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Puppet 5 Cookbook

Puppet 5 Cookbook

By : Thomas Uphill
3.7 (3)
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Puppet 5 Cookbook

Puppet 5 Cookbook

3.7 (3)
By: Thomas Uphill

Overview of this book

Puppet is a configuration management system that automates all your IT configurations, giving you control of managing each node. Puppet 5 Cookbook will take you through Puppet's latest and most advanced features, including Docker containers, Hiera, and AWS Cloud Orchestration. Updated with the latest advancements and best practices, this book delves into various aspects of writing good Puppet code, which includes using Puppet community style, checking your manifests with puppet-lint, and learning community best practices with an emphasis on real-world implementation. You will learn to set up, install, and create your first manifests with version control, and also learn about various sysadmin tasks, including managing configuration files, using Augeas, and generating files from snippets and templates. As the book progresses, you'll explore virtual resources and use Puppet's resource scheduling and auditing features. In the concluding chapters, you'll walk through managing applications and writing your own resource types, providers, and external node classifiers. By the end of this book, you will have learned to report, log, and debug your system.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Managing your manifests with Git


It's a great idea to put your Puppet manifests in a version-control system, such as Git or Subversion (Git is the de facto standard for Puppet). This gives you several advantages:

  • You can undo changes and revert to any previous version of your manifest
  • You can experiment with new features using a branch
  • If several people need to make changes to the manifests, they can make them independently, in their own working copies, and then merge their changes later
  • You can use the Git log feature to see what was changed and when (and by whom)

Getting ready

In this section, we'll import your existing manifest files into Git. If you have created a Puppet directory in a previous section, use that, otherwise, use your existing manifest directory.

In this example, we'll create a new Git repository on a server accessible from all our nodes. There are several steps we need to take to have our code held in a Git repository:

  1. Install Git on a central server.
  2. Create a user to run Git...
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