SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Learning Puppet
Quick Start Guide
Suhan Dharmasuriya
Software Engineer - Test Automation
WSO2 Inc.
Outline
● What is puppet?
● Session 1 - Configuring puppet master/agent
● Puppet module fundamentals
● What are puppet templates?
● Session 2 - Puppet modules and templates
● Session 3 - Looping elements in a given template
What is puppet?
"The Puppet Domain Specific Language (DSL) is a
Ruby-based coding language that provides a precise and
adaptable way to describe a desired state for each
machine in your infrastructure. Once you've described a
desired state, Puppet does the work to bring your systems
in line and keeping them there" - Puppet Labs
Q: Why not use shell scripts and manage infrastructure?
- Not feasible to manage large # of nodes
Installing Puppet Master and Agent
Puppet Master
● sudo apt-get update
● sudo apt-get install puppetmaster
● /etc/puppet/puppet.conf
[main]
dns_alt_names=puppetmaster,puppet,puppet.example.com
[master]
autosign=true
● /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.1 puppetmaster
● /etc/hostname
puppetmaster
dns_alt_names are mentioned so that when
creating ssl certificates for the master itself, the
names will be embedded to the certificate itself
which is easy for the agent to find out that
agent is connecting to the intended puppet
master.
autosign=true is used to automatically sign
puppet agent join requests for the time being.
So that you can easily learn puppet and later
comment out the said line to manually sign
agent certificates.
SESSION1
Installing Puppet Master and Agent
Puppet Agent
● sudo apt-get update
● sudo apt-get install puppet
● /etc/puppet/puppet.conf
[main]
server = puppet
● /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.1.1 agent1
192.168.92.2 puppet
● /etc/hostname
agent1
IP address of the Puppet master
SESSION1
If you get certificate issues, using puppet cert
command clean and regenerate the
certificates accordingly.
> puppet cert clean <host>
> puppet cert generate <host>
Do a puppet agent catalog run
● Add the following to /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp
node default {
}
● Since we have established the master/agent communication
previously, go to puppet agent and issue the following,
> puppet agent --test OR
> puppet agent -t
You will see an output as follows.
root@agent1:~# puppet agent --test
info: Caching catalog for agent1.domain.name
info: Applying configuration version '1416123976'
notice: Finished catalog run in 0.01 seconds
Puppet always starts compiling with either a
single manifest file or a directory of manifests
that get treated like a single file.
This main starting point is called the main
manifest or site manifest.
SESSION1
The name default (without quotes) is a special value for node
names. If no node statement matching a given node can be
found, the default node will be used.
Do a puppet agent catalog run
> puppet cert list --all
+ "agent1.us-west-2.compute.internal" (SHA256)
B4:DC:3C:FF:DF:D6:36:C7:1E:49:CE:99:17:E9:55:89:42:0E:3A:DB:67:84
:4F:D0:7B:FE:7E:E4:2D:BE:8C:D4
+ "puppetmaster.us-west-2.compute.internal" (SHA256)
58:EF:90:05:72:1C:51:8F:BC:63:6C:5E:30:11:87:AC:04:28:F5:F3:94:F3
:0A:DA:91:05:00:ED:5A:7A:E7:9E (alt names: "DNS:puppet",
"DNS:puppet.us-west-2.compute.internal", "DNS:puppetmaster",
"DNS:puppetmaster.us-west-2.compute.internal")
SESSION1
Do a puppet agent catalog run
HTTP trace at puppet master node /var/log/puppet/masterhttp.log
When puppet agent connect to master and get the
certificate auto signed for the first time
When a puppet agent catalog run is performed,
> puppet agent -t
{
{
module is simply a directory tree with a specific, predictable structure
modules
|_your_module
|_ manifests
|_ templates
|_yourtemplate.erb
|_ files
|__ facts.d
|__ examples
|__ spec
|__ lib
Puppet module fundamentals
This outermost directory’s name matches the name of the module
Contains all of the manifests in the module
- init.pp — Contains a class definition. This class’s name
must match the module’s name.
