salt/doc/topics/beacons/index.rst

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.. _beacons:
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=======
Beacons
=======
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The beacon system allows the minion to hook into a variety of system processes
and continually monitor these processes. When monitored activity occurs in
a system process, an event is sent on the Salt event bus that can
be used to trigger a :ref:`reactor <reactor>`.
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Salt beacons can currently monitor and send Salt events for many system
activities, including:
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- file system changes
- system load
- service status
- shell activity, such as user login
- network and disk usage
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See :ref:`beacon modules <all-salt.beacons>` for a current list.
.. note::
Salt beacons are an event generation mechanism. Beacons leverage the Salt
:ref:`reactor <reactor>` system to make changes when beacon events occur.
Configuring Beacons
===================
Salt beacons does not require any changes to the system process that
is being monitored, everything is configured using Salt.
Beacons are typically enabled by placing a ``beacons:`` top level block in the
minion configuration file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
beacons:
inotify:
/etc/httpd/conf.d: {}
/opt: {}
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The beacon system, like many others in Salt, can also be configured via the
minion pillar, grains, or local config file.
Beacon Monitoring Interval
--------------------------
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Beacons monitor on a 1-second interval by default. To set a different interval,
provide an ``interval`` argument to a beacon. The following beacons run on
5- and 10-second intervals:
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.. code-block:: yaml
beacons:
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inotify:
/etc/httpd/conf.d: {}
/opt: {}
interval: 5
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load:
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- 1m:
- 0.0
- 2.0
- 5m:
- 0.0
- 1.5
- 15m:
- 0.1
- 1.0
- interval: 10
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Beacon Example
==============
This example demonstrates configuring the :py:mod:`~salt.beacons.inotify`
beacon to monitor a file for changes, and then create a backup each time
a change is detected.
.. note::
The inotify beacon requires Pyinotify on the minion, install it using
``salt myminion pkg.install python-inotify``.
First, on the Salt minion, add the following beacon configuration to
``/ect/salt/minion``:
.. code-block:: yaml
beacons:
inotify:
home/user/importantfile:
mask:
- modify
Replace ``user`` in the previous example with the name of your user account,
and then save the configuration file and restart the minion service.
Next, create a file in your home directory named ``importantfile`` and add some
simple content. The beacon is now set up to monitor this file for
modifications.
View Events on the Master
-------------------------
On your Salt master, start the event runner using the following command:
.. code-block:: bash
salt-run state.event pretty=true
This runner displays events as they are received on the Salt event bus. To test
the beacon you set up in the previous section, make and save
a modification to the ``importantfile`` you created. You'll see an event
similar to the following on the event bus:
.. code-block:: json
salt/beacon/minion1/inotify/home/user/importantfile {
"_stamp": "2015-09-09T15:59:37.972753",
"data": {
"change": "IN_IGNORED",
"id": "minion1",
"path": "/home/user/importantfile"
},
"tag": "salt/beacon/minion1/inotify/home/user/importantfile"
}
This indicates that the event is being captured and sent correctly. Now you can
create a reactor to take action when this event occurs.
Create a Reactor
----------------
On your Salt master, create a file named ``srv/reactor/backup.sls``. If the
``reactor`` directory doesn't exist, create it. Add the following to ``backup.sls``:
.. code-block:: yaml
backup file:
cmd.file.copy:
- tgt: {{ data['data']['id'] }}
- arg:
- {{ data['data']['path'] }}
- {{ data['data']['path'] }}.bak
Next, add the code to trigger the reactor to ``ect/salt/master``:
.. code-block:: yaml
reactor:
- salt/beacon/*/inotify/*/importantfile:
- /srv/reactor/backup.sls
This reactor creates a backup each time a file named ``importantfile`` is
modified on a minion that has the :py:mod:`~salt.beacons.inotify` beacon
configured as previously shown.
.. note::
You can have only one top level ``reactor`` section, so if one already
exists, add this code to the existing section. See :ref:`Understanding
the Structure of Reactor Formulas <reactor-structure>` to learn more about
reactor SLS syntax.
Start the Salt Master in Debug Mode
-----------------------------------
To help with troubleshooting, start the Salt master in debug mode:
.. code-block:: yaml
service salt-master stop
salt-master -l debug
When debug logging is enabled, event and reactor data are displayed so you can
discover syntax and other issues.
Trigger the Reactor
-------------------
On your minion, make and save another change to ``importantfile``. On the Salt
master, you'll see debug messages that indicate the event was received and the
``file.copy`` job was sent. When you list the directory on the minion, you'll now
see ``importantfile.bak``.
All beacons are configured using a similar process of enabling the beacon,
writing a reactor SLS, and mapping a beacon event to the reactor SLS.
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Writing Beacon Plugins
======================
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Beacon plugins use the standard Salt loader system, meaning that many of the
constructs from other plugin systems holds true, such as the ``__virtual__``
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function.
The important function in the Beacon Plugin is the ``beacon`` function. When
the beacon is configured to run, this function will be executed repeatedly
by the minion. The ``beacon`` function therefore cannot block and should be
as lightweight as possible. The ``beacon`` also must return a list of dicts,
each dict in the list will be translated into an event on the master.
Please see the :py:mod:`~salt.beacons.inotify` beacon as an example.