This module manages apt on Debian.
It keeps dpkg's and apt's databases as well as the keyrings for securing package download current.
backports.debian.org is added.
/etc/apt/sources.list
and /etc/apt/preferences
are managed. More
recent Debian releases are pinned to very low values by default to
prevent accidental upgrades.
Ubuntu support is lagging behind but not absent either.
-
The
$apt_cron_hours
global variable is deprecated. Useapt::cron::dist_upgrade
'scron_hours
parameter instead. -
The default value of the
$repos
parameter was removed since the logic is now in theapt::params
class. If you have explicitly set$repos
to 'auto' in your manifests, you should remove this. -
The
disable_update
parameter has been removed. The main apt class defaults to not run anapt-get update
on every run anyway so this parameter seems useless. You can include theapt::update
class if you want it to be run every time. -
The
apt::upgrade_package
now doesn't automatically call anExec['apt_updated']
anymore, so you would need to includeapt::update
now by hand. -
The
apt::codename
parameter has been removed. In its place, thedebian_codename
fact may be overridden via an environment variable. This will affect all otherdebian_*
facts, and achieve the same result.FACTER_debian_codename=jessie puppet agent -t
-
If you were using custom
50unattended-upgrades.${::lsbdistcodename}
in yoursite_apt
, these are no longer supported. You should migrate to passing$blacklisted_packages
to theapt::unattended_upgrades
class. -
the apt class has been moved to a paramterized class. if you were including this class before, after passing some variables, you will need to move to instantiating the class with those variables instead. For example, if you had the following in your manifests:
$apt_debian_url = 'http://localhost:9999/debian/' $apt_use_next_release = true include apt
you will need to remove the variables, and the include and instead do the following:
class { 'apt': debian_url => 'http://localhost:9999/debian/', use_next_release => true; }
previously, you could manually set
$lsbdistcodename
which would enable forced upgrades, but because this is a top-level facter variable, and newer puppet versions do not let you assign variables to other namespaces, this is no longer possible. However, there is a way to obtain this functionality, and that is to pass the 'codename' parameter to the apt class, which will change thesources.list
andpreferences
files to be the codename you set, allowing you to trigger upgrades:include apt::dist_upgrade class { 'apt': codename => 'wheezy', notify => Exec['apt_dist-upgrade']; }
-
the
apticron
class has been moved to a parameterized class. if you were including this class before, you will need to move to instantiating the class instead. For example, if you had the following in your manifests:$apticron_email = 'foo@example.com' $apticron_notifynew = '1' ... any $apticron_* variables include apticron
you will need to remove the variables, and the include and instead do the following:
class { 'apt::apticron': email => 'foo@example.com', notifynew => '1'; }
-
the
apt::listchanges
class has been moved to a paramterized class. if you were including this class before, after passing some variables, you will need to move to instantiating the class with those variables instead. For example, if you had the following in your manifests:$apt_listchanges_email = 'foo@example.com' ... any $apt_listchanges_* variables include apt::listchanges
you will need to remove the variables, and the include and instead do the following:
class { 'apt::listchanges': email => 'foo@example.com'; }
-
the
apt::proxy_client
class has been moved to a paramterized class. if you were including this class before, after passing some variables, you will need to move to instantiating the class with those variables instead. For example, if you had the following in your manifests:$apt_proxy = 'http://proxy.domain' $apt_proxy_port = 666 include apt::proxy_client
you will need to remove the variables, and the include and instead do the following:
class { 'apt::proxy_client': proxy => 'http://proxy.domain', port => '666'; }
-
the
apt::preseeded_package
defined type was renamedapt::package
. the previous name is now deprecated and will be removed in the future.
This module needs:
-
the
lsb-release
package should be installed on the server prior to running puppet. otherwise, all of the$::lsb*
facts will be empty during runs. -
the common module
By default, on normal hosts, this module sets the configuration option
DSelect::Clean
to 'auto'. On virtual servers, the value is set by default to
'pre-auto', because virtual servers are usually more space-bound and have better
recovery mechanisms via the host:
From apt.conf(5), 0.7.2: "Cache Clean mode; this value may be one of always, prompt, auto, pre-auto and never. always and prompt will remove all packages from the cache after upgrading, prompt (the default) does so conditionally. auto removes only those packages which are no longer downloadable (replaced with a new version for instance). pre-auto performs this action before downloading new packages."