- other_class.pp — Contains a class named
your_module::other_class.
- my_defined_type.pp — Contains a defined type named
your_module::my_defined_type.
- implementation/ — This directory’s name affects the class
names beneath it.
- foo.pp — Contains a class named
your_module::implementation::foo.
- bar.pp — Contains a class named
your_module::implementation::barContains plugins, like custom facts and
custom resource types.
Contains templates, which the module’s manifests can use.
- component.erb — A manifest can render this template with
template('your_module/component.erb').
- component.epp — A manifest can render this template with
epp('your_module/component.epp').
Contains static files, which managed nodes can download
- service.conf — This file’s source => URL would be
puppet:///modules/your_module/service.conf. Its contents
can also be accessed with the file function, like content =>
file('your_module/service.conf').
Contains external facts, which are an alternative to Ruby-based
custom facts. These will be synced to all agent nodes, so they can
submit values for those facts to the Puppet master
Contains spec tests for any plugins in
the lib directory
Contains examples showing how to
declare the module’s classes and
defined types
- init.pp
- other_example.pp
What are puppet templates?
$value = template("your_module/yourtemplate.erb")
Puppet assumes that,
● Template files are stored in the templates directory inside your
puppet module
● common modulepath is at /etc/puppet/modules
/etc/
|__ puppet
|__ manifests
| |__ site.pp
|__ modules
|__ your_module
|__ manifests
|__ templates
|__ yourtemplate.erb
/etc/puppet/modules/your_module/templates/yourtemplate.erb
Templates can be used to specify the contents of
files. They are commonly used to template out
configuration files, filling in variables with the
managed node’s facts.
Puppet supports templates written in the ERB
templating language, which is part of the Ruby
standard library.
Embedded Puppet template (EPP)
Using Puppet modules and templates
● puppet agent → agent1
● create puppet module → myserver, create init.pp, template files
/etc/
|__ puppet
|__ manifests
| |__ site.pp
|__ modules
|__ myserver
|__ manifests
|__init.pp
|__params.pp
|__ templates
|__ welcome-template-file.erb
/etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp
import 'myserver'
node 'agent1' {
include myserver
}
node default {
}
SESSION2
Contains the class definition. This class’s
name must match the module’s name
When we include the module in site.pp
manifest file, puppet looks into this init.pp
script and execute
1
2
3
4
1
We are importing the myserver module to our main manifest:
site.pp
Then we are including it to our agent1 puppet node definition
Using Puppet modules and templates
/etc/puppet/modules/myserver/manifests/init.pp
class myserver inherits myserver::params{
file { "/tmp/$myname":
ensure => file,
content => template('myserver/welcome-template-file.erb'),
}
}
/etc/puppet/modules/myserver/manifests/params.pp [1]
class myserver::params {
$say_hello_to = 'guys and gals'
$myname = 'welcome file.xml'
}
SESSION2
2
3
Image Credits: https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/modules_fundamentals.html#manifests
Image Credits: https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/modules_fundamentals.html#templates
Using Puppet modules and templates
/etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome-template-file.erb
<% if @say_hello_to -%>
Hello <%= @say_hello_to %>,
<% end -%>
I'm <%= @myname %>, on a <%= @operatingsystem %> system, nice to
meet you.
Then issue the following command on puppet agent node.
> puppet agent -t
A file will be created on agent node.
/tmp/welcome file.xml
Hello guys and gals,
I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you.
SESSION2
4
Wondering how value came for @operatingsystem?
Apart from custom variables defined, puppet can use variables
predefined by Factor.
Looping elements in a given template
/etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp to be modified as follows,
class myserver::params {
$say_hello_to = 'guys and gals'
$myname = 'welcome file.xml'
$members = ['10.0.1.196', '10.0.1.198', '10.0.1.200']
}
Append the following to the /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome-
template-file.erb
<members>
<%- if @members -%>
# loop hostnames
<%- @members.each do |hostname| -%>
<member>
<hostName><%= hostname %></hostName>
<port>4100</port>
</member>
<%- end -%>
<%- end -%>
</members>
SESSION3
loop variable
each — Repeat a block of
code any number of times,
using a collection of values
to provide different
parameters each time.
Looping elements in a given template
Then issue the following command on puppet agent node.
> puppet agent -t
/tmp/welcome file.xml will now look like this.
Hello guys and gals,
I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you.
<members>
<member>
<hostName>10.0.1.196</hostName>
<port>4100</port>
</member>
<member>
<hostName>10.0.1.198</hostName>
<port>4100</port>
</member>
<member>
<hostName>10.0.1.200</hostName>
<port>4100</port>
</member>
</members>
SESSION3
Looping elements in a given template
Now lets try to parameterize both member and port.
Modify /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp as follows,
class myserver::params {
$say_hello_to = 'guys and gals'
$myname = 'welcome file.xml'
$members = { '192.168.1.156' => '4100',
'192.168.1.157' => '4000' }
}
Modify the following <members> section in
/etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome-template-file.erb
<members>
<%- if @members -%>
<%- @members.each_pair do |hostname,port| -%>
<member>
<hostName><%= hostname %></hostName>
<port><%= port %></port>
</member>
<%- end -%>
<%- end -%>
</members>
SESSION3
two loop
variables
[example]
Looping elements in a given template
Then issue the following command on puppet agent node.
> puppet agent -t
/tmp/welcome file.xml will now look like this.
Hello guys and gals,
I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you.
<members>
<member>
<hostName>192.168.1.156</hostName>
<port>4100</port>
</member>
<member>
<hostName>192.168.1.157</hostName>
<port>4000</port>
</member>
</members>
SESSION3
Puppet quick start guide
Contact us !

More Related Content

PDF
developing sysadmin, sysadmining developersGuug devops puppet
PDF
Puppet modules: An Holistic Approach
PDF
Puppet modules for Fun and Profit
PPTX
Zf2 phpquebec
PDF
13 java beans
PDF
Apc Memcached Confoo 2011
PDF
Puppi. Puppet strings to the shell
PDF
Puppet @ Seat
developing sysadmin, sysadmining developersGuug devops puppet
Puppet modules: An Holistic Approach
Puppet modules for Fun and Profit
Zf2 phpquebec
13 java beans
Apc Memcached Confoo 2011
Puppi. Puppet strings to the shell
Puppet @ Seat

What's hot (18)

PDF
Can you upgrade to Puppet 4.x?
PDF
PuppetCamp SEA 1 - Puppet Deployment at OnApp
PDF
Anatomy of a reusable module
PDF
Decoupled Libraries for PHP
KEY
Webinar: Zend framework Getting to grips (ZF1)
KEY
Zend framework: Getting to grips (ZF1)
PPTX
Puppet Enterprise for the Network
PDF
Essential applications management with Tiny Puppet
PDF
2007 Fsoss Drupal Under The Hood
PDF
Asset management with Zend Framework 2
KEY
JavaScript Coding with Class
PPT
Download It
PDF
Zend Framework 2 - presentation
PDF
CapitalCamp Features
PDF
Portland Puppet User Group June 2014: Writing and publishing puppet modules
PPT
J2 Ee Overview
PDF
Java EE 6 - Deep Dive - Indic Threads, Pune - 2010
ODP
Java EE 6 = Less Code + More Power (Tutorial) [5th IndicThreads Conference O...
Can you upgrade to Puppet 4.x?
PuppetCamp SEA 1 - Puppet Deployment at OnApp
Anatomy of a reusable module
Decoupled Libraries for PHP
Webinar: Zend framework Getting to grips (ZF1)
Zend framework: Getting to grips (ZF1)
Puppet Enterprise for the Network
Essential applications management with Tiny Puppet
2007 Fsoss Drupal Under The Hood
Asset management with Zend Framework 2
JavaScript Coding with Class
Download It
Zend Framework 2 - presentation
CapitalCamp Features
Portland Puppet User Group June 2014: Writing and publishing puppet modules
J2 Ee Overview
Java EE 6 - Deep Dive - Indic Threads, Pune - 2010
Java EE 6 = Less Code + More Power (Tutorial) [5th IndicThreads Conference O...
Ad

Similar to Puppet quick start guide (20)

ODP
Puppet slides for intelligrape
PPTX
Introduction to puppet - Hands on Session at HPI Potsdam
PPTX
Installaling Puppet Master and Agent
PPTX
PPTX
Puppet barcampexercises.jzt
PDF
Puppet - The IT automation software
PDF
Puppet - Simple Configuration Management
PDF
DevOps Braga #6
PDF
Intro to-puppet
PPTX
Puppet_training
PDF
Puppet: From 0 to 100 in 30 minutes
PDF
Learning Puppet Chapter 1
PDF
Writing and Publishing Puppet Modules - PuppetConf 2014
PPT
Puppet
PDF
Puppet fundamentals
PPTX
Puppet for Developers
PPTX
What is Puppet? | How Puppet Works? | Puppet Tutorial For Beginners | DevOps ...
PDF
Our Puppet Story – Patterns and Learnings (sage@guug, March 2014)
PDF
Our Puppet Story (Linuxtag 2014)
PPTX
A Brief Introduction to Writing and Understanding Puppet Modules
Puppet slides for intelligrape
Introduction to puppet - Hands on Session at HPI Potsdam
Installaling Puppet Master and Agent
Puppet barcampexercises.jzt
Puppet - The IT automation software
Puppet - Simple Configuration Management
DevOps Braga #6
Intro to-puppet
Puppet_training
Puppet: From 0 to 100 in 30 minutes
Learning Puppet Chapter 1
Writing and Publishing Puppet Modules - PuppetConf 2014
Puppet
Puppet fundamentals
Puppet for Developers
What is Puppet? | How Puppet Works? | Puppet Tutorial For Beginners | DevOps ...
Our Puppet Story – Patterns and Learnings (sage@guug, March 2014)
Our Puppet Story (Linuxtag 2014)
A Brief Introduction to Writing and Understanding Puppet Modules
Ad

Puppet quick start guide

  • 1. Learning Puppet Quick Start Guide Suhan Dharmasuriya Software Engineer - Test Automation WSO2 Inc.
  • 2. Outline ● What is puppet? ● Session 1 - Configuring puppet master/agent ● Puppet module fundamentals ● What are puppet templates? ● Session 2 - Puppet modules and templates ● Session 3 - Looping elements in a given template
  • 3. What is puppet? "The Puppet Domain Specific Language (DSL) is a Ruby-based coding language that provides a precise and adaptable way to describe a desired state for each machine in your infrastructure. Once you've described a desired state, Puppet does the work to bring your systems in line and keeping them there" - Puppet Labs Q: Why not use shell scripts and manage infrastructure? - Not feasible to manage large # of nodes
  • 4. Installing Puppet Master and Agent Puppet Master ● sudo apt-get update ● sudo apt-get install puppetmaster ● /etc/puppet/puppet.conf [main] dns_alt_names=puppetmaster,puppet,puppet.example.com [master] autosign=true ● /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.0.1 puppetmaster ● /etc/hostname puppetmaster dns_alt_names are mentioned so that when creating ssl certificates for the master itself, the names will be embedded to the certificate itself which is easy for the agent to find out that agent is connecting to the intended puppet master. autosign=true is used to automatically sign puppet agent join requests for the time being. So that you can easily learn puppet and later comment out the said line to manually sign agent certificates. SESSION1
  • 5. Installing Puppet Master and Agent Puppet Agent ● sudo apt-get update ● sudo apt-get install puppet ● /etc/puppet/puppet.conf [main] server = puppet ● /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.1.1 agent1 192.168.92.2 puppet ● /etc/hostname agent1 IP address of the Puppet master SESSION1 If you get certificate issues, using puppet cert command clean and regenerate the certificates accordingly. > puppet cert clean <host> > puppet cert generate <host>
  • 6. Do a puppet agent catalog run ● Add the following to /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp node default { } ● Since we have established the master/agent communication previously, go to puppet agent and issue the following, > puppet agent --test OR > puppet agent -t You will see an output as follows. root@agent1:~# puppet agent --test info: Caching catalog for agent1.domain.name info: Applying configuration version '1416123976' notice: Finished catalog run in 0.01 seconds Puppet always starts compiling with either a single manifest file or a directory of manifests that get treated like a single file. This main starting point is called the main manifest or site manifest. SESSION1 The name default (without quotes) is a special value for node names. If no node statement matching a given node can be found, the default node will be used.
  • 7. Do a puppet agent catalog run > puppet cert list --all + "agent1.us-west-2.compute.internal" (SHA256) B4:DC:3C:FF:DF:D6:36:C7:1E:49:CE:99:17:E9:55:89:42:0E:3A:DB:67:84 :4F:D0:7B:FE:7E:E4:2D:BE:8C:D4 + "puppetmaster.us-west-2.compute.internal" (SHA256) 58:EF:90:05:72:1C:51:8F:BC:63:6C:5E:30:11:87:AC:04:28:F5:F3:94:F3 :0A:DA:91:05:00:ED:5A:7A:E7:9E (alt names: "DNS:puppet", "DNS:puppet.us-west-2.compute.internal", "DNS:puppetmaster", "DNS:puppetmaster.us-west-2.compute.internal") SESSION1
  • 8. Do a puppet agent catalog run HTTP trace at puppet master node /var/log/puppet/masterhttp.log When puppet agent connect to master and get the certificate auto signed for the first time When a puppet agent catalog run is performed, > puppet agent -t { {
  • 9. module is simply a directory tree with a specific, predictable structure modules |_your_module |_ manifests |_ templates |_yourtemplate.erb |_ files |__ facts.d |__ examples |__ spec |__ lib Puppet module fundamentals This outermost directory’s name matches the name of the module Contains all of the manifests in the module - init.pp — Contains a class definition. This class’s name must match the module’s name. - other_class.pp — Contains a class named your_module::other_class. - my_defined_type.pp — Contains a defined type named your_module::my_defined_type. - implementation/ — This directory’s name affects the class names beneath it. - foo.pp — Contains a class named your_module::implementation::foo. - bar.pp — Contains a class named your_module::implementation::barContains plugins, like custom facts and custom resource types. Contains templates, which the module’s manifests can use. - component.erb — A manifest can render this template with template('your_module/component.erb'). - component.epp — A manifest can render this template with epp('your_module/component.epp'). Contains static files, which managed nodes can download - service.conf — This file’s source => URL would be puppet:///modules/your_module/service.conf. Its contents can also be accessed with the file function, like content => file('your_module/service.conf'). Contains external facts, which are an alternative to Ruby-based custom facts. These will be synced to all agent nodes, so they can submit values for those facts to the Puppet master Contains spec tests for any plugins in the lib directory Contains examples showing how to declare the module’s classes and defined types - init.pp - other_example.pp
  • 10. What are puppet templates? $value = template("your_module/yourtemplate.erb") Puppet assumes that, ● Template files are stored in the templates directory inside your puppet module ● common modulepath is at /etc/puppet/modules /etc/ |__ puppet |__ manifests | |__ site.pp |__ modules |__ your_module |__ manifests |__ templates |__ yourtemplate.erb /etc/puppet/modules/your_module/templates/yourtemplate.erb Templates can be used to specify the contents of files. They are commonly used to template out configuration files, filling in variables with the managed node’s facts. Puppet supports templates written in the ERB templating language, which is part of the Ruby standard library. Embedded Puppet template (EPP)
  • 11. Using Puppet modules and templates ● puppet agent → agent1 ● create puppet module → myserver, create init.pp, template files /etc/ |__ puppet |__ manifests | |__ site.pp |__ modules |__ myserver |__ manifests |__init.pp |__params.pp |__ templates |__ welcome-template-file.erb /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp import 'myserver' node 'agent1' { include myserver } node default { } SESSION2 Contains the class definition. This class’s name must match the module’s name When we include the module in site.pp manifest file, puppet looks into this init.pp script and execute 1 2 3 4 1 We are importing the myserver module to our main manifest: site.pp Then we are including it to our agent1 puppet node definition
  • 12. Using Puppet modules and templates /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/manifests/init.pp class myserver inherits myserver::params{ file { "/tmp/$myname": ensure => file, content => template('myserver/welcome-template-file.erb'), } } /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/manifests/params.pp [1] class myserver::params { $say_hello_to = 'guys and gals' $myname = 'welcome file.xml' } SESSION2 2 3 Image Credits: https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/modules_fundamentals.html#manifests Image Credits: https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/modules_fundamentals.html#templates
  • 13. Using Puppet modules and templates /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome-template-file.erb <% if @say_hello_to -%> Hello <%= @say_hello_to %>, <% end -%> I'm <%= @myname %>, on a <%= @operatingsystem %> system, nice to meet you. Then issue the following command on puppet agent node. > puppet agent -t A file will be created on agent node. /tmp/welcome file.xml Hello guys and gals, I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you. SESSION2 4 Wondering how value came for @operatingsystem? Apart from custom variables defined, puppet can use variables predefined by Factor.
  • 14. Looping elements in a given template /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp to be modified as follows, class myserver::params { $say_hello_to = 'guys and gals' $myname = 'welcome file.xml' $members = ['10.0.1.196', '10.0.1.198', '10.0.1.200'] } Append the following to the /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome- template-file.erb <members> <%- if @members -%> # loop hostnames <%- @members.each do |hostname| -%> <member> <hostName><%= hostname %></hostName> <port>4100</port> </member> <%- end -%> <%- end -%> </members> SESSION3 loop variable each — Repeat a block of code any number of times, using a collection of values to provide different parameters each time.
  • 15. Looping elements in a given template Then issue the following command on puppet agent node. > puppet agent -t /tmp/welcome file.xml will now look like this. Hello guys and gals, I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you. <members> <member> <hostName>10.0.1.196</hostName> <port>4100</port> </member> <member> <hostName>10.0.1.198</hostName> <port>4100</port> </member> <member> <hostName>10.0.1.200</hostName> <port>4100</port> </member> </members> SESSION3
  • 16. Looping elements in a given template Now lets try to parameterize both member and port. Modify /etc/puppet/manifests/site.pp as follows, class myserver::params { $say_hello_to = 'guys and gals' $myname = 'welcome file.xml' $members = { '192.168.1.156' => '4100', '192.168.1.157' => '4000' } } Modify the following <members> section in /etc/puppet/modules/myserver/templates/welcome-template-file.erb <members> <%- if @members -%> <%- @members.each_pair do |hostname,port| -%> <member> <hostName><%= hostname %></hostName> <port><%= port %></port> </member> <%- end -%> <%- end -%> </members> SESSION3 two loop variables [example]
  • 17. Looping elements in a given template Then issue the following command on puppet agent node. > puppet agent -t /tmp/welcome file.xml will now look like this. Hello guys and gals, I'm welcome file.xml, on a Ubuntu system, nice to meet you. <members> <member> <hostName>192.168.1.156</hostName> <port>4100</port> </member> <member> <hostName>192.168.1.157</hostName> <port>4000</port> </member> </members> SESSION3