GopherAcademy
Brian Ketelsen
Jul 9, 2014 11 min read

Automatically Deploy A Revel Web Application

Introduction

The websites that power GopherAcademy and GopherCon are written using Revel, which is a very nice framework for building web applications. Go has a great built-in HTTP server, but there are times when you don’t want to roll-your-own web framework. Revel is great if you’re looking for a batteries-included approach to web development in Go.

I come from a Ruby and Rails background, and one of my favorite parts of the Rails ecosystem is Capistrano. Deploying a Rails app is just a simple “cap deploy” command once you’ve set things up correctly. I missed that with Revel. I know that I could have used Capistrano to deploy our Revel applications; capistrano isn’t limited in what you can use it to deploy. But I wanted an opportunity to learn new technologies and push my Linux/Git/Go learning a little bit. When Jeff Lindsay released Dokku I had my inspiration. I wanted to create an automated deployment system like Dokku, but without using Docker.

If you haven’t checked out Dokku yet, you should. It’s a tiny amount of Bash scripting that wraps the fabulous Docker deployment system. With Dokku and Docker, you can create a Heroku-like deployment system on your own Ubunut server. Dokku adds some hooks in the git workflow that intercepts your git push and deploys your app automatically.

I cloned the Dokku source and found that the meat of the git interception happens in gitreceive. Armed with this new knowledge, I set off to make something smaller than Dokku that would accept a git push and automatically deploy my Revel web applications.

Install gitreceive

The first step in making this happen is to install gitreceive. Follow the instructions on the gitreceive repository home page to download and initialize gitreceive on your server. This article presumes that you’re running Ubuntu 13+ like I am.

After you run _sudo_gitreceiveinit, gitreceive creates a “git” user on your server with a home directory at /home/git. It also creates a sample receiver script that shows an exmample of what you can do with the script. I copied this script and saved it as receiver.original so I could reference it later.

Install NginX

The next step in the deployment methodology is to have NginX proxy all of my Revel web applications.

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sudo apt-get install nginx

That was easy. I’ve decided that I’m going to deploy all my web applications at /var/www/$APPNAME/ using a capistrano-like setup where each release is in its own folder and the root has a symlink to the most current release.

Create the new receiver script

To deploy a Revel application, you have a few options. I develop on a Mac but deploy to Linux, so I knew I wanted to push the code to the server and use the Revel tools to package and deploy the web apps. See the Revel Deployment Guide for more information on your options.

Here’s how my new receiver script looks:

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#!/bin/bash
echo "Removing previous directory"
rm -rf /home/git/tmp/src/$1
echo "Creating new package directory"
mkdir -p /home/git/tmp/src/$1 && cat | tar -x -C /home/git/tmp/src/$1
export PATH=$PATH:/home/git/tmp/bin:/usr/local/go/bin
export GOPATH=/home/git/tmp
echo "Packaging application $1"
sed -i 's/BOGUSPASS/myMysqlRootPassword/g' /home/git/tmp/src/$1/conf/app.conf
revel package $1
mkdir -p /var/www/$1/releases/$2
tar -zxvf /home/git/$1/$1.tar.gz -C /var/www/$1/releases/$2
rm /var/www/$1/current 
ln -s /var/www/$1/releases/$2 /var/www/$1/current
chmod +x /var/www/$1/current/run.sh
sudo restart $1

Let’s walk through it line by line and explain what is going on.

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#!/bin/bash

This is a bash script. We have to put the shebang line in to mark it as such.

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echo "Removing previous directory"

Gitreceive is kind enough to pass stdout from your git push session back to the client. It’s really nice to have this feedback as the app is being assembled and deployed.

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rm -rf /home/git/tmp/src/$1

I created a $GOPATH in /home/git/tmp so that I could compile the Revel binary and have any packages installed that the web apps depend on. Here, I’m removing the last version of the application before the gitreceive script puts the new code there. You’ll need to have the revel binary somewhere in your path for this process to work. I installed it as the git user in /home/git/tmp/bin so it would be available to these scripts.

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echo "Creating new package directory"

More feedback for the remote user.

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mkdir -p /home/git/tmp/src/$1 && cat | tar -x -C /home/git/tmp/src/$1

This is where the gitreceive magic happens. First I create a directory with the name of the repository that’s being pushed. Then pipe the output of the gitreceive script (which is a tar’d version of the repository files you’re pushing with git) to the tar command, un-tarring them to /home/git/tmp/src/$1 where $1 represents the name of the repository.

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export PATH=$PATH:/home/git/tmp/bin:/usr/local/go/bin
export GOPATH=/home/git/tmp

These two lines setup a temporary $GOPATH and working environment for the compilation of the Revel web app.

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echo "Packaging application $1"

More feedback.

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sed -i 's/BOGUSPASS/myMysqlRootPassword/g' /home/git/tmp/src/$1/conf/app.conf

Here, I remove a placeholder password in my Revel app’s app.conf file and replace it with my real mysql password. Now I can keep the app’s source in a public repo on Github without compromising my server.

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revel package $1

The revel package command takes the Revel web application, compiles it, and creates a tar.gz file with the binary, assets and a shell script to run the app.

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mkdir -p /var/www/$1/releases/$2

This creates a directory under /var/www with the application name, and the git SHA like this: /var/www/gopheracademy/releases/biglonggitshahere.

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tar -zxvf /home/git/$1/$1.tar.gz -C /var/www/$1/releases/$2

Now untar the Revel package into the previously created directory.

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rm /var/www/$1/current 
ln -s /var/www/$1/releases/$2 /var/www/$1/current

These two commands remove the previously created current symlink and replace it with a symlink to the newest deployment.

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chmod +x /var/www/$1/current/run.sh

Mark the Revel run script as executable.

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sudo restart $1

Restart the Upstart service that runs the web application.

UPDATE

Rob Figueiredo emailed me with a few comments about the post. The best piece of advice he gave me was to ditch the revel package $1 command in favor of revel build $1 /var/www/$1/releases/$2 which shaves many seconds off the deployment and avoids the creation of the tar.gz file completely. Awesome! He also said that Revel supports environment variables in the app.conf file so I could export ${DBPASS} and use ${DBPASS} in my mysql connection script. I tried this and couldn’t make it work, more than likely it’s a problem with the setuid stanza in the Upstart script and how Upstart handles environment variables. I’ll keep trying with that piece. Thanks for the great advice Rob. And of course, thanks for Revel, we love it. The new script looks like this:

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#!/bin/bash
echo "Removing previous directory"
rm -rf /home/git/tmp/src/$1
echo "Creating new package directory"
mkdir -p /home/git/tmp/src/$1 && cat | tar -x -C /home/git/tmp/src/$1
export PATH=$PATH:/home/git/tmp/bin:/usr/local/go/bin
export GOPATH=/home/git/tmp
echo "Packaging application $1"
sed -i 's/BOGUSPASS/MyGoodPass/g' /home/git/tmp/src/$1/conf/app.conf
revel build $1 /var/www/$1/releases/$2
rm /var/www/$1/current 
ln -s /var/www/$1/releases/$2 /var/www/$1/current
chmod +x /var/www/$1/current/run.sh
sudo restart $1

NginX Configuration

There could be any number of Revel web apps deployed using this method. We have two running on this server, so I thought it would be convenient to put the NginX configuration files right in each application’s repositories. Each application has an nginx.conf file in the root of the repo that looks like this:

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upstream ga { server 127.0.0.1:9001; }
server { 
    listen      80;
    server_name $hostname;
    location    / {
        proxy_pass  http://ga;
        proxy_http_version 1.1;
        proxy_set_header Upgrade \$http_upgrade;
        proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade"; 
    }
}

This one is for GopherAcademy, it declares an upstream host on port 9001, which matches the Revel app’s configuration file setting for port.

In /etc/nginx/conf.d/ I added a file called autodeploy.conf with this line:

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include /var/www/*/current/src/*/nginx.conf;

Now NginX will automatically include configurations for any revel application deployed using this gitreceive script.

Upstart

The last step in this process is to create an Upstart script to run the shell script that Revel creates. Here’s the one for Gopher Academy, it lives in /etc/init/ and it’s called gopheracademy.conf:

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description "Gopheracademy Website"

start on (local-filesystems and net-device-up IFACE!=lo)

kill signal TERM
kill timeout 60

respawn
respawn limit 10 5

setgid mydeploymentuser
setuid mydeploymentuser

# oom score -999
#console log

script
    /var/www/gopheracademy/current/run.sh
end script

The important thing to note is that this Upstart script runs my Revel app as mydeploymentuser instead of running it as root. To start the web app from the command line type the following:

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start gopheracademy

That’s it. The service will start on server reboot, and it’s restarted as the last line of the gitreceive script mentioned above.

Setting up your git repository

To enable auto-deployment, you have to enable SSH keys for a git user. The gitreceive documentation shows this example:

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cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh you@yourserver.com "sudo gitreceive upload-key progrium"

where progrium is the user attached to the key. In my case it’s the user bketelsen because that’s who my key belongs to.

Now add a git remote to your repository:

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git remote add production bketelsen@myserver.ip.address:gopheracademy

This line is important, so let’s break it down. We’re creating a remote git repository reference called production, with the git user bketelsen (which has to match the git user you created with the upload-key command above) at my Ubuntu deployment server. The repository name gopheracademy corresponds to the $1 variable in the gitreceive scripts. So to emphasize that point again, the :gopheracademy piece of this command will be concatenated into the /var/www/$1 lines as /var/www/gopheracademy.

