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Nexus Shared Service

Sonatype Nexus (RepoManager) allows users in workspaces to access external software packages securely.

Documentation on Nexus can be found here: https://help.sonatype.com/repomanager3/.

Deploy

Caution

Before deploying the Nexus service, you will need workspaces of version 0.3.2 or above due to a dependency on a DNS zone link for the workspace(s) to connect to the Nexus VM.

Before deploying the Nexus shared service, you need to make sure that it will have access to a certificate to configure serving secure proxies. By default, the Nexus service will serve proxies from https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/, and thus it requires a certificate that validates ownership of this domain to use for SSL.

You can use the Certs Shared Service to set one up by following these steps:

  1. Run the below command in your terminal to build, publish and register the certs bundle:

    make shared_service_bundle BUNDLE=certs
    
  2. Navigate to the TRE UI, click on Shared Services in the navigation menu and click Create new.

  3. Select the Certs template, then fill in the required details. Domain prefix should be set to nexus and Cert name should be nexus-ssl.

Caution

If you have KeyVault Purge Protection enabled and are re-deploying your environment using the same cert_name, you may encounter this: Status=409 Code=\"Conflict\" Message=\"Certificate nexus-ssl is currently in a deleted but recoverable state. You need to either manually recover the certificate or purge it before redeploying.

Once deployed, the certs service will use Letsencrypt to generate a certificate for the specified domain prefix followed by -{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com, so in our case, having entered nexus, this will be nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com, which will be the public domain for our Nexus service.

You can verify whether this has been successful by navigating to your core keyvault (kv-{TRE_ID}) and looking for a certificate called nexus-ssl (or whatever you called it).

After verifying the certificate has been generated, you can deploy Nexus:

  1. Run the below command in your terminal to build, publish and register the Nexus shared service bundle:

    make shared_service_bundle BUNDLE=sonatype-nexus-vm
    
  2. Navigate back to the TRE UI, and click Create new again within the Shared Services page.

  3. Select the Nexus template then fill in the required details. The SSL certificate name should default to nexus-ssl, so there's no need to change it unless you gave it a different name in the previous step.

This will deploy the infrastructure required for Nexus, then start the service and configure it with the repository configurations located in the ./templates/shared_services/sonatype-nexus-vm/scripts/nexus_repos_config folder. It will also set up HTTPS using the certificate you generated in the previous section, so proxies can be served at https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com.

Setup and usage

  1. A TRE Administrator can access Nexus though the admin jumpbox provisioned as part of the TRE deployment. The username is adminuser and the password is located in the KeyVault under vm-<tre-id>-jumpbox-password
  2. A researcher can access Nexus from within the workspace by using the internal Nexus URL of https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com
  3. To fetch Python packages from the PyPI proxy, a researcher can use pip install while specifying the proxy server:
    pip install packagename --index-url https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/apt-pypi/simple
    

Info

In the built-in Linux and Windows Guacamole VM bundles, PyPI and several other package managers are already configured to use the Nexus proxy by default, so manually specifying in the install commands isn't neccesary.

Network requirements

Nexus Shared Service requires access to resources outside of the Azure TRE VNET. These are set as part of the firewall provisioning pipeline via explicit allow on Service Tags or URLs.

Service Tag / Destination Justification
AzureActiveDirectory Authorize the signed in user against Azure Active Directory.
AzureContainerRegistry Pull the Nexus container image, as it is located in Azure Container Registry.
pypi.org Enables Nexus to "proxy" python packages to use inside of workspaces.
repo.anaconda.com Enables Nexus to "proxy" conda packages to use inside of workspaces.
conda.anaconda.org Enables Nexus to "proxy" additional conda packages to use inside of workspaces such as conda-forge.
*.docker.com Enables Nexus to "proxy" docker repos to use inside of workspaces.
*.docker.io Enables Nexus to "proxy" docker repos to use inside of workspaces.
archive.ubuntu.com Enables Nexus to "proxy" apt packages to use inside of workspaces.
security.ubuntu.com Enables Nexus to "proxy" apt packages to use inside of workspaces.

Current Repos

Name Type Source URI Nexus URI Usage
PyPI PyPI [https://pypi.org/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/pypi/ Allow use of pip commands.
Conda conda [https://repo.anaconda.com/pkgs] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/conda-repo/ Configure conda to have access to default conda packages.
Conda Mirror conda [https://conda.anaconda.org] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/conda-mirror/ Configure conda to have access to conda mirror packages.
Docker apt [https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/docker/ Install Docker via apt on Linux systems.
Docker GPG raw [https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/docker-public-key/ Provide public key to sign apt source for above Docker apt.
Docker Hub docker [https://registry-1.docker.io] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/docker-hub/ Provide docker access to public images repo.
Ubuntu Packages apt [http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/ubuntu/ Provide access to Ubuntu apt packages on Ubuntu systems.
Ubuntu Security Packages apt [http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/ubuntu-security/ Provide access to Ubuntu Security apt packages on Ubuntu systems.
Almalinux yum [https://repo.almalinux.org] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/almalinux Install Almalinux packages
R-Proxy r [https://cran.r-project.org/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/r-proxy Provide access to CRAN packages for R
Fedora Project yum [https://download-ib01.fedoraproject.org] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/fedoraproject Install Fedora Project Linux packages
Microsoft Apt apt [https://packages.microsoft.com] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/microsoft-apt Provide access to Microsoft Apt packages
Microsoft Keys raw [https://packages.microsoft.com/keys/] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/microsoft-keys Provide access to Microsoft keys
Microsoft Yum yum [https://packages.microsoft.com/yumrepos] https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/repository/microsoft-yum Provide access to Microsoft Yum packages

Migrate from an existing V1 Nexus service (hosted on App Service)

If you still have an existing Nexus installation based on App Service (from the original V1 bundle), you can migrate to the VM-based Nexus service by following these steps:

  1. Install the new Nexus service alongside your old installation using the steps from earlier in this document.

  2. Identify any existing Guacamole user resources that are using the old proxy URL (https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.azurewebsites.net/). These will be any VMs with bundle versions < 0.3.2 that haven't been manually updated.

  3. These will need to be either re-deployed with the new template versions 0.3.2 or later and specifying an additional template parameter "nexus_version" with the value of "V2", or manually have their proxy URLs updated by remoting into the VMs and updating the various configuration files of required package managers with the new URL (https://nexus-{TRE_ID}.{LOCATION}.cloudapp.azure.com/).

    1. For example, pip will need the index, index-url and trusted-host values in the global pip.conf file to be modified to use the new URL.
  4. Once you've confirmed there are no dependencies on the old Nexus shared service, you can delete it using the API or UI.

Renewing certificates for Nexus

The Nexus service checks Keyvault regularly for the latest certificate matching the name you passed on deploy (nexus-ssl by default).

When approaching expiry, you can either provide an updated certificate into the TRE core KeyVault (with the name you specified when installing Nexus) if you brought your own, or if you used the certs shared service to generate one, just call the renew custom action on that service. This will generate a new certificate and persist it to the Keyvault, replacing the expired one.