Basic Puppet
- Puppet - Facter & Facts
- Puppet - File Server
- Puppet - Module
- Puppet - Manifest Files
- Puppet - Coding Style
- Puppet - Validating Setup
- Installing & Configuring r10K
- Puppet - SSL Sign Certificate Setup
- Puppet - Agent Setup
- Puppet - Master
- Puppet - Environment Conf
- Puppet - Configuration
- Puppet - Installation
- Puppet - Architecture
- Puppet - Overview
Advanced Puppet
- Puppet - Live Project
- Puppet - RESTful API
- Puppet - Type & Provider
- Puppet - Environment
- Puppet - Custom Functions
- Puppet - Function
- Puppet - Classes
- Puppet - Template
- Puppet - Resource Abstraction Layer
- Puppet - Resource
Puppet Useful Resources
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
Puppet - Module
In Puppet, a module can be defined as a collection of resources, classes, files, definition, and templates. Puppet supports easy re-distribution of modules, which is very helpful in modularity of code as one can write a specified generic module and can use it multiple times with very few simple code changes. For example, this will enable default site configuration under /etc/puppet, with modules shipped by Puppet proper in /etc/share/puppet.
Module Configuration
In any Puppet module, we have two partitions which help in defining the structure of code and controlpng the denominates.
The search path of modules is configured using colon-separated pst of directories in the puppetmasterd or masterd, the later section of Puppet’s master configuration file with the modulepath parameter.
[puppetmasterd] ... modulepath = /var/pb/puppet/modules:/data/puppet/modules
The search path can be added at the runtime by setting the PUPPETLAB environment variable which must also be colon-separated pst of variables.
Access control settings for the file server modules in fileserver.conf, the path configuration for that module is always ignored, and specifying a path will produce a warning.
Modules Source
Puppet supports a different location for storing modules. Any module can be stored in different file system of any particular machine. However, all the paths where modules are stored must be specified in configuration variable known as modulepath which is in general, a path variable where Puppet scans for all module directories and loads them up when it is booting up.
A reasonable default path can be configured as −
/etc/puppet/modules:/usr/share/puppet:/var/pb/modules.
Alternatively, the /etc/puppet directory could be estabpshed as a special anonymous module, which is always searched first.
Module Naming
Puppet follows the same naming standards of a particular module wherein the module name must be normal words, matching [-\w+] (letter, word, number, underscore and dashes) and not containing the namespace separator: : or /. While it might be allowed regarding module hierarchies, for new modules it cannot be nested.
Module Internal Organization
When the user creates a new module in Puppet, it follows the same structure and contains manifest, distributed file, plugins, and templates arranged in a specific directory structure as shown in the following code.
MODULE_PATH/ downcased_module_name/ files/ manifests/ init.pp pb/ puppet/ parser/ functions provider/ type/ facter/ templates/ README
Whenever a module is created, it contains init.pp manifest file at the specified fix location inside manifests directory. This manifest file is a default file which executes first in any particular module and contains a collection of all the classes associated with that particular module. Additional .pp file can be added directly under the manifests folder. If we are adding additional .pp files, they should be named after the class.
One of the key feature achieved by using modules is code sharing. A module by nature should be self-contained which means one should be able to include any module from anywhere and drop it onto the module path, which gets loaded when Puppet boots up. With the help of modules, one gets modularity in Puppet infrastructure coding.
Example
Consider an autofs module that installs a fixed auto.homes map and generates the auto.master from templates.
class autofs { package { autofs: ensure => latest } service { autofs: ensure => running } file { "/etc/auto.homes": source => "puppet://$servername/modules/autofs/auto.homes" } file { "/etc/auto.master": content => template("autofs/auto.master.erb") } }
The file system will have the following files.
MODULE_PATH/ autofs/ manifests/ init.pp files/ auto.homes templates/ auto.master.erb
Module Lookup
Puppet follows a pre-defined structure wherein it contains multiple directories and subdirectories in a defined structure. These directories contain different kind of files which are required by a module to perform certain actions. A pttle behind-the-scenes magic makes sure that the right file is associated with the right context. All module searches are within the modulepath, a colon-separated pst of directories.
For file references on the fileserver, a similar reference is used so that a reference to puppet: //$servername/modules/autofs/auto.homes resolves to the file autofs/files/auto.homes in the module’s path.
To make a module usable with both the command pne cpent and a puppet master, one can use a URL of the from puppet:///path. i.e. a URL without an exppcit server name. Such URL is treated spghtly different by Puppet and puppetd. Puppet searches for serverless URL in the local file system.
Template files are searched in a manner similar to manifest and files: a mention of template (“autofs/auto.master.erb”) will make the puppetmaster first look for a file in $templatedir/autofs/auto.master.erb and then autofs/templates/auto.master.erb on the module path. With Puppet versions of everything under the Puppet, it is available to use. This is called module auto loading. Puppet will attempt to auto-load classes and definitions from the module.
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