Book Image

Mastering Puppet 5

By : Ryan Russell-Yates, Jason Southgate
Book Image

Mastering Puppet 5

By: Ryan Russell-Yates, Jason Southgate

Overview of this book

Puppet is a configuration management system and a language written for and by system administrators to manage a large number of systems efficiently and prevent configuration drift. The core topics this book addresses are Puppet's latest features and mastering Puppet Enterprise. You will begin by writing a new Puppet module, gaining an understanding of the guidelines and style of the Puppet community. Following on from this, you will take advantage of the roles and profiles pattern, and you will learn how to structure your code. Next, you will learn how to extend Puppet and write custom facts, functions, types, and providers in Ruby, and also use the new features of Hiera 5. You will also learn how to configure the new Code Manager component, and how to ensure code is automatically deployed to (multiple) Puppet servers. Next, you will learn how to integrate Puppet with Jenkins and Git to build an effective workflow for multiple teams, and use the new Puppet Tasks feature and the latest Puppet Orchestrator language extensions. Finally, you will learn how to scale and troubleshoot Puppet. By the end of the book, you will be able to deal with problems of scale and exceptions in your code, automate workflows, and support multiple developers working simultaneously.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we focused on building out a CI System (Jenkins) and performing a validation check, a unit test, and an acceptance test. CI/CD is a continual journey, and there is always room for improvement in our workflows. Continuous Integration provides us with a valuable safety net for development, allowing us to develop without worrying about feature loss or regression. 

Where are some places to go to from here? Integrate your Git system closer to Jenkins by using Git hooks to deploy code, and providing a status back before a pull request is added. You can also add notifications to developers, alerting them when their tests have gone from passing to failing. If you find some of these warnings to be too much, tune the system providing the warning to avoid some of these errors. Everyone has a different CI/CD journey, so explore for yourself and figure out what works for you!

The next chapter covers Puppet Tasks and Puppet Discovery. Puppet Tasks allows us to run ad-hoc commands...