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Nextstrain infrastructure

Terraform configurations and related data and code for managing Nextstrain infrastructure on AWS (and maybe eventually Heroku, DNSimple, and more).

This repository is for shared or cross-project infrastructure. Project-specific infrastructure for nextstrain.org is managed by Terraform configurations in that repository.

Synopsis

One time initialization for the configuration:

terraform -chdir=env/production init

See what needs doing to bring actual resources into alignment with the current configuration:

terraform -chdir=env/production plan -out=plan

Make those changes so:

terraform -chdir=env/production apply plan

Important

You'll need ambiently-configured AWS credentials with broad admin-level access to read (and optionally modify) resources in our account.

You'll also need a GITHUB_TOKEN in the environment with the following fine-grained token permissions on our repos:

  • actions:write
  • administration:write

Please step cautiously and be careful when using these two sets of credentials!

Documentation

To come. For now, refer to nextstrain.org's Terraform documentation. The set ups are similar, though not identical.

One notable difference is that this repository uses import {} blocks instead of the terraform import command to bring existing resources into the fold. It's a much nicer experience that's harder to mess up and requires less understanding about Terraform state management.

How to add a new pathogen repository for use with pathogen-repo-build

Some changes are necessary to support a repository's use of our centralized pathogen-repo-build.yaml GitHub Actions workflow.

  1. Add the repository by its short name to the pathogen_repos variable in env/production/locals.tf. In most cases, this will be a line like:

    "repo-name" = ["repo-name"],
  2. Plan, review, and apply changes using the terraform command. See synopsis above, as well as nextstrain.org's Terraform documentation.

    The plan summary should be "4 to add, 1 to change, 0 to destroy". Added should be:

    • aws_iam_policy.NextstrainPathogen["repo-name"]
    • aws_iam_role.GitHubActionsRoleNextstrainRepo["repo-name"]
    • github_actions_repository_oidc_subject_claim_customization_template.nextstrain["repo-name"]
    • github_repository_topics.pathogen["repo-name"]

    Changed should be:

    • aws_iam_role.GitHubActionsRoleNextstrainBatchJobs, a new condition value entry like repo:nextstrain/repo-name:*:job_workflow_ref:….

Rule of thumb

from previous discussion

Though there's not full consensus on this, I (@tsibley) think it would be very valuable and prudent to adopt more of our cloud resources under the control of Terraform going forward. Long-term, the goal would be to have most resources under source-controlled management.

The rule of thumb here would be to import existing resources into our configuration as we need to make significant changes to them and to add new resources straight away. New resources are easier to add than existing resources and adding them straight away means less future work and an initial direction that's aligned with the long-term direction.

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