamup
Git clone
sudo npm remove -g yamup # Only if you already installed yamup before
git clone https://github.com/bordalix/yamup.git
cd yamup
sudo npm install -g
Creating a yamup Project
mkdir ~/my-meteor-deployment
cd ~/my-meteor-deployment
yamup init
This will create two files in your Meteor Up project directory:
- yamup.json - yamup configuration file
- settings.json - Settings for Meteor's settings API
yamup.json
is commented and easy to follow (it supports JavaScript comments).
Example File
{
// Server authentication info
"servers": [
{
"host": "hostname",
"username": "root",
"password": "password",
// or pem file (ssh based authentication)
//"pem": "~/.ssh/id_rsa",
// Also, for non-standard ssh port use this
//"sshOptions": { "port" : 49154 },
// server specific environment variables
"env": {}
}
],
// Install MongoDB on the server. Does not destroy the local MongoDB on future setups
"setupMongo": true,
// WARNING: Node.js is required! Only skip if you already have Node.js installed on server.
"setupNode": true,
// WARNING: nodeVersion defaults to 8.9.1 if omitted. Do not use v, just the version number.
// For Meteor 1.5.*, use 4.8.4
"nodeVersion": "8.9.1",
// Install PhantomJS on the server
"setupPhantom": true,
// Show a progress bar during the upload of the bundle to the server.
// Might cause an error in some rare cases if set to true, for instance in Shippable CI
"enableUploadProgressBar": true,
// Application name (no spaces).
"appName": "meteor",
// Location of app (local directory). This can reference '~' as the users home directory.
// i.e., "app": "~/Meteor/my-app",
// This is the same as the line below.
"app": "/Users/bordalix/Meteor/my-app",
// Configure environment
// ROOT_URL must be set to https://YOURDOMAIN.com when using the spiderable package & force SSL
// your NGINX proxy or Cloudflare. When using just Meteor on SSL without spiderable this is not necessary
"env": {
"PORT": 80,
"ROOT_URL": "http://myapp.com",
"MONGO_URL": "mongodb://bordalix:fd8dsjsfh7@hanso.mongohq.com:10023/MyApp",
"MAIL_URL": "smtp://postmaster%40myapp.mailgun.org:adj87sjhd7s@smtp.mailgun.org:587/"
},
// yamup checks if the app comes online just after the deployment.
// Before yamup checks that, it will wait for the number of seconds configured below.
"deployCheckWaitTime": 15
}
Setting Up a Server
yamup setup
This will setup the server for the yamup
deployments. It will take around 2-5 minutes depending on the server's performance and network availability.
Deploying an App
yamup deploy
This will bundle the Meteor project and deploy it to the server.
Additional Setup/Deploy Information
Deploy Wait Time
yamup checks if the deployment is successful or not just after the deployment. By default, it will wait 10 seconds before the check. You can configure the wait time with the deployCheckWaitTime
option in the yamup.json
SSH keys with passphrase (or ssh-agent support)
This only tested with Mac/Linux
With the help of ssh-agent
, `` can use SSH keys encrypted with a
passphrase.
Here's the process:
- First remove your
pem
field from theyamup.json
. So, youryamup.json
only has the username and host only. - Then start a ssh agent with
eval $(ssh-agent)
- Then add your ssh key with
ssh-add <path-to-key>
- Then you'll asked to enter the passphrase to the key
- After that simply invoke
yamup
commands and they'll just work - Once you've deployed your app kill the ssh agent with
ssh-agent -k
Ssh based authentication with sudo
If your username is root
, you don't need to follow these steps
Please ensure your key file (pem) is not protected by a passphrase. Also the setup process will require NOPASSWD access to sudo. (Since Meteor needs port 80, sudo access is required.)
Make sure you also add your ssh key to the /YOUR_USERNAME/.ssh/authorized_keys
list
You can add your user to the sudo group:
sudo adduser *username* sudo
And you also need to add NOPASSWD to the sudoers file:
sudo visudo
# replace this line
%sudo ALL=(ALL) ALL
# by this line
%sudo ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
When this process is not working you might encounter the following error:
'sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified'
Server Setup Details
This is how yamup will configure the server for you based on the given appName
or using "meteor" as default appName. This information will help you customize the server for your needs.
