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12 KiB
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================================
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Miscellaneous Salt Cloud Options
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================================
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This page describes various miscellaneous options available in Salt Cloud
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Deploy Script Arguments
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=======================
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Custom deploy scripts are unlikely to need custom arguments to be passed to
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them, but salt-bootstrap has been extended quite a bit, and this may be
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necessary. script_args can be specified in either the profile or the map file,
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to pass arguments to the deploy script:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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ec2-amazon:
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provider: my-ec2-config
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image: ami-1624987f
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size: t1.micro
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ssh_username: ec2-user
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script: bootstrap-salt
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script_args: -c /tmp/
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This has also been tested to work with pipes, if needed:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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script_args: | head
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Selecting the File Transport
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============================
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By default, Salt Cloud uses SFTP to transfer files to Linux hosts. However, if
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SFTP is not available, or specific SCP functionality is needed, Salt Cloud can
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be configured to use SCP instead.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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file_transport: sftp
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file_transport: scp
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Sync After Install
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==================
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Salt allows users to create custom modules, grains, and states which can be
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synchronised to minions to extend Salt with further functionality.
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This option will inform Salt Cloud to synchronise your custom modules, grains,
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states or all these to the minion just after it has been created. For this to
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happen, the following line needs to be added to the main cloud
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configuration file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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sync_after_install: all
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The available options for this setting are:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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modules
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grains
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states
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all
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Setting Up New Salt Masters
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===========================
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It has become increasingly common for users to set up multi-hierarchal
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infrastructures using Salt Cloud. This sometimes involves setting up an
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instance to be a master in addition to a minion. With that in mind, you can
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now lay down master configuration on a machine by specifying master options
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in the profile or map file.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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make_master: True
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This will cause Salt Cloud to generate master keys for the instance, and tell
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salt-bootstrap to install the salt-master package, in addition to the
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salt-minion package.
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The default master configuration is usually appropriate for most users, and
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will not be changed unless specific master configuration has been added to the
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profile or map:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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master:
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user: root
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interface: 0.0.0.0
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Setting Up a Salt Syndic with Salt Cloud
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========================================
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In addition to `setting up new Salt Masters`_, :ref:`syndic`s can also be
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provisioned using Salt Cloud. In order to set up a Salt Syndic via Salt Cloud,
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a Salt Master needs to be installed on the new machine and a master configuration
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file needs to be set up using the ``make_master`` setting. This setting can be
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defined either in a profile config file or in a map file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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make_master: True
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To install the Salt Syndic, the only other specification that needs to be
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configured is the ``syndic_master`` key to specify the location of the master
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that the syndic will be reporting to. This modification needs to be placed
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in the ``master`` setting, which can be configured either in the profile,
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provider, or ``/etc/salt/cloud`` config file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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master:
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syndic_master: 123.456.789 # may be either an IP address or a hostname
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Many other Salt Syndic configuration settings and specifications can be passed
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through to the new syndic machine via the ``master`` configuration setting.
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See the :ref:`syndic` documentation for more information.
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SSH Port
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========
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By default ssh port is set to port 22. If you want to use a custom port in
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provider, profile, or map blocks use ssh_port option.
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.. versionadded:: 2015.5.0
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.. code-block:: yaml
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ssh_port: 2222
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SSH Port
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========
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By default ssh port is set to port 22. If you want to use a custom port in
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provider, profile, or map blocks use ssh_port option.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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ssh_port: 2222
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Delete SSH Keys
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===============
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When Salt Cloud deploys an instance, the SSH pub key for the instance is added
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to the known_hosts file for the user that ran the salt-cloud command. When an
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instance is deployed, a cloud host generally recycles the IP address for
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the instance. When Salt Cloud attempts to deploy an instance using a recycled
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IP address that has previously been accessed from the same machine, the old key
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in the known_hosts file will cause a conflict.
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In order to mitigate this issue, Salt Cloud can be configured to remove old
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keys from the known_hosts file when destroying the node. In order to do this,
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the following line needs to be added to the main cloud configuration file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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delete_sshkeys: True
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Keeping /tmp/ Files
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===================
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When Salt Cloud deploys an instance, it uploads temporary files to /tmp/ for
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salt-bootstrap to put in place. After the script has run, they are deleted. To
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keep these files around (mostly for debugging purposes), the --keep-tmp option
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can be added:
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.. code-block:: bash
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salt-cloud -p myprofile mymachine --keep-tmp
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For those wondering why /tmp/ was used instead of /root/, this had to be done
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for images which require the use of sudo, and therefore do not allow remote
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root logins, even for file transfers (which makes /root/ unavailable).
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Hide Output From Minion Install
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===============================
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By default Salt Cloud will stream the output from the minion deploy script
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directly to STDOUT. Although this can been very useful, in certain cases you
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may wish to switch this off. The following config option is there to enable or
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disable this output:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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display_ssh_output: False
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Connection Timeout
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==================
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There are several stages when deploying Salt where Salt Cloud needs to wait for
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something to happen. The VM getting it's IP address, the VM's SSH port is
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available, etc.
