Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

You have successfully unsubscribed! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates about Ubuntu and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

How to install Landscape Server with Juju

See also: Landscape Server charm (Charmhub)

Note: For more information on charms and bundles, visit Charmhub.

You can deploy Landscape in a scalable way with Juju.

Contents:

  1. Install Juju
  2. Deploy self-hosted Landscape Server
  3. Configure an SSL cert on HAProxy
  4. Access self-hosted Landscape

Install Juju

Install Juju as a snap with this command:

sudo snap install juju --classic

To learn more about Juju and to bootstrap a Juju controller, check out their getting started page.

Deploy self-hosted Landscape Server

When deploying with Juju, you will use a Juju bundle. A bundle is an encapsulation of all of the parts needed to deploy the required services as well as associated relations and configurations that the deployment requires. When deploying Landscape Server using Juju, there are three different methods you can use. Select the one that meets the needs for your environment.

landscape-dense-maas bundle

See also: Landscape-dense-maas bundle on Charmhub

If you have a MAAS server, you can take advantage of containers and use the landscape-dense-maas bundle:

juju deploy landscape-dense-maas

This will deploy Landscape on just one node using LXD containers for all services.

landscape-scalable bundle

See also: Landscape-scalable bundle on Charmhub

landscape-scalable each service gets its own machine. Currently that means you will need 4 machines for Landscape, and one for the controller node:

juju deploy landscape-scalable

landscape-dense bundle

See also: Landscape-dense bundle on Charmhub

landscape-dense is quite similar to the landscape-dense-maas deployment, but it installs the haproxy service directly on the machine without a container. All the other services use a container:

juju deploy landscape-dense

This is useful for the cases where the LXD containers don’t get externally routable IP addresses.

Configure an SSL cert on HAProxy

Create a SSL certificate with LetsEncrypt

If your Landscape instance has a public IP, and your FQDN resolves to that public IP, run the following code to get a valid SSL certificate from LetsEncrypt. Replace <EMAIL@EXAMPLE.COM> with an email address where certificate renewal reminders can be sent.

sudo certbot certonly --standalone -d $FQDN --non-interactive --agree-tos --email <EMAIL@EXAMPLE.COM>

This will produce a fullchain.pem and privkey.pem file which you need for HAProxy SSL termination.

Configure HAProxy with the certificate

Use the following commands to configure HAProxy with the generated certificate.

juju config haproxy ssl_cert="$(base64 fullchain.pem)"
juju config haproxy ssl_key="$(base64 privkey.pem)"

Access self-hosted Landscape

Once the deployment has finished, grab the address of the first haproxy unit and access it with your browser:

juju status haproxy

This page was last modified 3 months ago. Help improve this document in the forum.