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What is Salt?
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We’re not just talking about NaCl.
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Salt is a distributed remote execution system used to execute commands and query
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data. It was developed in order to bring the best solutions found in the world
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of remote execution together and make them better, faster and more malleable.
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Salt accomplishes this via its ability to handle larger loads of information,
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and not just dozens, but hundreds or even thousands of individual servers,
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handle them quickly and through a simple and manageable interface.
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Versatility between massive scale deployments and smaller systems may seem
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daunting, but Salt is very simple to set up and maintain, regardless of the
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size of the project. The architecture of Salt is designed to work with any
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number of servers, from a handful of local network systems to international
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deployments across disparate data-centers. The topology is a simple server/client
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model with the needed functionality built into a single set of daemons.
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While the default configuration will work with little to no modification, salt
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can be fine tuned to meet specific needs.
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The core function of salt is to enable remote commands to be called in parallel
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rather than in serial, to use a secure and encrypted protocol, the smallest and
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fastest network payloads possible and with a simple programmer interface.
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Salt also introduces more granular controls to the realm of remote execution,
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allowing for commands to be executed in parallel and for systems to be targeted
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based on more than just hostname, but by system properties.
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Salt takes advantage of a number of technologies and techniques. The networking
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layer is built with the excellent zeromq networking library, so salt itself
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contains a viable, and transparent, amq broker inside the daemon. Salt uses
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public keys for authentication with the master daemon, then uses faster aes
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encryption for payload communication, this means that authentication and
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encryption are also built into Salt. Salt takes advantage of communication via
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python pickles, enabling fast and light network traffic.
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In order to allow for simple expansion, Salt execution routines can be written
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as plain python modules, and the data collected from salt executions can be sent
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back to the master server, or to any arbitrary program. Salt can be called from
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a simple python api, or from the command line, so that salt can be used to
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execute one-off commands as well as operate as an integral part of a larger
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application.
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The result is a system that can execute commands across groups of varying size,
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from very few to very many servers at considerably high speed. A system that is
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very fast, easy to set up and amazingly malleable, able to suit the needs of any
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number of servers working within the same system. Salt’s unique architecture
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brings together the best of the remote execution world, amplifies its
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capabilities and expands its range, resulting in this system that is as
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versatile as it is practical, able to suit any network.
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Salt is developed under the Apache 2.0 licence, and can be used for open and
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proprietary projects. Please submit your expansions to back so that we can all
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benefit together as Salt grows. So, please feel free to sprinkle some of this
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around your systems and let the deliciousness come forth.
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