To change the default setting for DSelect::Clean
, you can create a file named
"03clean" or "03clean_vserver" in your site_apt
module's files directory. You
can also define this for a specific host by creating a file in a subdirectory of
the site_apt
modules' files directory that is named the same as the
host. (example: site_apt/files/some.host.com/03clean, or
site_apt/files/some.host.com/03clean_vserver)
The apt class sets up most of the documented functionality. To use functionality that is not enabled by default, you must set one of the following parameters.
Example usage:
class { 'apt':
use_next_release => true,
debian_url => 'http://localhost:9999/debian/',
}
Class parameters:
If this variable is set to true the CODENAME-lts sources (such as wheezy-lts) are added.
By default this is false for backward compatibility with older versions of this module.
If this variable is set to true the CODENAME-updates sources (such as wheezy-updates) are added.
By default this is false for backward compatibility with older versions of this module.
If this variable is set to true a deb-src source is added for every added binary archive source.
By default this is false for backward compatibility with older versions of this module.
If this variable is set to true the sources for the next Debian release are added. The default pinning configuration pins it to very low values.
By default this is false for backward compatibility with older versions of this module.
These variables allow to override the default APT mirrors respectively used for the standard Debian archives, the Debian security archive, and the Debian Volatile archive.
These variables allows to override the default APT mirror used for all standard Ubuntu archives (including updates, security, backports).
If this variable is set the default repositories list ("main contrib non-free") is overriden.
Setting this variable to false
will delete all the files in preferences.d
managed by Puppet. By default, this parameter is set to true
.
For historical reasons (Debian Lenny's version of APT did not support the use
of the preferences.d
directory for putting fragments of 'preferences'), this
module will manage a default generic apt/preferences file with more
recent releases pinned to very low values so that any package
installation will not accidentally pull in packages from those suites
unless you explicitly specify the version number. This file will be
complemented with all of the preferences_snippet calls (see below).
If the default preferences template doesn't suit your needs, you can create a
template located in your apt
module, and set custom_preferences
to your
preferred template:
class { 'apt':
custom_preferences => 'apt/my_super_template.erb',
}
By default this module will use a basic apt/sources.list
template with
a generic Debian mirror. If you need to set more specific sources,
e.g. changing the sections included in the source, etc. you can set
this variable to the content that you desire to use instead.
For example, setting this variable will pull in the
templates/site_apt/sources.list
file:
class { 'apt':
custom_sources_list => template('site_apt/sources.list'),
}
If you have different apt-key files that you want to get added to your
apt keyring, you can set this variable to a path in your fileserver
where individual key files can be placed. If this is set and keys
exist there, this module will apt-key add
each key.
The debian-archive-keyring package is installed and kept current up to the latest revision (this includes the backports archive keyring).
When you instantiate this class, apticron will be installed, with the following defaults, which you are free to change:
$ensure_version = 'installed',
$config = "apt/${::operatingsystem}/apticron_${::lsbdistcodename}.erb",
$email = 'root',
$diff_only = '1',
$listchanges_profile = 'apticron',
$system = false,
$ipaddressnum = false,
$ipaddresses = false,
$notifyholds = '0',
$notifynew = '0',
$customsubject = ''
Example usage:
class { 'apt::apticron':
email => 'foo@example.com',
notifynew => '1',
}
This class sets up cron-apt so that it dist-upgrades the system and emails when upgrades are performed.
cron-apt
defaults to run at 4 AM. You may want to set the
$cron_hours
class parameter before you include the class: its value will
be passed as the "hours" parameter of a cronjob. Example:
# Run cron-apt every three hours
class { 'apt::cron::dist_upgrade': cron_hours => '*/3' }
Note that the default 4 AM cronjob won't be disabled.
This class provides the Exec['apt_dist-upgrade']
resource that
dist-upgrade's the system.
This exec is set as refreshonly so including this class does not
trigger any action per-se: other resources may notify it, other
classes may inherit from this one and add to its subscription list
using the plusignment (+>
) operator. A real-world example can be
seen in the apt::dist_upgrade::initiator
source.
Parameters:
- timeout: specified in seconds; the maximum time the
dist-upgrade
command should take. If the command takes longer than the timeout, the command is considered to have failed and will be stopped.
