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And fix doc example of what --list-images looks like
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155 lines
4.6 KiB
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=================================
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Getting Started With DigitalOcean
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=================================
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DigitalOcean is a public cloud host that specializes in Linux instances.
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Configuration
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=============
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Using Salt for DigitalOcean requires a ``personal_access_token``, an ``ssh_key_file``,
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and at least one SSH key name in ``ssh_key_names``. More ``ssh_key_names`` can be added
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by separating each key with a comma. The ``personal_access_token`` can be found in the
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DigitalOcean web interface in the "Apps & API" section. The SSH key name can be found
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under the "SSH Keys" section.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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# Note: This example is for /etc/salt/cloud.providers or any file in the
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# /etc/salt/cloud.providers.d/ directory.
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my-digitalocean-config:
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driver: digital_ocean
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personal_access_token: xxx
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ssh_key_file: /path/to/ssh/key/file
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ssh_key_names: my-key-name,my-key-name-2
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location: New York 1
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.. note::
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.. versionchanged:: 2015.8.0
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The ``provider`` parameter in cloud provider definitions was renamed to ``driver``. This
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change was made to avoid confusion with the ``provider`` parameter that is used in cloud profile
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definitions. Cloud provider definitions now use ``driver`` to refer to the Salt cloud module that
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provides the underlying functionality to connect to a cloud host, while cloud profiles continue
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to use ``provider`` to refer to provider configurations that you define.
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Profiles
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========
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Cloud Profiles
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Set up an initial profile at ``/etc/salt/cloud.profiles`` or in the
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``/etc/salt/cloud.profiles.d/`` directory:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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digitalocean-ubuntu:
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provider: my-digitalocean-config
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image: 14.04 x64
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size: 512MB
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location: New York 1
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private_networking: True
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backups_enabled: True
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ipv6: True
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Locations can be obtained using the ``--list-locations`` option for the ``salt-cloud``
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command:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# salt-cloud --list-locations my-digitalocean-config
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my-digitalocean-config:
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----------
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digital_ocean:
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----------
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Amsterdam 1:
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----------
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available:
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False
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features:
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[u'backups']
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name:
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Amsterdam 1
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sizes:
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[]
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slug:
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ams1
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...SNIP...
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Sizes can be obtained using the ``--list-sizes`` option for the ``salt-cloud``
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command:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# salt-cloud --list-sizes my-digitalocean-config
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my-digitalocean-config:
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----------
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digital_ocean:
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----------
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512MB:
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----------
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cost_per_hour:
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0.00744
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cost_per_month:
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5.0
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cpu:
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1
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disk:
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20
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id:
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66
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memory:
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512
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name:
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512MB
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slug:
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None
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...SNIP...
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Images can be obtained using the ``--list-images`` option for the ``salt-cloud``
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command:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# salt-cloud --list-images my-digitalocean-config
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my-digitalocean-config:
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----------
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digital_ocean:
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----------
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10.1:
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----------
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created_at:
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2015-01-20T20:04:34Z
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distribution:
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FreeBSD
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id:
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10144573
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min_disk_size:
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20
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name:
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10.1
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public:
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True
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...SNIP...
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.. note::
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DigitalOcean's concept of ``Applications`` is nothing more than a
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pre-configured instance (same as a normal Droplet). You will find examples
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such ``Docker 0.7 Ubuntu 13.04 x64`` and ``Wordpress on Ubuntu 12.10``
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when using the ``--list-images`` option. These names can be used just like
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the rest of the standard instances when specifying an image in the cloud
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profile configuration.
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.. note::
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If your domain's DNS is managed with DigitalOcean, you can automatically
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create A-records for newly created droplets. Use ``create_dns_record: True``
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in your config to enable this. Add ``delete_dns_record: True`` to also
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delete records when a droplet is destroyed.
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.. note::
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Additional documentation is available from `DigitalOcean <https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/automated-provisioning-of-digitalocean-cloud-servers-with-salt-cloud-on-ubuntu-12-04>`_.
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