- your app lives at
/opt/<appName>/app
- MongoDB installed and bound to the local interface (cannot access from the outside)
- the database is named
<appName>
- yamup uses
upstart
orsystemd
depending on your Ubuntu version:
upstart
- yamup uses
upstart
with a config file at/etc/init/<appName>.conf
- you can start and stop the app with
sudo start <appName>
andsudo stop <appName>
- logs are located at:
/var/log/upstart/<appName>.log
systemd
- yamup uses
systemd
with a config file at/etc/systemd/system/<appName>.service
- you can start and stop the app with
sudo service <appName> start
andsudo service <appName> stop
- logs are located at:
/var/log/syslog | grep <appName>
For more information see lib/taskLists.js
.
Multiple Deployment Targets
You can use an array to deploy to multiple servers at once.
To deploy to different environments (e.g. staging, production, etc.), use separate yamup configurations in separate directories, with each directory containing separate yamup.json
and settings.json
files, and the yamup.json
files' app
field pointing back to your app's local directory.
Custom Meteor Binary
Sometimes, you might be using mrt
, or Meteor from a git checkout. By default, yamup uses meteor
. You can ask yamup to use the correct binary with the meteorBinary
option.
{
...
"meteorBinary": "~/bin/meteor/meteor"
...
}
Access Logs
yamup logs -f
Mupc can tail logs from the server and supports all the options of tail
.
Reconfiguring & Restarting
After you've edit environmental variables or settings.json
, you can reconfigure the app without deploying again. Use the following command to do update the settings and restart the app.
yamup reconfig
If you want to stop, start or restart your app for any reason, you can use the following commands to manage it.
yamup stop
yamup start
yamup restart
Accessing the Database
You can't access the MongoDB from the outside the server. To access the MongoDB shell you need to log into your server via SSH first and then run the following command:
mongo appName
Server Specific Environment Variables
It is possible to provide server specific environment variables. Add the env
object along with the server details in the yamup.json
. Here's an example:
{
"servers": [
{
"host": "hostname",
"username": "root",
"password": "password",
"env": {
"SOME_ENV": "the-value"
}
}
...
}
By default, yamup adds CLUSTER_ENDPOINT_URL
to make cluster deployment simple. But you can override it by defining it yourself.
Multiple Deployments
yamup supports multiple deployments to a single server. yamup only does the deployment; if you need to configure subdomains, you need to manually setup a reverse proxy yourself.
Let's assume, we need to deploy production and staging versions of the app to the same server. The production app runs on port 80 and the staging app runs on port 8000.
We need to have two separate yamup projects. For that, create two directories and initialize yamup and add the necessary configurations.
In the staging yamup.json
, add a field called appName
with the value staging
. You can add any name you prefer instead of staging
. Since we are running our staging app on port 8000, add an environment variable called PORT
with the value 8000.
Now setup both projects and deploy as you need.
SSL Support
You can enable SSL in two different ways, via stud (deprecated) or using nginx and let's encrypt (prefered method).
Via nginx and let's encrypt
1 - Configure a nginx site with a proxy_pass:
file: /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com
server {
listen 80;
server_name example.com www.example.com;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
charset UTF-8;
server_name example.com www.example.com;
# meteor app
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:3001;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_cache_bypass $http_upgrade;
}
}
2 - Check your nginx configuration sintax:
sudo nginx -t
3 - Install certbot:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
sudo add-apt-repository universe
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:certbot/certbot
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install certbot python-certbot-nginx
4 - Generate the certificates
sudo certbot --nginx -d example.com -d www.example.com
It should append this 2 lines to the file /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com:
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot
5 - Reload nginx:
sudo nginx -s reload
6 - Configure yamup without SSL, and on port 3001.
file: yamup.json
{
// Server authentication info
"servers": [
{
"host": "example.com",
"username": "aws_username",
"pem": "aws_pem_file.pem"
}
],
// Install MongoDB in the server, does not destroy local MongoDB on future setup
"setupMongo": true,
// WARNING: Node.js is required! Only skip if you already have Node.js installed on server.
