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253 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
253 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
Deployment system for web applications, originally intended for hosting Yesod
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applications. Keter does the following actions for your application:
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* Binds to the main port (usually port 80) and reverse proxies requests to your application based on virtual hostnames.
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* Provides SSL support if requested.
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* Automatically launches applications, monitors processes, and relaunches any processes which die.
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* Provides graceful redeployment support, by launching a second copy of your application, performing a health check, and then switching reverse proxying to the new process.
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* Management of log files.
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Keter provides many more advanced features and extension points. It allows
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configuration of static hosts, redirect rules, management of PostgreSQL
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databases, and more. It supports a simple bundle format for applications which
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allows for easy management of your web apps.
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## Quick Start
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To get Keter up-and-running quickly on an Ubuntu system, run:
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wget -O - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/snoyberg/keter/master/setup-keter.sh | bash
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(Note: you may need to run the above command twice, if the shell exits after
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`apt-get` but before running the rest of its instructions.) This will download
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and build Keter from source and get it running with a
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default configuration. By default Keter will be set up to support HTTPS and
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will require you to provide a key and certificate in `/opt/keter/etc`. You can
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disable HTTPS in `/opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml` by commenting the certificate
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and key lines.
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_This approach is not recommended for a production system_. We do not recommend
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installing a full GHC toolchain on a production server, nor running such ad-hoc
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scripts. This is intended to provide a quick way to play with Keter, especially
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for temporary virtual machines. For a production system, we recommend building
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the `keter` binary on a separate system, and tracking it via a package manager
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or similar strategy.
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## Bundling your app for Keter
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1. Modify your web app to check for the `PORT` environment variable, and have
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it listen for incoming HTTP requests on that port. Keter automatically
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assigns arbitrary ports to each web app it manages. The Yesod scaffold
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site is already equipped to read the `PORT` environment variable when
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it is set.
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2. Create a file `config/keter.yaml`. The minimal file just has two settings:
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```yaml
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exec: ../path/to/executable
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host: mydomainname.example.com
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```
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See the bundles section below for more available settings.
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3. Create a gzipped tarball with the `config/keter.yaml` file, your
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executable, and any other static resources you would like available to your
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application. This file should be given a `.keter` file extension, e.g.
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`myapp.keter`.
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4. Copy the `.keter` file to `/opt/keter/incoming`. Keter will monitor this
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directory for file updates, and automatically redeploy new versions of your
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bundle.
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## Setup
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Instructions are for an Ubuntu system. Eventually, I hope to provide a PPA for
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this (please contact me if you would like to assist with this). For now, the
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following steps should be sufficient:
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First, install PostgreSQL
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sudo apt-get install postgresql
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Second, build the `keter` binary and place it at `/opt/keter/bin`. To do so,
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you'll need to install the Haskell Platform, and can then build with `cabal`.
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This would look something like:
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sudo apt-get install haskell-platform
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cabal update
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cabal install keter
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sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/bin
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sudo cp ~/.cabal/bin/keter /opt/keter/bin
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Third, create a Keter config file. You can view a sample at
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https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/etc/keter-config.yaml.
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Fourth, set up an Upstart job to start `keter` when your system boots.
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```
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# /etc/init/keter.conf
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start on (net-device-up and local-filesystems and runlevel [2345])
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stop on runlevel [016]
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respawn
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console none
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exec /opt/keter/bin/keter /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml
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```
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Finally, start the job for the first time:
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sudo start keter
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Optionally, you may wish to change the owner on the `/opt/keter/incoming`
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folder to your user account, so that you can deploy without `sudo`ing.
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sudo mkdir -p /opt/keter/incoming
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sudo chown $USER /opt/keter/incoming
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## Bundles
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An application needs to be set up as a keter bundle. This is a GZIPed tarball
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with a `.keter` filename extension and which has one special file:
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`config/keter.yaml`. A sample file is available at
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https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/incoming/foo1_0/config/keter.yaml.
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Keter as well supports wildcard subdomains and exceptions, as in this example
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configuration:
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```yaml
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exec: ../com.example.app
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args:
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- Hello
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- World
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- 1
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host: www.example.com
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extra-hosts:
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- "*.example.com"
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- foo.bar.example.com
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static-hosts:
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- host: static.example.com
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root: ../static
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redirects:
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- from: example.com
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to: www.example.com
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```
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Due to YAML parsing, wildcard hostnames will need to be quoted as above.
