Life has been busy – no apologies or excuses, but, ya know, it’s 2020. Yet, I’m trying to slowly make my way back into playing with Rust. I decided to move my EC2 instance from AWS-Linux to the Ubuntu image; for one, I got tired of fighting with LetsEncode to get it to renew my SSL cert every 3 months. Also, I wanted to see how a redeploy of my Rust web app would go and if it still worked (why wouldn’t it?). So, lets see how tough it is to get my environment back to the same place. I took some notes (in case I needed to restart, sigh), so let’s go through it.
Go back to Part 1to see what this fake web app is about and how I got here – I need to reread it myself! So, first, this is what I ended up needing to add to what I got from the default Ubuntu image:
sudo apt install build-essential checkinstall zlib1g-dev pig-config libssl-dev libpq-dev postgresql postgresql-contrib -y
Lots of that was needed in order to get OpenSSL installed, I was following along hints here. Continuing those instructions, I did:
cd /usr/local/src/
sudo wget https://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-1.1.1g.tar.gz
sudo tar -xf openssl-1.1.1g.tar.gz
cd openssl-1.1.1g
sudo ./config --prefix=/usr/local/ssl --openssldir=/usr/local/ssl shared zlib
sudo make
sudo make test
sudo make install
sudo echo "/usr/local/ssl/lib" > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/openssl-1.1.1g.conf
sudo ldconfig -v
sudo mv /usr/bin/c_rehash /usr/bin/c_rehash.backup
sudo mv /usr/bin/openssl /usr/bin/openssl.backup
sudo nano /etc/environment # to add "/usr/local/ssl/bin" to the PATH
Next, instead of solely storing my code on a potentially tenuous EC2 server, I wanted to keep it backed up on my Google Drive (or whatever you like, this solution works with MANY network storage). I used rclone for my Raspberry Pi photo frame so I was familiar with that already.
curl https://rclone.org/install.sh | sudo bash
rclone config # to add google drive and authorize it
Ok, the most fun step!!
curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
cd ~/projects/rust
git clone git@github.com:jculverhouse/pinpoint_shooting.git
I need nginx for my app
sudo apt install nginx
sudo service nginx start
And now the much more reliable LetsEncrypt using Ubuntu 18.04
# follow instructions at https://certbot.eff.org/lets-encrypt
# setup root cronjob to renew once/week
For my Rocket-powered Rust app, I followed some reminders here to connect it to nginx. Simple enough, really, mostly relevant:
...
server_name pinpointshooting.com; # managed by Certbot
location {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000;
}
...
What? Nginx still has TLS 1 and 1.1 turned on by default? Followed this and removed those, tested the config, and restarted nginx. All of that I checked with SSLLabs via https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/analyze.html :
sudo nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf # to remove TLS1 TLS1.1 from any line
sudo nano /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf # to remove TLS1 TLS1.1 from any line
sudo nginx -t
sudo service nginx reload
I’ll need Postgres for my PinpointShooting app as well, found some steps to follow here, plus I needed to setup for my own app and run the initial migrations to get it up-to-date. That involved another change so I could login with the password from a non-user-account.
cargo install diesel_cli --no-default-features --features posters
psql -d postgres -U postgres
create user pinpoint password 'yeahrightgetyourown'; # save this in file .env in app dir
create database pinpoint;
grant all privileges on database pinpoint to pinpoint;
sudo nano /etc/postgresql/10/main/pg\_hba.conf # to edit "local all all" line to be md5 instead of peer
sudo service postgresql restart
psql -d postgres -U pinpoint # to test password above; just exit
cd ~/projects/rust/pinpointshooting
diesel migration run
Finally:
rustup default nightly # because Rocket, sigh...
cargo update
cargo build --release
target/release/pps &
And, we’re back online! Turns out, a redeploy of my Rust web app was about as easy as I could expect! If the app happens to be running, check it out here (though, there isn’t much to see or anything to do): pinpointshooting.com. Also, browse the repo and feel free to send me comments on how to be better about using idiomatic Rust!
The post Scraping off the Dust: Redeploy of my Rust web app appeared first on Learning Rust.
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