Book Image

Puppet 5 Essentials - Third Edition

By : Felix Frank
Book Image

Puppet 5 Essentials - Third Edition

By: Felix Frank

Overview of this book

Puppet is a configuration management tool that allows you to automate all your IT configurations, giving you control over what you do to each Puppet Agent in a network, and when and how you do it. In this age of digital delivery and ubiquitous Internet presence, it's becoming increasingly important to implement scaleable and portable solutions, not only in terms of software, but also the system that runs it. This book gets you started quickly with Puppet and its tools in the right way. It highlights improvements in Puppet and provides solutions for upgrading. It starts with a quick introduction to Puppet in order to quickly get your IT automation platform in place. Then you learn about the Puppet Agent and its installation and configuration along with Puppet Server and its scaling options. The book adopts an innovative structure and approach, and Puppet is explained with flexible use cases that empower you to manage complex infrastructures easily. Finally, the book will take readers through Puppet and its companion tools such as Facter, Hiera, and R10k and how to make use of tool chains.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Avoiding antipatterns

Speaking of things to avoid, there is a language feature that we will only address in order to advise great caution. Puppet comes with a function called defined, which allows you to query the compiler about resources that have been declared in the manifest:

if defined(File['/etc/motd']) { 
  notify { 'This machine has a MotD': } 
} 

The problem with the concept is that it cannot ever be reliable. Even if the resource appears in the manifest, the compiler might encounter it later than the if condition. This is potentially very problematic, because some modules will try to make themselves portable through this construct:

if ! defined(Package['apache2']) {  
  package { 'apache2':  
    ensure => 'installed'  
  }  
}  

The module author supposes that this resource definition will be skipped if
the manifest...