proxy_http_version 1.1;
@@ -120,29 +120,34 @@ Use a text editor to create a new file @/etc/nginx/conf.d/arvados-api-and-contro
# "available keep services" request with either a list of internal keep
# servers (0) or with the keepproxy (1).
#
-# TODO: Following the example here, update the netmask to the
-# your internal subnet.
+# Following the example here, update the 10.20.30.0/24 netmask
+# to match your private subnet.
+# Update 1.2.3.4 and add lines as necessary with the public IP
+# address of all servers that can also access the private network to
+# ensure they are not considered 'external'.
geo $external_client {
default 1;
+ 127.0.0.0/24 0;
10.20.30.0/24 0;
+ 1.2.3.4/32 0;
}
# This is the port where nginx expects to contact arvados-controller.
upstream controller {
- server xxxxx.example.com:8003 fail_timeout=10s;
+ server localhost:8003 fail_timeout=10s;
}
server {
# This configures the public https port that clients will actually connect to,
# the request is reverse proxied to the upstream 'controller'
- listen xxxxx.example.com:443 ssl;
+ listen *:443 ssl;
server_name xxxxx.example.com;
ssl on;
- ssl_certificate /TODO/YOUR/PATH/TO/cert.pem;
- ssl_certificate_key /TODO/YOUR/PATH/TO/cert.key;
+ ssl_certificate /YOUR/PATH/TO/cert.pem;
+ ssl_certificate_key /YOUR/PATH/TO/cert.key;
# Refer to the comment about this setting in the passenger (arvados
# api server) section of your Nginx configuration.
@@ -166,7 +171,7 @@ server {
# This configures the Arvados API server. It is written using Ruby
# on Rails and uses the Passenger application server.
- listen xxxxx.example.com:8004;
+ listen localhost:8004;
server_name localhost-api;
root /var/www/arvados-api/current/public;
@@ -174,8 +179,8 @@ server {
passenger_enabled on;
- # TODO: If you are using RVM, uncomment the line below.
- # If you're using system ruby, leave it commented out.
+ # If you are using RVM, uncomment the line below.
+ # If you're using system ruby, leave it commented out.
#passenger_ruby /usr/local/rvm/wrappers/default/ruby;
# This value effectively limits the size of API objects users can
@@ -192,28 +197,32 @@ server {
{% include 'install_packages' %}
+{% assign arvados_component = 'arvados-controller' %}
+
{% include 'start_service' %}
h2(#confirm-working). Confirm working installation
Confirm working controller:
-
-$ curl https://ClusterID.example.com/arvados/v1/config
-
+$ curl https://ClusterID.example.com/arvados/v1/config
+
Confirm working Rails API server:
-
-$ curl https://ClusterID.example.com/discovery/v1/apis/arvados/v1/rest
-
+$ curl https://ClusterID.example.com/discovery/v1/apis/arvados/v1/rest
+
Confirm that you can use the system root token to act as the system root user:
-
-$ curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $system_root_token" https://xxxxx.example.com/arvados/v1/users/current
-
+
+$ curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $system_root_token" https://ClusterID.example.com/arvados/v1/users/current
+
h3. Troubleshooting
-See the admin page on "Logging":{{site.baseurl}}/admin/logging.html .
+If you are getting TLS errors, make sure the @ssl_certificate@ directive in your nginx configuration has the "full certificate chain":http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/configuring_https_servers.html#chains
+
+Logs can be found in @/var/www/arvados-api/current/log/production.log@ and using @journalctl -u arvados-controller@.
+
+See also the admin page on "Logging":{{site.baseurl}}/admin/logging.html .