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http://docs.saltstack.com/index.html#configuration-management -> http://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/index.html#configuration-management
500 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
500 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
The MacOS X (Maverick) Developer Step By Step Guide To Salt Installation
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========================================================================
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This document provides a step-by-step guide to installing a Salt cluster
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consisting of one master, and one minion running on a local VM hosted on Mac OS X.
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.. note::
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This guide is aimed at developers who wish to run Salt in a virtual machine.
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The official (Linux) walkthrough can be found
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`here <http://docs.saltstack.com/topics/tutorials/walkthrough.html>`_.
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The 5 Cent Salt Intro
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---------------------
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Since you're here you've probably already heard about Salt, so you already
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know Salt lets you configure and run commands on hordes of servers easily.
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Here's a brief overview of a Salt cluster:
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- Salt works by having a "master" server sending commands to one or multiple
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"minion" servers [#]_. The master server is the "command center". It is
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going to be the place where you store your configuration files, aka: "which
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server is the db, which is the web server, and what libraries and software
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they should have installed". The minions receive orders from the master.
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Minions are the servers actually performing work for your business.
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- Salt has two types of configuration files:
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1. the "salt communication channels" or "meta" or "config" configuration
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files (not official names): one for the master (usually is /etc/salt/master
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, **on the master server**), and one for minions (default is
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/etc/salt/minion or /etc/salt/minion.conf, **on the minion servers**). Those
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files are used to determine things like the Salt Master IP, port, Salt
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folder locations, etc.. If these are configured incorrectly, your minions
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will probably be unable to receive orders from the master, or the master
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will not know which software a given minion should install.
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2. the "business" or "service" configuration files (once again, not an
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official name): these are configuration files, ending with ".sls" extension,
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that describe which software should run on which server, along with
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particular configuration properties for the software that is being
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installed. These files should be created in the /srv/salt folder by default,
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but their location can be changed using ... /etc/salt/master configuration file!
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.. note::
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This tutorial contains a third important configuration file, not to
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be confused with the previous two: the virtual machine provisioning
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configuration file. This in itself is not specifically tied to Salt, but
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it also contains some Salt configuration. More on that in step 3. Also
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note that all configuration files are YAML files. So indentation matters.
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.. [#]
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Salt also works with "masterless" configuration where a minion is
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autonomous (in which case salt can be seen as a local configuration tool),
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or in "multiple master" configuration. See the documentation for more on
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that.
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Before Digging In, The Architecture Of The Salt Cluster
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-------------------------------------------------------
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Salt Master
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+++++++++++
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The "Salt master" server is going to be the Mac OS machine, directly. Commands
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will be run from a terminal app, so Salt will need to be installed on the Mac.
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This is going to be more convenient for toying around with configuration files.
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Salt Minion
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+++++++++++
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We'll only have one "Salt minion" server. It is going to be running on a
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Virtual Machine running on the Mac, using VirtualBox. It will run an Ubuntu
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distribution.
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Step 1 - Configuring The Salt Master On Your Mac
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================================================
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`official documentation
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<http://docs.saltstack.com/topics/installation/osx.html>`_
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Because Salt has a lot of dependencies that are not built in Mac OS X, we will
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use Homebrew to install Salt. Homebrew is a package manager for Mac, it's
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great, use it (for this tutorial at least!). Some people spend a lot of time
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installing libs by hand to better understand dependencies, and then realize how
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useful a package manager is once they're configuring a brand new machine and
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have to do it all over again. It also lets you *uninstall* things easily.
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.. note::
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Brew is a Ruby program (Ruby is installed by default with your Mac). Brew
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downloads, compiles, and links software. The linking phase is when compiled
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software is deployed on your machine. It may conflict with manually
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installed software, especially in the /usr/local directory. It's ok,
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remove the manually installed version then refresh the link by typing
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``brew link 'packageName'``. Brew has a ``brew doctor`` command that can
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help you troubleshoot. It's a great command, use it often. Brew requires
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xcode command line tools. When you run brew the first time it asks you to
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install them if they're not already on your system. Brew installs
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software in /usr/local/bin (system bins are in /usr/bin). In order to use
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those bins you need your $PATH to search there first. Brew tells you if
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your $PATH needs to be fixed.
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.. tip::
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Use the keyboard shortcut ``cmd + shift + period`` in the "open" Mac OS X
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dialog box to display hidden files and folders, such as .profile.
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Install Homebrew
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----------------
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Install Homebrew here http://brew.sh/
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Or just type
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.. code-block:: bash
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ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/Homebrew/homebrew/go/install)"
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Now type the following commands in your terminal (you may want to type ``brew
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doctor`` after each to make sure everything's fine):
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.. code-block:: bash
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brew install python
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brew install swig
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brew install zmq
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.. note::
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zmq is ZeroMQ. It's a fantastic library used for server to server network
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communication and is at the core of Salt efficiency.
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Install Salt
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------------
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You should now have everything ready to launch this command:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pip install salt
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.. note::
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There should be no need for ``sudo pip install salt``. Brew installed
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Python for your user, so you should have all the access. In case you
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would like to check, type ``which python`` to ensure that it's
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/usr/local/bin/python, and ``which pip`` which should be
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/usr/local/bin/pip.
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Now type ``python`` in a terminal then, ``import salt``. There should be no
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errors. Now exit the Python terminal using ``exit()``.
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Create The Master Configuration
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-------------------------------
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If the default /etc/salt/master configuration file was not created,
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copy-paste it from here:
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http://docs.saltstack.com/ref/configuration/examples.html#configuration-examples-master
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.. note::
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``/etc/salt/master`` is a file, not a folder.
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Salt Master configuration changes. The Salt master needs a few customization
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to be able to run on Mac OS X:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo launchctl limit maxfiles 4096 8192
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In the /etc/salt/master file, change max_open_files to 8192 (or just add the
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line: ``max_open_files: 8192`` (no quote) if it doesn't already exists).
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You should now be able to launch the Salt master:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo salt-master --log-level=all
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There should be no errors when running the above command.
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.. note::
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This command is supposed to be a daemon, but for toying around, we'll keep
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it running on a terminal to monitor the activity.
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Now that the master is set, let's configure a minion on a VM.
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Step 2 - Configuring The Minion VM
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==================================
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The Salt minion is going to run on a Virtual Machine. There are a lot of
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software options that let you run virtual machines on a mac, But for this
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tutorial we're going to use VirtualBox. In addition to virtualBox, we will use
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Vagrant, which allows you to create the base VM configuration.
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Vagrant lets you build ready to use VM images, starting from an OS image and
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customizing it using "provisioners". In our case, we'll use it to:
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* Download the base Ubuntu image
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* Install salt on that Ubuntu image (Salt is going to be the "provisioner"
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for the VM).
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* Launch the VM
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* SSH into the VM to debug
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* Stop the VM once you're done.
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Install VirtualBox
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------------------
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Go get it here: https://www.virtualBox.org/wiki/Downloads (click on VirtualBox
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for OS X hosts => x86/amd64)
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Install Vagrant
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---------------
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Go get it here: http://downloads.vagrantup.com/ and choose the latest version
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(1.3.5 at time of writing), then the .dmg file. Double-click to install it.
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Make sure the ``vagrant`` command is found when run in the terminal. Type
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``vagrant``. It should display a list of commands.
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Create The Minion VM Folder
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---------------------------
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Create a folder in which you will store your minion's VM. In this tutorial,
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it's going to be a minion folder in the $home directory.
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.. code-block:: bash
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cd $home
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mkdir minion
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Initialize Vagrant
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------------------
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From the minion folder, type
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.. code-block:: bash
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vagrant init
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This command creates a default Vagrantfile configuration file. This
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configuration file will be used to pass configuration parameters to the Salt
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provisioner in Step 3.
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Import Precise64 Ubuntu Box
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---------------------------
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.. code-block:: bash
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vagrant box add precise64 http://files.vagrantup.com/precise64.box
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.. note::
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This box is added at the global Vagrant level. You only need to do it
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once as each VM will use this same file.
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Modify the Vagrantfile
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----------------------
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Modify ./minion/Vagrantfile to use th precise64 box. Change the ``config.vm.box``
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line to:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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config.vm.box = "precise64"
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Uncomment the line creating a host-only IP. This is the ip of your minion
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(you can change it to something else if that IP is already in use):
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.. code-block:: yaml
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config.vm.network :private_network, ip: "192.168.33.10"
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At this point you should have a VM that can run, although there won't be much
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in it. Let's check that.
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Checking The VM
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---------------
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From the $home/minion folder type:
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.. code-block:: bash
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vagrant up
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A log showing the VM booting should be present. Once it's done you'll be back
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to the terminal:
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.. code-block:: bash
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ping 192.168.33.10
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The VM should respond to your ping request.
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Now log into the VM in ssh using Vagrant again:
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.. code-block:: bash
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vagrant ssh
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You should see the shell prompt change to something similar to
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``vagrant@precise64:~$`` meaning you're inside the VM. From there, enter the
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following:
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.. code-block:: bash
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ping 10.0.2.2
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.. note::
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That ip is the ip of your VM host (the Mac OS X OS). The number is a
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VirtualBox default and is displayed in the log after the Vagrant ssh
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command. We'll use that IP to tell the minion where the Salt master is.
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Once you're done, end the ssh session by typing ``exit``.
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It's now time to connect the VM to the salt master
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Step 3 - Connecting Master and Minion
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=====================================
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Creating The Minion Configuration File
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--------------------------------------
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Create the ``/etc/salt/minion`` file. In that file, put the
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following lines, giving the ID for this minion, and the IP of the master:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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master: 10.0.2.2
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id: 'minion1'
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file_client: remote
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Minions authenticate with the master using keys. Keys are generated
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automatically if you don't provide one and can accept them later on. However,
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this requires accepting the minion key every time the minion is destroyed or
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created (which could be quite often). A better way is to create those keys in
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advance, feed them to the minion, and authorize them once.
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Preseed minion keys
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-------------------
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From the minion folder on your Mac run:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo salt-key --gen-keys=minion1
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This should create two files: minion1.pem, and minion1.pub.
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Since those files have been created using sudo, but will be used by vagrant,
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you need to change ownership:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo chown youruser:yourgroup minion1.pem
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sudo chown youruser:yourgroup minion1.pub
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Then copy the .pub file into the list of accepted minions:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo cp minion1.pub /etc/salt/pki/master/minions/minion1
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Modify Vagrantfile to Use Salt Provisioner
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------------------------------------------
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Let's now modify the Vagrantfile used to provision the Salt VM. Add the
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following section in the Vagrantfile (note: it should be at the same
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indentation level as the other properties):
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.. code-block:: yaml
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# salt-vagrant config
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config.vm.provision :salt do |salt|
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salt.run_highstate = true
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salt.minion_config = "/etc/salt/minion"
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salt.minion_key = "./minion1.pem"
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salt.minion_pub = "./minion1.pub"
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end
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Now destroy the vm and recreate it from the /minion folder:
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.. code-block:: bash
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vagrant destroy
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vagrant up
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If everything is fine you should see the following message:
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.. code-block:: bash
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"Bootstrapping Salt... (this may take a while)
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Salt successfully configured and installed!"
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Checking Master-Minion Communication
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------------------------------------
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To make sure the master and minion are talking to each other, enter the
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following:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo salt '*' test.ping
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You should see your minion answering the ping. It's now time to do some
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configuration.
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Step 4 - Configure Services to Install On the Minion
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====================================================
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In this step we'll use the Salt master to instruct our minion to install
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Nginx.
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Checking the system's original state
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------------------------------------
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First, make sure that an HTTP server is not installed on our minion.
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When opening a browser directed at ``http://192.168.33.10/`` You should get an
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error saying the site cannot be reached.
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Initialize the top.sls file
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---------------------------
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System configuration is done in the /srv/salt/top.sls file (and
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subfiles/folders), and then applied by running the ``state.highstate``
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command to have the Salt master give orders so minions will update their
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instructions and run the associated commands.
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First Create an empty file on your Salt master (Mac OS X machine):
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.. code-block:: bash
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touch /srv/salt/top.sls
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When the file is empty, or if no configuration is found for our minion
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an error is reported:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo salt 'minion1' state.highstate
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Should return an error stating:
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"No Top file or external nodes data matches found".
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Create The Nginx Configuration
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------------------------------
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Now is finally the time to enter the real meat of our server's configuration.
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For this tutorial our minion will be treated as a web server that needs to
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have Nginx installed.
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Insert the following lines into the ``/srv/salt/top.sls`` file (which should
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current be empty).
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.. code-block:: yaml
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base:
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'minion1':
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- bin.nginx
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Now create a ``/srv/salt/bin/nginx.sls`` file containing the following:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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nginx:
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pkg.installed:
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- name: nginx
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service.running:
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- enable: True
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- reload: True
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Check Minion State
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------------------
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Finally run the state.highstate command again:
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo salt 'minion1' state.highstate
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You should see a log showing that the Nginx package has been installed
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and the service configured. To prove it, open your browser and navigate to
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http://192.168.33.10/, you should see the standard Nginx welcome page.
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Congratulations!
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Where To Go From Here
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---------------------
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A full description of configuration management within Salt (sls files among
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other things) is available here:
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http://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/index.html#configuration-management
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