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Puppet 8 for DevOps Engineers

Puppet 8 for DevOps Engineers

By : David Sandilands
4.8 (5)
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Puppet 8 for DevOps Engineers

Puppet 8 for DevOps Engineers

4.8 (5)
By: David Sandilands

Overview of this book

As DevOps and platform engineering drive the demand for robust internal development platforms, the need for infrastructure configuration tools has never been greater. Puppet, a powerful configuration management tool, is widely used by leading enterprises and boasts a thriving open source community. This book provides a comprehensive explanation of both the Puppet language and the platform. It begins by helping you grasp the basic concepts and approach of Puppet as a stateful language, and then builds up to explaining how to structure Puppet code to scale and allow flexibility and collaboration among teams. As you advance, you’ll find out how the Puppet platform allows the management and reporting of infrastructure configuration. The book also shows you how the platform can be integrated with other tooling, such as ServiceNow and Splunk. The concluding chapters help you implement Puppet to fit in heavily regulated and audited environments as well as modern hybrid cloud environments. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a solid understanding of the capabilities of both the Puppet language and platform, and you will have learned how to structure and scale Puppet to create a platform to provide enterprise-grade infrastructure configuration.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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1
Part 1 – Introduction to Puppet and the Basics of the Puppet Language
7
Part 2 – Structuring, Ordering, and Managing Data in the Puppet Language
12
Part 3 – The Puppet Platform and Bolt Orchestration
17
Part 4 – Puppet Enterprise and Approaches to the Adoption of Puppet

Summary

In this chapter, you learned how the Facter tool provides system profiling information with its facts and how this can be expanded using external facts and custom facts. We warned you that there is an infrastructure cost to gathering facts and that the scale it will work with should be balanced. We stated that external facts can be simple flat files of static data or executable scripts, as allowed by the operating system. Custom facts, although written in Ruby, were shown to have several advantages over external facts. Being able to confine the custom fact to only run on certain systems allows you to choose different resolutions with a weight as to which should be selected and timeouts at the resolution level in Puppet 7 or the execution level in Puppet 6 and below.

Next, we reviewed functions and highlighted the vast range of tasks functions can do to manipulate the catalog or return calculated values in Puppet code. Here, we discussed catalog statements, which are used...

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