Puppet agent is a mechanism use to pull puppet manifests and configuration from a centralized master. This means there is only one place that needs to hold secure information such as passwords, and only one location for the git repo holding the modules.
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The puppet master is setup using a combination of Apache and mod passenger to ship the data to the clients.
The cron jobs, current configuration files and more can be done with puppet apply but first some bootstrapping needs to be done.
First want to install these from puppetlabs’ apt repo, but we typically pin to a specific version, so you’ll want to copy in the preferences file from the git repository. Configuration files for puppet master are stored in a git repo clone at /opt/config/production so we’ll just do this checkout now and copy over the preferences file:
git clone git://github.com/openstack-infra/config.git /opt/config/production
cp /opt/config/production/modules/openstack_project/files/00-puppet.pref /etc/apt/preferences.d/
Then we can add the repo and install the packages, we’ll also install the hiera packages here which are used to maintain secret information on the puppetmaster:
apt-add-repository "deb http://apt.puppetlabs.com `lsb_release -cs` devel"
apt-key adv --keyserver pool.sks-keyservers.net --recv <KEY_ID>
apt-get update
apt-get install puppet puppetmaster-passenger hiera hiera-puppet
Finally, install the modules and use puppet apply to finish configuration:
bash /opt/config/production/install_modules.sh
puppet apply --modulepath='/opt/config/production/modules:/etc/puppet/modules' -e 'include openstack_project::puppetmaster'
Note: Hiera uses a systemwide configuration file in /etc/puppet/hiera.yaml and this setup supports multiple configurations. The two sets of environments that OpenStack Infrastructure uses are production and development. production is the default is and the environment used when nothing else is specified. Then the configuration needs to be placed into common.yaml in /etc/puppet/hieradata/production and /etc/puppet/hieradata/development. The values are simple key-value pairs in yaml format.
On the new server connecting (for example, review.openstack.org) to the puppet master:
sudo apt-get install puppet
Then edit the /etc/default/puppet file to change the start variable:
# Start puppet on boot?
START=yes
The node then needs to be configured to set a fixed hostname and the hostname of the puppet master with the following additions to /etc/puppet/puppet.conf:
[main]
server=ci-puppetmaster.openstack.org
certname=review.openstack.org
The cert signing process needs to be started with:
sudo puppet agent --test
This will make a request to the puppet master to have its SSL cert signed. On the puppet master:
sudo puppet cert list
You should get a list of entries similar to the one below:
review.openstack.org (44:18:BB:DF:08:50:62:70:17:07:82:1F:D5:70:0E:BF)
If you see the new node there you can sign its cert on the puppet master with:
sudo puppet cert sign review.openstack.org
Finally on the puppet agent you need to start the agent daemon:
sudo service puppet start
Now that it is signed the puppet agent will execute any instructions for its node on the next run (default is every 30 minutes). You can trigger this earlier by restarting the puppet service on the agent node.