The Conch API has reached its end of life. So long and thanks for all the fish.
Conch helps you build and manage datacenters.
Conch's goal is to provide an end-to-end solution for full datacenter resource lifecycle: from design to initial power-on to end-of-life for all components of all devices.
Conch is open source, licensed under MPL2.
More documentation can be found here.
This repository only encompasses the API server. Repositories for other parts of the Conch ecosystem can be found here (some repositories may be private which will require you to request access):
- kosh, the command line interface
- web UI
- build infrastructure
- conch-relay, which sends device reports
- conch-relay-go, ""
- conch-reporter, ""
- conch-livesys, which configures live systems and creates device reports
The API is in a constant state of flux. Contact the development team before attempting to use it directly. The conch shell and the Web UI are our current stable interfaces.
We currently support Docker/Ubuntu. Being a Perl app, the API should run nearly anywhere but the code is only actively tested on macOS and Docker/Ubuntu.
The API is only certified to run against Perl 5.26.
Below is a list of useful Make commands that can be used to build and run the project. All of these should be run in the top level directory.
make run
-- Build the project and run itmake test
-- Run testsmake migrate-db
-- Run database migrations
Copy conch.conf.dist
to conch.conf
, modifying for any local parameters,
including database connectivity information.
make run
First, you need to get a login token into the local database. We can do this by leveraging the
knowledge that an encrypted password entry of ''
will match against all supplied inputs:
$ psql -U conch conch --command="insert into user_account (name, password, email) values ('me', '', 'your_email@joyent.com')"
Now, we use this email and password to generate a login token:
make run curl -i -H'Content-Type: application/json' --url http://127.0.0.1:5001/login -d '{"email":"your_email@joyent.com","password":"anything"}'
You will see output like this:
{"jwt_token":"eyJInR5cCI6Iwhargarbl.eyJl9pZCI6ImM1MGYwhargarbl.WV3uJEvg0bqInI9pEtl04ZZ8ECN4yQOSmehello"}
Save that token somewhere, such as in an environment variable or a file, for use in future API calls. You will include it in the "Authorization" header, for example:
curl -i --url https://staging.conch.joyent.us/user/me --header "Authorization: Bearer eyJInR5cCI6Iwhargarbl.eyJl9pZCI6ImM1MGYwhargarbl.WV3uJEvg0bqInI9pEtl04ZZ8ECN4yQOSmehello"
The most simple way to get going with the Conch API is to use Docker Compose.
First, build the image locally using docker/builder.sh
Copy conch.conf.dist
to conch.conf
, modifying for any local parameters.
Specifically search for 'docker' in the comments. Ignore the database
parameters.
# Edit compose file for desired release
docker-compose up -d postgres # initialize the postgres database
docker-compose run --rm web bin/conch-db all --username conch --email conch@example.com --password kaewee3hipheem8BaiHoo6waed7pha
docker-compose up -d
docker-compose down
# Edit compose file for desired release
docker-compose pull
docker-compose up -d postgres
docker-compose run --rm web bin/conch-db migrate
docker-compose up -d
Copyright Joyent, Inc.
This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License, v.2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file, You can obtain one at https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/.