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If you find that the Salt Cloud defaults are not enough and your deployment
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fails because Salt Cloud did not wait log enough, there are some settings you
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can tweak.
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.. admonition:: Note
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All settings should be provided in lowercase
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All values should be provided in seconds
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You can tweak these settings globally, per cloud provider, or event per profile
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definition.
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wait_for_ip_timeout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The amount of time Salt Cloud should wait for a VM to start and get an IP back
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from the cloud host.
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Default: varies by cloud provider ( between 5 and 25 minutes)
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wait_for_ip_interval
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The amount of time Salt Cloud should sleep while querying for the VM's IP.
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Default: varies by cloud provider ( between .5 and 10 seconds)
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ssh_connect_timeout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The amount of time Salt Cloud should wait for a successful SSH connection to
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the VM.
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Default: varies by cloud provider (between 5 and 15 minutes)
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wait_for_passwd_timeout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The amount of time until an ssh connection can be established via password or
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ssh key.
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Default: varies by cloud provider (mostly 15 seconds)
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wait_for_passwd_maxtries
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The number of attempts to connect to the VM until we abandon.
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Default: 15 attempts
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wait_for_fun_timeout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Some cloud drivers check for an available IP or a successful SSH connection
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using a function, namely, SoftLayer, and SoftLayer-HW. So, the amount of time
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Salt Cloud should retry such functions before failing.
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Default: 15 minutes.
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wait_for_spot_timeout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The amount of time Salt Cloud should wait before an EC2 Spot instance is
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available. This setting is only available for the EC2 cloud driver.
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Default: 10 minutes
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Salt Cloud Cache
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================
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Salt Cloud can maintain a cache of node data, for supported providers. The
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following options manage this functionality.
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update_cachedir
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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On supported cloud providers, whether or not to maintain a cache of nodes
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returned from a --full-query. The data will be stored in ``msgpack`` format
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under ``<SALT_CACHEDIR>/cloud/active/<DRIVER>/<PROVIDER>/<NODE_NAME>.p``. This
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setting can be True or False.
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diff_cache_events
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When the cloud cachedir is being managed, if differences are encountered
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between the data that is returned live from the cloud host and the data in
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the cache, fire events which describe the changes. This setting can be True or
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False.
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Some of these events will contain data which describe a node. Because some of
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the fields returned may contain sensitive data, the ``cache_event_strip_fields``
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configuration option exists to strip those fields from the event return.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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cache_event_strip_fields:
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- password
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- priv_key
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The following are events that can be fired based on this data.
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salt/cloud/minionid/cache_node_new
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**********************************
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A new node was found on the cloud host which was not listed in the cloud
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cachedir. A dict describing the new node will be contained in the event.
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salt/cloud/minionid/cache_node_missing
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**************************************
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A node that was previously listed in the cloud cachedir is no longer available
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on the cloud host.
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salt/cloud/minionid/cache_node_diff
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***********************************
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One or more pieces of data in the cloud cachedir has changed on the cloud
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host. A dict containing both the old and the new data will be contained in
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the event.
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SSH Known Hosts
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===============
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Normally when bootstrapping a VM, salt-cloud will ignore the SSH host key. This
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is because it does not know what the host key is before starting (because it
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doesn't exist yet). If strict host key checking is turned on without the key
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in the ``known_hosts`` file, then the host will never be available, and cannot
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be bootstrapped.
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If a provider is able to determine the host key before trying to bootstrap it,
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that provider's driver can add it to the ``known_hosts`` file, and then turn on
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strict host key checking. This can be set up in the main cloud configuration
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file (normally ``/etc/salt/cloud``) or in the provider-specific configuration
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file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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known_hosts_file: /path/to/.ssh/known_hosts
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If this is not set, it will default to ``/dev/null``, and strict host key
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checking will be turned off.
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It is highly recommended that this option is *not* set, unless the user has
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verified that the provider supports this functionality, and that the image
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being used is capable of providing the necessary information. At this time,
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only the EC2 driver supports this functionality.
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SSH Agent
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=========
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.. versionadded:: 2015.5.0
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If the ssh key is not stored on the server salt-cloud is being run on, set
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ssh_agent, and salt-cloud will use the forwarded ssh-agent to authenticate.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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ssh_agent: True
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File Map Upload
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===============
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.. versionadded:: 2014.7.0
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The ``file_map`` option allows an arbitrary group of files to be uploaded to the
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target system before running the deploy script. This functionality requires a
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provider uses salt.utils.cloud.bootstrap(), which is currently limited to the ec2,
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gce, openstack and nova drivers.
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The ``file_map`` can be configured globally in ``/etc/salt/cloud``, or in any cloud
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provider or profile file. For example, to upload an extra package or a custom deploy
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script, a cloud profile using ``file_map`` might look like:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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ubuntu14:
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provider: ec2-config
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image: ami-98aa1cf0
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size: t1.micro
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ssh_username: root
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securitygroup: default
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file_map:
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/local/path/to/custom/script: /remote/path/to/use/custom/script
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/local/path/to/package: /remote/path/to/store/package
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