This class automatically dist-upgrade's the system when an initiator file's content changes. The initiator file is copied from the first available source amongst the following ones, in decreasing priority order:
-
puppet:///modules/site_apt/${::fqdn}/upgrade_initiator
-
puppet:///modules/site_apt/upgrade_initiator
-
puppet:///modules/apt/upgrade_initiator
This is useful when one does not want to setup a fully automated upgrade process but still needs a way to manually trigger full upgrades of any number of systems at scheduled times.
Beware: a dist-upgrade
is triggered the first time Puppet runs after
this class has been included. This is actually the single reason why
this class is not enabled by default.
When this class is included the APT indexes are updated on every Puppet run due to the author's lack of Puppet wizardry.
This class, when included, installs dselect and switches it to expert mode to suppress superfluous help screens.
This class, when instantiated, installs apt-listchanges
and configures it using
the following parameterized variables, which can be changed:
version = 'present'
config = "apt/${::operatingsystem}/listchanges_${::lsbrelease}.erb"
frontend = 'pager'
email = 'root'
confirm = 0
saveseen = '/var/lib/apt/listchanges.db'
which = 'both'
Example usage:
class { 'apt::listchanges':
email => 'foo@example.com',
}
This class adds the right configuration to apt to make it fetch packages via a
proxy. The class parameters apt_proxy
and apt_proxy_port
need to be set:
You can set the proxy
class parameter variable to the URL of the proxy that
will be used. By default, the proxy will be queried on port 3142, but you can
change the port number by setting the port
class parameter.
Example usage:
class { 'apt::proxy_client':
proxy => 'http://proxy.domain',
port => '666',
}
This class installs a daily cronjob that checks if a package upgrade requires the system to be rebooted; if so, cron sends a notification email to root.
If this class is included, it will install the package unattended-upgrades
and configure it to daily upgrade the system.
The class has the following parameters that you can use to change the contents of the configuration file. The values shown here are the default values:
$config_content = undef
$config_template = 'apt/50unattended-upgrades.erb'
$mailonlyonerror = true
$mail_recipient = 'root'
$blacklisted_packages = []
Note that using $config_content
actually specifies all of the configuration
contents and thus makes the other parameters useless.
Example usage:
class { 'apt::unattended_upgrades':
config_template => 'site_apt/50unattended-upgrades.jessie',
blacklisted_packages => [ 'libc6', 'libc6-dev', 'libc6-i686',
'mysql-server', 'redmine', 'nodejs', 'bird' ],
}
Creates a file in the apt/apt.conf.d
directory to easily add configuration
components. One can use either the source
meta-parameter to specify a list of
static files to include from the puppet fileserver or the content
meta-parameter to define content inline or with the help of a template.
Example usage:
apt::apt_conf { '80download-only':
source => 'puppet:///modules/site_apt/80download-only',
}
A way to add pinning information to files in /etc/apt/preferences.d/
Examples:
apt::preferences_snippet { 'irssi-plugin-otr':
release => 'jessie-backports',
priority => 999,
}
apt::preferences_snippet { 'unstable_fallback':
package => '*',
release => 'unstable',
priority => 1,
}
apt::preferences_snippet { 'ttdnsd':
pin => 'origin deb.torproject.org',
priority => 999,
}
The names of the resources will be used as the names of the files in the preferences.d directory, so you should ensure that resource names follow the prescribed naming scheme.
From apt_preferences(5): Note that the files in the /etc/apt/preferences.d directory are parsed in alphanumeric ascending order and need to obey the following naming convention: The files have no or "pref" as filename extension and which only contain alphanumeric, hyphen (-), underscore (_) and period (.) characters - otherwise they will be silently ignored.
This simplifies installation of packages for which you wish to preseed the answers to debconf or pin to a certain version.
To use preseeding you need to set the use_seed
parameter to true. For
example, if you wish to provide a preseed template for the locales package, you
would place the locales.seed
file in
site_apt/templates/${::lsbdistcodename}/locales.seeds
and then include the
following in your manifest:
apt::package { 'locales':
use_seed => true,
}
You can change what template is used by setting seedfile_template
to a
template path of your choosing (same as you would pass to the template()
function).
You can also specify the content of the seed via the seedfile_content
parameter instead of using a template, for example:
apt::package { 'apticron':
use_seed => true,
seedfile_content => 'apticron apticron/notification string root@example.com',
}
To pin a package to a certain release or version, you need to set the pin
parameter to the restriction that you want (this value corresponds to the
'Pin:' line in preferences files). For example this would pin the package
ganeti to the jessie release:
apt::package { 'ganeti':
pin => 'release o=Debian Backports,a=jessie',
}
Also, if you want to set a priority number to a package pin, you can set
pin_priority
to an integer value. The default value of this parameter is
1000, which will install but not downgrade a package.
