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144 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
144 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
============
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The Top File
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============
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The top file is used to map what sls modules get loaded onto what minions via
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the state system. The top file creates a few general abstractions. First it
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maps what nodes should pull from which environments, next it defines which
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matches systems should draw from.
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Environments
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============
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The environments in the top file corresponds with the environments defined in
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the file_roots variable. In a simple, single environment setup you only have
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the base environment, and therefore only one state tree. Here is a simple
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example of file_roots in the master configuration:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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file_roots:
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base:
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- /srv/salt
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This means that the top file will only have one environment to pull from,
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here is a simple, single environment top file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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base:
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'*':
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- core
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- edit
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This also means that /srv/salt has a state tree. But if you want to use
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multiple environments, or partition the file server to serve more than
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just the state tree, then the file_roots option can be expanded:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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file_roots:
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base:
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- /srv/salt/base
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dev:
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- /srv/salt/dev
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qa:
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- /srv/salt/qa
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prod:
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- /srv/salt/prod
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Then our top file could reference the environments:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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dev:
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'webserver*dev*':
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- webserver
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'db*dev*':
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- db
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qa:
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'webserver*qa*':
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- webserver
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'db*qa*':
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- db
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prod:
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'webserver*prod*':
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- webserver
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'db*prod*':
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- db
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In this setup we have state trees in 3 of the 4 environments, and no state
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tree in the base environment. Notice that the targets for the minions
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specify environment data. In Salt the master determines who is in what
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environment, and many environments can be crossed together. For instance,
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a separate global state tree could be added to the base environment if
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it suits your deployment:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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base:
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'*':
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- global
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dev:
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'webserver*dev*':
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- webserver
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'db*dev*':
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- db
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qa:
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'webserver*qa*':
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- webserver
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'db*qa*':
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- db
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prod:
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'webserver*prod*':
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- webserver
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'db*prod*':
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- db
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In this setup all systems will pull the global sls from the base environment,
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as well as pull from their respective environments.
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Remember, that since everything is a file in salt, the environments are
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primarily file server environments, this means that environments that have
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nothing to do with states can be defined and used to distribute other files.
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A clean and recommended setup for multiple environments would look like this:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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# Master file_roots configuration:
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file_roots:
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base:
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- /srv/salt/base
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dev:
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- /srv/salt/dev
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qa:
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- /srv/salt/qa
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prod:
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- /srv/salt/prod
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Then only place state trees in the dev, qa and prod environments, leaving
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the base environment open for generic file transfers. Then the top.sls file
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would look something like this:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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dev:
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'webserver*dev*':
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- webserver
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'db*dev*':
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- db
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qa:
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'webserver*qa*':
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- webserver
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'db*qa*':
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- db
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prod:
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'webserver*prod*':
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- webserver
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'db*prod*':
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- db
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