Salt was added to the OpenCSW package repository in September of 2012 by Romeo Theriault <romeot@hawaii.edu> at version 0.10.2 of Salt. It has mainly been tested on Solaris 10 (sparc), though it is built for and has been tested minimally on Solaris 10 (x86), Solaris 9 (sparc/x86) and 11 (sparc/x86). (Please let me know if you're using it on these platforms!) Most of the testing has also just focused on the minion, though it has verified that the master starts up successfully on Solaris 10.
Comments and patches for better support on these platforms is very welcome.
As of version 0.10.4, Solaris is well supported under salt, with all of the following working well:
Salt is dependent on the following additional packages. These will automatically be installed as dependencies of the py_salt package.:
py_yaml
py_pyzmq
py_jinja2
py_msgpack_python
py_m2crypto
py_crypto
python
To install Salt from the OpenCSW package repository you first need to install pkgutil assuming you don't already have it installed:
On Solaris 10:
pkgadd -d http://get.opencsw.org/now
On Solaris 9:
wget http://mirror.opencsw.org/opencsw/pkgutil.pkg
pkgadd -d pkgutil.pkg all
Once pkgutil is installed you'll need to edit it's config file /etc/opt/csw/pkgutil.conf to point it at the unstable catalog:
- #mirror=http://mirror.opencsw.org/opencsw/testing
+ mirror=http://mirror.opencsw.org/opencsw/unstable
OK, time to install salt.
# Update the catalog
root> /opt/csw/bin/pkgutil -U
# Install salt
root> /opt/csw/bin/pkgutil -i -y py_salt
Now that salt is installed you can find it's configuration files in /etc/opt/csw/salt/.
You'll want to edit the minion config file to set the name of your salt master server:
- #master: salt
+ master: your-salt-server
If you would like to use pkgutil as the default package provider for your Solaris minions, you can do so using the providers option in the minion config file.
You can now start the salt minion like so:
On Solaris 10:
svcadm enable salt-minion
On Solaris 9:
/etc/init.d/salt-minion start
You should now be able to log onto the salt master and check to see if the salt-minion key is awaiting acceptance:
salt-key -l un
Accept the key:
salt-key -a <your-salt-minion>
Run a simple test against the minion:
salt '<your-salt-minion>' test.ping
Logs are in /var/log/salt