Creates a file in the apt/sources.list.d
directory to easily add additional apt
sources. One can use either the source
meta-parameter to specify a list of
static files to include from the puppet fileserver or the content
meta-parameter to define content inline or with the help of a template. Ending
the resource name in .list
is optional: it will be automatically added to the
file name if not present in the resource name.
Example usage:
apt::sources_list { 'company_internals':
source => [ "puppet:///modules/site_apt/${::fqdn}/company_internals.list",
'puppet:///modules/site_apt/company_internals.list' ];
}
Deploys a secure apt OpenPGP key. This usually accompanies the sources.list snippets above for third party repositories. For example, you would do:
apt::key {
'neurodebian.gpg':
ensure => present,
source => 'puppet:///modules/site_apt/neurodebian.gpg';
}
This deploys the key in the /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d
directory, which
is assumed by secure apt to be binary OpenPGP keys and not
"ascii-armored" or "plain text" OpenPGP key material. For the latter,
use apt::key::plain
.
The .gpg
extension is compulsory for apt
to pickup the key properly.
Deploys a secure apt OpenPGP key. This usually accompanies the sources.list snippets above for third party repositories. For example, you would do:
apt::key::plain { 'neurodebian.asc':
source => 'puppet:///modules/site_apt/neurodebian.asc';
}
This deploys the key in the ${apt_base_dir}/keys
directory (as
opposed to $custom_key_dir
which deploys it in keys.d
). The reason
this exists on top of $custom_key_dir
is to allow a more
decentralised distribution of those keys, without having all modules
throw their keys in the same directory in the manifests.
Note that this model does not currently allow keys to be removed!
Use apt::key
instead for a more practical, revokable approach, but
that needs binary keys.
This simplifies upgrades for DSA security announcements or point-releases. This will ensure that the named package is upgraded to the version specified, only if the package is installed, otherwise nothing happens. If the specified version is 'latest' (the default), then the package is ensured to be upgraded to the latest package revision when it becomes available.
For example, the following upgrades the perl package to version 5.8.8-7etch1 (if it is installed), it also upgrades the syslog-ng and perl-modules packages to their latest (also, only if they are installed):
upgrade_package {
'perl':
version => '5.8.8-7etch1';
'syslog-ng':
version => latest;
'perl-modules':
}
Override ownership and mode of files. This define takes the following parameters:
[name] Implicit parameter. File path.
[user] User name (or user id if prepended with '#').
[group] Group name (or group id if prepended with '#').
[mode] File mode, in octal
[ensure] Whether to add or delete this configuration
Example usage:
apt::dpkg_statoverride { '/var/log/puppet':
user => 'puppet',
group => 'puppet',
mode => '750',
}
Use this resource to depend on or add to a completed apt configuration
After this point the APT indexes are up-to-date.
This resource is set to refreshonly => true
so it is not run on
every puppetrun. To run this every time, you can include the apt::update
class.
This resource is usually used like this to ensure current packages are installed by Package resources:
include apt::update
Package {
require => Exec['apt_updated']
}
Note that nodes can be updated once a day by using
APT::Periodic::Update-Package-Lists "1";
in i.e. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/80_apt_update_daily
.
To run pupept rspec tests:
bundle install --path vendor/bundle
bundle exec rake spec
Verbose Output:
bundle exec rake spec SPEC_OPTS='--format documentation'
Using different facter/puppet versions:
FACTER_GEM_VERSION=1.6.10 PUPPET_GEM_VERSION=2.7.23 bundle install --path vendor/bundle
bundle exec rake spec
At the moment, we use beaker together with docker to do acceptance testing. Be sure to have a recent docker version installed.
List configured nodesets:
bundle exec rake beaker_nodes
Run tests on default node (Debian Jessie):
bundle exec rake beaker
Run different nodeset:
BEAKER_set="debian-8-x86_64-docker" bundle exec rspec spec/acceptance/*_spec.rb
This puppet module is licensed under the GPL version 3 or later. Redistribution and modification is encouraged.
The GPL version 3 license text can be found in the "LICENSE" file accompanying this puppet module, or at the following URL: