Book Image

Extending Puppet - Second Edition

By : Alessandro Franceschi, Jaime Soriano Pastor
Book Image

Extending Puppet - Second Edition

By: Alessandro Franceschi, Jaime Soriano Pastor

Overview of this book

Puppet has changed the way we manage our systems, but Puppet itself is changing and evolving, and so are the ways we are using it. To tackle our IT infrastructure challenges and avoid common errors when designing our architectures, an up-to-date, practical, and focused view of the current and future Puppet evolution is what we need. With Puppet, you define the state of your IT infrastructure, and it automatically enforces the desired state. This book will be your guide to designing and deploying your Puppet architecture. It will help you utilize Puppet to manage your IT infrastructure. Get to grips with Hiera and learn how to install and configure it, before learning best practices for writing reusable and maintainable code. You will also be able to explore the latest features of Puppet 4, before executing, testing, and deploying Puppet across your systems. As you progress, Extending Puppet takes you through higher abstraction modules, along with tips for effective code workflow management. Finally, you will learn how to develop plugins for Puppet - as well as some useful techniques that can help you to avoid common errors and overcome everyday challenges.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Extending Puppet Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Working with the command line on a YAML backend


When we use a backend based on files such as JSON or YAML, which are the most commonly used, we have to recreate on the filesystem the hierarchy defined in our hiera.yaml file, the files that contain Hiera data must be placed in these directories.

Let's see Hiera in action. Look at the following sample hierarchy configuration:

:hierarchy:
  - "nodes/%{::fqdn}"
  - "env/%{::env}"
  - common

:yaml:
  :datadir: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata

We have to create a directory structure as follows:

mkdir -p /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/{nodes,env}

Then, work on the YAML files as shown:

vi /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/nodes/web01.example42.com.yaml
vi /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/env/production.yaml
vi /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/env/test.yaml
vi /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/common.yaml

These files are plain YAML files where we can specify the values for any Hiera-managed key. These values can be strings, arrays, or hashes:

vi /etc/puppet/hieradata...