Profit

After adding the git remote, make changes to your local Revel application, commit them, then deploy using the following command:

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git push production master

This means “deploy the master branch to the remote named production”. You can watch the output of your gitreceive command from your command prompt as you deploy.

I suspect you’ll end up with some permissions issues as you follow along. The simplest thing to do is to make your /var/www directory owned by the git user, and make the user in your Upstart script’s setuid stanza the git user as well.

I hope you enjoyed this tutorial. It was a fun project project and I learned quite a bit about Revel packaging and Bash scripting along the way.

Here’s some sample output of an actual deployment of the Gopher Academy website:

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Ix:gopheracademy bketelsen$ git push production master
Counting objects: 19, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (10/10), done.
Writing objects: 100% (10/10), 946 bytes, done.
Total 10 (delta 8), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Removing previous directory
remote: Creating new package directory
remote: Packaging application gopheracademy
remote: ~
remote: ~ revel! http://robfig.github.com/revel
remote: ~
remote: 2013/07/09 15:52:44 revel.go:267: Loaded module static
remote: 2013/07/09 15:52:44 build.go:72: Exec: [/usr/local/go/bin/go build -tags  -o /home/git/tmp/bin/gopheracademy gopheracademy/app/tmp]
remote: Your archive is ready: gopheracademy.tar.gz
remote: gopheracademy
remote: run.bat
remote: run.sh
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/conf/mime-types.conf
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/static/app/controllers/static.go
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/app/controllers/testrunner.go
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/app/plugin.go
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/app/views/TestRunner/FailureDetail.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/app/views/TestRunner/Index.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/app/views/TestRunner/SuiteResult.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/conf/routes
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/public/css/bootstrap.css
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/public/images/favicon.png
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/modules/testrunner/public/js/jquery-1.9.1.min.js
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/403.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/403.json
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/403.txt
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/403.xml
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/404-dev.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/404.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/404.json
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/404.txt
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/404.xml
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/500-dev.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/500.html
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/500.json
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/500.txt
remote: src/github.com/robfig/revel/templates/errors/500.xml
remote: src/gopheracademy/README.md
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/content/building-stathat-with-go.article
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/content/building-stathat-with-go_stathat_architecture.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/content/building-stathat-with-go_weather.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/controllers/app.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/controllers/db.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/controllers/init.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/controllers/jobs.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/controllers/newsletter.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/models/jobs.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/routes/routes.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/tmp/main.go
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Application/Index.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/Confirm.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/Find.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/HandlePostSubmit.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/Index.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/Post.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/Jobs/Show.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/errors/404.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/errors/500.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/footer.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/app/views/header.html
remote: src/gopheracademy/conf/app.conf
remote: src/gopheracademy/conf/routes
remote: src/gopheracademy/db/dbconf.yml
remote: src/gopheracademy/db/migrations/001_jobs.sql
remote: src/gopheracademy/messages/sample.en
remote: src/gopheracademy/nginx.conf
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/css/bootstrap-responsive.css
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/css/bootstrap-responsive.min.css
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/css/bootstrap.css
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/css/bootstrap.min.css
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/images/building-stathat-with-go_stathat_architecture.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/images/building-stathat-with-go_weather.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/images/favicon.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/images/project.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/img/glyphicons-halflings-white.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/img/glyphicons-halflings.png
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/js/bootstrap.js
remote: src/gopheracademy/public/js/bootstrap.min.js
remote: src/gopheracademy/tests/apptest.go
remote: gopheracademy start/running, process 21270
To git@my.server.ip:gopheracademy
   dd71f2b..5117a28  master -> master

UPDATE

With the new receiver script changes that Rob Figueiredo pointed out, the output of a deployment is much smaller, and significantly faster to boot. Here’s what it looks like now:

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brians-air:gopheracademy bketelsen$ git push production master
Counting objects: 7, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (4/4), done.
Writing objects: 100% (4/4), 401 bytes, done.
Total 4 (delta 2), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Removing previous directory
remote: Creating new package directory
remote: Packaging application gopheracademy
remote: ~
remote: ~ revel! http://robfig.github.com/revel
remote: ~
remote: 2013/07/10 01:22:13 revel.go:267: Loaded module static
remote: 2013/07/10 01:22:13 build.go:72: Exec: [/usr/local/go/bin/go build -tags  -o /home/git/tmp/bin/gopheracademy gopheracademy/app/tmp]
remote: gopheracademy start/running, process 22938
To git@my.server.ip.address:gopheracademy
   c3bf1da..2806965  master -> master

I love automating things! This entire process was HEAVILY inspired by Jeff Lindsay’s Dokku scripts. Many thanks to him for creating such an inspiring project.