puppet-git-receiver is a script that handles validating and applying puppet manifests that are pushed to a git repository.
When installed as a git update hook, it validates any file with the
suffix .pp. If no validation errors are detected, then it runs puppet apply
using the manifest manifests/site.pp
.
It uses the path modules/
in your repository as the puppet modules
path.
By default it considers the master branch and ignores all others (See below to change the target branch). If the validation or the apply return any errors, the update is rejected (i.e: the master head is not updated).
git push srv-30qvg.gb1.brightbox.com
Counting objects: 7, done.
Delta compression using up to 2 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
Writing objects: 100% (4/4), 346 bytes, done.
Total 4 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: *** Validating puppet manifests for refs/heads/master
remote: *** Applying puppet manifests
remote: notice: /Stage[main]//Package[cowsay]/ensure: ensure changed 'purged' to 'present'
remote: notice: Finished catalog run in 3.18 seconds
remote: *** Puppet manifests applied successfully
To puppet-git@ipv6.srv-30qvg.gb1.brightbox.com:puppet.git
3ffd7b7..49072b1 master -> master
The source includes recipes to build Ubuntu packages which creates a
user named puppet-git
, with a pre-configured git repository named
puppet.git
in its home directory (and appropriate sudo privileges).
Pre-built packages for Ubuntu are available in the Brightbox launchpad ppa.
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:brightbox/puppet
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install puppet-git-receiver
Then set a password for the puppet-git
user, or add your ssh keys to
its home directory /var/lib/puppet-git-receiver
.
Then you can just add the git repository as a git remote and push to get your manifests applied.
git remote add myserver puppet-git@myserver.example.com:puppet.git
git remote push myserver master
Alternatively, you can just use any user in the admin
group with
full sudo privileges to access the repo too:
git remote add myserver ubuntu@myserver.example.com:/var/lib/puppet-git-receiver/puppet.git
git remote push myserver master
And for (slight) convenience, there is a symlink to the repository at
/var/lib/puppet-git-receiver.git
:
git remote add myserver ubuntu@myserver.example.com:/var/lib/puppet-git-receiver.git
git remote push myserver master
If you're using an Ubuntu image with the cloud-init
package
installed on a cloud platform that supports EC2-style user data (like
Amazon EC2 obviously, or Brightbox Cloud, you
can script the installation on boot like this:
#cloud-config
apt_sources:
- source: "ppa:brightbox/puppet"
packages:
- puppet-git-receiver
runcmd:
- cp -ar /home/ubuntu/.ssh /var/lib/puppet-git-receiver/
- chown -R puppet-git.puppet-git /var/lib/puppet-git-receiver/.ssh
A version of this script is maintained as a Github gist at
https://gist.github.com/3129203 for convenience. You can use it with
a cloud-init #include
statement, like this:
$ brightbox-servers create --user-data="#include https://raw.github.com/gist/3129203/puppet-git-receiver-install" img-9h5cv
Creating a nano server with image Ubuntu Precise 12.04 LTS server (img-9h5cv) with 0.10k of user data
id status type zone created_on image_id cloud_ip_ids name
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
srv-3te8u creating nano gb1-a 2012-07-17 img-9h5cv
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
When this boots, you can immediately push puppet manifests to it and have them applied. Easy peasy!
If you'd prefer not to use the Ubuntu package, just install the script
in your git repository named .git/hooks/update
. Ensure the user the
script will run as has permission to run puppet
using sudo with
environment variables. Something like this in sudoers
should do the
trick:
puppet-git ALL=NOPASSWD: SETENV:/usr/bin/puppet
You obviously need git and puppet installed, but also bash, sudo, find, tar and xargs.
You can disable the full validation step by setting the git config
boolean option puppet-receiver.skip-validation
to true on the remote
repository:
git config --bool --add puppet-receiver.skip-validation true
You can set extra arguments passed to puppet apply
by setting the
git config option puppet-receiver.args
on the remote repository:
git config --add puppet-receiver.args "--noop --debug"
You can change the default branch that puppet-git-receiver uses by
creating the file /etc/puppet-git-receiver.conf
and setting the
BRANCH variable
BRANCH=new-version
puppet-git-receiver can download and install modules hosted on Puppet Forge prior to applying your manifests.
Create a file in the root of your repository named
.puppetforge-modules
and list each module you want installed, one
per line. You can optionally specify the exact module version you want
installed, putting the version number after the module name separated
by a space, otherwise the latest version is installed. Lines starting
with a #
character and empty lines are ignored. Example:
brightbox/apt
brightbox/apache 1.0.0
brightbox/nagios
The modules are installed on the server into a directory created in
the root named puppetforge-modules
which is added to the puppet
modulespath
. Your repository's own modules/
directory takes
precedence.
Puppet version 2.7.12 is required for installing forge modules.
puppet-git-receiver can alternatively download and install modules using
librarian-puppet. If a Puppetfile
is found in your repository and
librarian-puppet is installed the modules will be fetched before applying your
manifests.
Options to librarian-puppet can be supplied by setting the
puppet-receiver.librarian-puppet-args
git config option on the remote
repository:
git config --add puppet-receiver.librarian-puppet-args "--verbose"
You can classify nodes using yaml files placed in the manifests/
directory.
manifests/site.yml
is the default for all nodes, but you can create
files in manifests/nodes/
with the fqdn of the node you want to
classify and that will be used instead (e.g:
manifests/nodes/srv-abcde.gb1.brightbox.com.yml
).
The file needs to be formatted as per the puppet external node classification output format.
For example:
classes:
"apt":
"apache":
"apache::php":
"apache::passenger":
instances_per_app: 8
"rsyslog":
remote_servers:
- "10.0.0.1"
- "10.0.0.2"
The code is licensed under the terms of the GPLv3 and is available on Github at https://github.com/brightbox/puppet-git-receiver
(c) Copyright 2012 John Leach john@brightbox.co.uk