"setupNode": false,
// WARNING: If nodeVersion omitted will setup 0.10.36 by default. Do not use v, only version number.
"nodeVersion": "8.9.1",
// Install PhantomJS in the server
"setupPhantom": false,
// Show a progress bar during the upload of the bundle to the server.
// Might cause an error in some rare cases if set to true, for instance in Shippable CI
"enableUploadProgressBar": true,
// Application name (No spaces)
"appName": "example",
// Location of app (local directory)
"app": "./",
// Configure environment
"env": {
"PORT": 3001,
"ROOT_URL": "https://example.com",
"MONGO_URL": "mongodb://127.0.0.1/example"
},
// Meteor Up checks if the app comes online just after the deployment
// before mup checks that, it will wait for no. of seconds configured below
"deployCheckWaitTime": 15
}
7 - Deploy it with yamup deploy
or yamup reconfig
and you should have your site running with SSL via Let's Encrypt.
8 - To renew your certificates, just run on the server (you can put it on a cronjob also):
sudo certbot --nginx renew
9 - If you put the certificate renewal as a cronjob, you don't need to worry any more with SSL and certificates, and you can use yamup to simply build and deploy your Meteor app. Due to this, I don't plan to add support to Let's Encrypt directly.
More info on this gist.
Via stud
Note: deprecated method.
yamup has built in SSL support. It uses stud SSL terminator for that. First you need to get a SSL certificate from some provider. This is how to do that:
- First you need to generate a CSR file and the private key
- Then purchase a SSL certificate.
- Then generate a SSL certificate from your SSL providers UI.
- Then that'll ask to provide the CSR file. Upload the CSR file we've generated.
- When asked to select your SSL server type, select it as nginx.
- Then you'll get a set of files (your domain certificate and CA files).
Now you need combine SSL certificate(s) with the private key and save it in the mup config directory as ssl.pem
. Check this guide to do that.
Then add following configuration to your yamup.json
file.
{
...
"ssl": {
"pem": "./ssl.pem",
//"backendPort": 80
}
...
}
Now, simply do yamup setup
and now you've the SSL support.
- By default, it'll think your Meteor app is running on port 80. If it's not, change it with the
backendPort
configuration field.- SSL terminator will run on the default SSL port
443
- If you are using multiple servers, SSL terminators will run on the each server (This is made to work with cluster)
- Right now, you can't have multiple SSL terminators running inside a single server
Updating
To update yamup
to the latest version, just type:
npm update yamup -g
You should try and keep yamup
up to date in order to keep up with the latest Meteor changes. But note that if you need to update your Node version, you'll have to run yamup setup
again before deploying.
Troubleshooting
Check Access
Your issue might not always be related to yamup. So make sure you can connect to your instance first, and that your credentials are working properly.
Check Logs
If you suddenly can't deploy your app anymore, first use the yamup logs -f
command to check the logs for error messages.
One of the most common problems is your Node version getting out of date. In that case, see “Updating” section above.
Verbose Output
If you need to see the output of `` (to see more precisely where it's failing or hanging, for example), run it like so:
DEBUG=* yamup <command>
where <command>
is one of the yamup
commands such as setup
, deploy
, etc.
Errors with bcrypt
Don't use bcrypt (meteor npm uninstall bcrypt
) if after deployment your app crashes and outputs this type of errors (more info):
systemd[1]: Started testapp.
testapp[15111]: /usr/bin/node: symbol lookup error: /opt/testapp/app/programs/server/npm/node_modules/bcrypt/lib/binding/bcrypt_lib.node: undefined symbol: _ZN4node19GetCurrentEventLoopEPN2v87IsolateE
systemd[1]: testapp.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=127/n/a
systemd[1]: testapp.service: Unit entered failed state.
systemd[1]: testapp.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
systemd[1]: testapp.service: Service hold-off time over, scheduling restart.
systemd[1]: Stopped testapp.