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Wildcard hostnames are not recursive, so `foo.bar.example.com` must be
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explicitly added as an extra hostname in the above example, or
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alternatively, `*.*.example.com` would cover all host names two levels
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deep. It would not cover host names only one level deep, such as
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`qux.example.com`. In this manner, wildcard hostnames correspond to the
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manner in which SSL certificates are handled per RFC2818. Wildcards may
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be used in only one level of a hostname, as in `foo.*.example.com`.
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Full RFC2818 compliance is not present - `f*.example.com` will not be
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handled as a wildcard with a prefix.
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A sample Bash script for producing a Keter bundle is:
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```bash
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#!/bin/bash -ex
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cabal build
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strip dist/build/yesodweb/yesodweb
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rm -rf static/tmp
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tar czfv yesodweb.keter dist/build/yesodweb/yesodweb config static
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```
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For users of Yesod, The `yesod` executable provides a `keter` command for
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creating the bundle, and the scaffolded site provides a `keter.yaml` file.
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## Deploying
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In order to deploy, you simply copy the keter bundle to `/opt/keter/incoming`.
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To update an app, copy in the new version. The old process will only be
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terminated after the new process has started answering requests. To stop an
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application, delete the file from incoming.
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## PostgreSQL support
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Keter ships by default with a PostgreSQL plugin, which will handle management of PostgreSQL databases for your application. To use this, make the following changes:
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* Add the following lines to your `config/keter.yaml` file:
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```yaml
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plugins:
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postgres: true
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```
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(Note: The `plugins` configuration option was added in v1.0 of the
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keter configuration syntax. If you are using v0.4 then use `postgres: true`.)
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* Modify your application to get its database connection settings from the following environment variables:
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* `PGHOST`
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* `PGPORT`
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* `PGUSER`
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* `PGPASS`
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* `PGDATABASE`
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* The Yesod scaffold site is already equipped to read these environment
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variables when they are set.
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## Known issues
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* There are reports of Keter not working behind an nginx reverse proxy. From
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the reports, this appears to be a limitation in nginx's implementation, not a
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problem with Keter. Keter works fine behind other reverse proxies, including
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Apache and Amazon ELB.
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One possible workaround is to add the following lines to your nginx configuration:
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proxy_set_header Connection "";
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proxy_http_version 1.1;
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This has not yet been confirmed to work in production. If you use this,
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please report either its success or failure back to me.
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* Keter does not handle password-protected SSL key files well. When provided
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with such a key file, unlike Apache and Nginx, Keter will not pause to ask
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for the password. Instead, your https connections will merely stall.
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To get around this, you need to create a copy of the key without password
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and deploy this new key:
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openssl rsa -in original.key -out new.key
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(Back up the original key first, just in case.)
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## Stanza-based config files
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Starting with Keter 1.0, there is an alternate format for application Keter
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config files, which allows much more flexibility in defining multiple
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functionality for a single bundle (e.g., more than one web app, multiple
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redirects, etc). This README will eventually be updated to reflect all various
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options. In the meanwhile, please see the following examples of how to use this
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file format:
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* https://github.com/yesodweb/yesod-scaffold/blob/postgres/config/keter.yml
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* https://github.com/snoyberg/keter/blob/master/incoming/foo1_0/config/keter.yaml
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## Multiple SSL Certificates
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Keter is able to serve different certificates for different hosts, allowing for the deployment of distinct domains using the same server. An example `keter-config.yaml` would look like::
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```
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root: ..
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listeners:
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- host: "*4" # Listen on all IPv4 hosts
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port: 80
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- host: 127.0.0.1
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key: key.pem
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certificate: certificate1.pem
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- host: 127.0.0.2
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key: key.pem
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certificate: certificate2.pem
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```
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## FAQ
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* Keter spawns multiple failing process when run with `sudo start keter`.
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* This may be due to Keter being unable to find the SSL certificate and key.
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Try to run `sudo /opt/keter/bin/keter /opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml`.
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If it fails with `keter: etc/certificate.pem: openBinaryFile: does not exist`
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or something like it, you may need to provide valid SSL certificates and keys
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or disable HTTPS, by uncommenting the key and certificate lines from
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`/opt/keter/etc/keter-config.yaml`.
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