Add a site
In this tutorial, you will follow step-by-step instructions to bring an existing site to Cloudflare using Pulumi infrastructure as code (IaC) to familiarize yourself with the resource management lifecycle. In particular, you will create a Zone and a DNS record to resolve your newly added site. This tutorial adopts the IaC principle to complete the steps listed in the Add site tutorial.
Ensure you have:
- A Cloudflare account and API Token with permission to edit the resources in this tutorial. If you need to, sign up for a Cloudflare account ↗ before continuing. Your token must have:
Zone-Zone-Edit
permissionZone-DNS-Edit
permissioninclude-All zones from an account-<your account>
zone resource
- A Pulumi Cloud account. You can sign up for an always-free individual tier ↗.
- The Pulumi CLI is installed on your machine.
- A Pulumi-supported programming language ↗ is configured. (TypeScript, JavaScript, Python, Go, .NET, Java, or use YAML)
- A domain name. You may use
example.com
to complete the tutorial.
A Pulumi project is a collection of files in a dedicated folder that describes the infrastructure you want to create. The Pulumi project folder is identified by the required Pulumi.yaml
file. You will use the Pulumi CLI to create and configure a new project.
Use a new and empty directory for this tutorial.
Pulumi Cloud ↗ is a hosted service that provides a secure and scalable platform for managing your infrastructure as code. You will use it to store your Pulumi backend configurations.
At the prompt, press Enter to log into your Pulumi Cloud account via the browser. Alternatively, you may provide a Pulumi Cloud access token ↗.
A Pulumi program is code written in a supported programming language ↗ that defines infrastructure resources.
To create a program, select your language of choice and run the pulumi
command:
A Pulumi stack ↗ is an instance of a Pulumi program. Stacks are independently configurable and may represent different environments (development, staging, production) or feature branches. For this tutorial, you’ll use the dev
stack.
To instantiate your dev
stack, run:
You have not defined any resources at this point, so you’ll have an empty stack.
In this step, you will store your settings in a Pulumi ESC Environment ↗, a YAML file containing configurations and secrets. These can be accessed in several ways, including a Pulumi program. All ESC Environments securely reside in your Pulumi Cloud account and can be fully managed via the Pulumi CLI. For this tutorial, you will store the following values:
- Your Cloudflare account ID.
- A valid Cloudflare API token.
- A domain. For instance,
example.com
.
You need to install the Cloudflare package for your language of choice in order to define Cloudflare resources in your Pulumi program.
Install the Cloudflare package by running the following command:
Below are Apache Maven instructions. For other Java project managers such as Gradle, see the official Maven repository ↗
- Open your
pom.xml
file. - Add the Pulumi Cloudflare dependency inside the
<dependencies>
section.
- Run:
There are no dependencies to download for YAML. Skip ahead.
With the Cloudflare package installed, you can now define any supported Cloudflare resource ↗ in your Pulumi program. You’ll define a Zone, and a DNS Record next.
A domain, or site, is known as a Zone in Cloudflare. In Pulumi, the Zone resource ↗ represents a Cloudflare Zone.
Replace the contents of your entrypoint file with the following:
Filename: index.js
Filename: index.ts
Filename: __main__.py
Filename: main.go
Filename: src/main/java/myproject/App.java
Filename: Program.cs
Filename: Pulumi.yaml
Notice that the code also outputs several properties from the Zone resource, such as the zoneId
, nameservers
, and status
, so that they can easily be accessed in subsequent steps.
You will now add a DNS Record resource ↗ to test previously configured Zone.
Add the following code snippet to your entrypoint file after the Zone resource definition:
Filename: index.js
Filename: index.ts
Filename: __main__.py
Filename: main.go
Filename: src/main/java/myproject/App.java
Filename: Program.cs
Filename: Pulumi.yaml
Now that you have defined your resources, you can deploy the changes using the Pulumi CLI so that they are reflected in your Cloudflare account.
To deploy the changes, run:
Once you have added a domain to Cloudflare, that domain will receive two assigned authoritative nameservers.
To retrieve the assigned nameservers
, run:
Update the nameservers at your registrar to activate Cloudflare services for your domain. The instructions are registrar-specific. You may be able to find guidance under this consolidated list of common registrars.
Once successfully registered, your domain status
will change to active
.
You will run two nslookup
commands against the Cloudflare-assigned nameservers.
To test your site, run:
For .NET, use Nameservers
as the Output.
Confirm your response returns the IP address(es) for your site.
In this last step, you will remove the resources and stack used throughout the tutorial.
You have incrementally defined Cloudflare resources needed to add a site to Cloudflare. You declare the resources in your programming language of choice and let Pulumi handle the rest.
To deploy a serverless app with Pulumi, follow the Deploy a Worker tutorial.