• Call: +1 (858) 429-9131

Posts Tagged ‘UDP’

Mosh aka mobile-shell

Mosh_demo_screenshot

Stumbled upon Mobile shell (Mosh) which allows persistent connection over intermittent connections, VPN – WiFi – networking roaming etc. Its quite useful especially when we have tons of nodes across multiple cloud providers & resulting attempts of their attention grabbing. Automating few things in a CRM made us  end up setting up a Postfix mail server after something like more than a decade, got frustrated over the nearly non-existent internet provided by Asianet DSL & all credit of this goes to them.

 

TL;DR Here is a quick guide to get Mosh working on Mac & GNU/Linux flavours.

 

Mosh uses UDP. Yes, you heard it right.

By default it uses 60000 to 61000 for establishing connections. We would need to open up some of these ports, say a subset of this in the fire wall mechanism that we use to get access to the servers.

There is a client & a server

I missed out this part ! Well, we need to install Mosh on the client and the server. (ie apt-get install mosh or yum install mosh on the servers too BOFH.)

On Amazon / AWS / EC2 cloud,

Open up few UDP ports in the security groups. We opened up 10 ports.

On DigitalOcean or any other provider open the ports in your firewall.

Client side installation:

On Mac,  we ran into issues with libprotobuf

> mosh migrate2cloud.com
dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/local/lib/libprotobuf.7.dylib
  Referenced from: /usr/local/bin/mosh-client
  Reason: image not found
Died at /usr/local/bin/mosh line 201. 

The solution is to upgrade Brew (well why shouldn’t one use brew ?)

brew update ; brew upgrade ;  brew remove libprotobuf ; brew install libprotobuf

will do the magic. If not,  we can try

         brew remove mosh ; brew install mosh

as well. If its doesn’t work, RTFM & the FAQ 🙂

Another issue we ran into was the locale & UTF-8 encoding. We fixed it by installing the locale in the client and server and exporting the following environment variable to the bash profile.

# for mosh
export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
export LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8
export MM_CHARSET=utf8
export LC_COLLATE=”en_US.UTF-8″
export LC_TIME=”en_US.UTF-8″
export LC_NUMERIC=”en_US.UTF-8″
export LC_MONETARY=”en_US.UTF-8″
export LC_MESSAGES=”en_US.UTF-8″

You load the environment variables by doing the following in bash.

. ~/.bash_profile   # don’t miss the dot at the beginning

Firewalls, Tunnelling, NAT

It may not work just yet as you may have to deal with NAT traversal and other nasty things. Creating an SSH tunnel can solve these issues.

mosh –ssh=”ssh -4 -R 2222:localhost:22 -i /Users/migrate2cloud/keys/ssh-key”  root@server.com

Reattaching a detached Mosh:mobile-shell is not possible. But we can run screen inside mobile shell.

do pkill mosh-server instead … or pgrep mosh-server -> kill etc

PS: if you use CIRU.org, things may be different for you.

That’s it. DigitalOcean guys have come up with a  nice write up here which is very helpful. There is also an Android client and iOS client in the making. On GNU/Linux I use KDE Konsole & on Mac iTerm : these are 2 good tools that are very useful IMHO.

How to Setup NFS Server on AWS EC2

This tutorial explains how to set up a highly available NFS server that can be used as storage solution (NAS – networked attached storage) for a cluster of web server instances that are being load balanced by a load balancer , for example ELB . If you have a web server cluster with two or more instances that serve the same web site contents, then these instances must access the same amount of data so that each one serves the same data, no matter if the load balancer directs the user to instance 1 or instance n. This can be achieved with an NFS share on an NFS server that all web server instances (the NFS clients) can access. Read more…