.. _tutorial-halite: ================================= Installing and Configuring Halite ================================= .. warning:: Halite is deprecated The Halite project is retired. The code will remain available on GitHub. In this tutorial, we'll walk through installing and setting up Halite. The current version of Halite is considered pre-alpha and is supported only in Salt ``v2014.1.0`` or greater. Additional information is available on GitHub: https://github.com/saltstack/halite Before beginning this tutorial, ensure that the salt-master is installed. To install the salt-master, please review the installation documentation: http://docs.saltstack.com/topics/installation/index.html .. note:: Halite only works with Salt versions greater than 2014.1.0. Installing Halite Via Package ============================= On CentOS, RHEL, or Fedora: .. code-block:: bash $ yum install python-halite .. note:: By default python-halite only installs CherryPy. If you would like to use a different webserver please review the instructions below to install pip and your server of choice. The package does not modify the master configuration with ``/etc/salt/master``. Installing Halite Using pip =========================== To begin the installation of Halite from PyPI, you'll need to install pip. The Salt package, as well as the bootstrap, do not install pip by default. On CentOS, RHEL, or Fedora: .. code-block:: bash $ yum install python-pip On Debian: .. code-block:: bash $ apt-get install python-pip Once you have pip installed, use it to install halite: .. code-block:: bash $ pip install -U halite Depending on the webserver you want to run halite through, you'll need to install that piece as well. On RHEL based distros, use one of the following: .. code-block:: bash $ pip install cherrypy .. code-block:: bash $ pip install paste .. code-block:: bash $ yum install python-devel $ yum install gcc $ pip install gevent $ pip install pyopenssl On Debian based distributions: .. code-block:: bash $ pip install CherryPy .. code-block:: bash $ pip install paste .. code-block:: bash $ apt-get install gcc $ apt-get install python-dev $ apt-get install libevent-dev $ pip install gevent $ pip install pyopenssl Configuring Halite Permissions ============================== Configuring Halite access permissions is easy. By default, you only need to ensure that the @runner group is configured. In the ``/etc/salt/master`` file, uncomment and modify the following lines: .. code-block:: yaml external_auth: pam: testuser: - .* - '@runner' .. note:: You cannot use the root user for pam login; it will fail to authenticate. Halite uses the runner manage.present to get the status of minions, so runner permissions are required. For example: .. code-block:: yaml external_auth: pam: mytestuser: - .* - '@runner' - '@wheel' Currently Halite allows, but does not require, any wheel modules. Configuring Halite Settings =========================== Once you've configured the permissions for Halite, you'll need to set up the Halite settings in the /etc/salt/master file. Halite supports CherryPy, Paste, and Gevent out of the box. To configure cherrypy, add the following to the bottom of your /etc/salt/master file: .. code-block:: yaml halite: level: 'debug' server: 'cherrypy' host: '0.0.0.0' port: '8080' cors: False tls: True certpath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt' keypath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.key' pempath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.pem' If you wish to use paste: .. code-block:: yaml halite: level: 'debug' server: 'paste' host: '0.0.0.0' port: '8080' cors: False tls: True certpath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt' keypath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.key' pempath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.pem' To use gevent: .. code-block:: yaml halite: level: 'debug' server: 'gevent' host: '0.0.0.0' port: '8080' cors: False tls: True certpath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt' keypath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.key' pempath: '/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.pem' The "cherrypy" and "gevent" servers require the certpath and keypath files to run tls/ssl. The .crt file holds the public cert and the .key file holds the private key. Whereas the "paste" server requires a single .pem file that contains both the cert and key. This can be created simply by concatenating the .crt and .key files. If you want to use a self-signed cert, you can create one using the Salt.tls module: .. note:: The following command needs to be run on your salt master. .. code-block:: bash salt-call tls.create_self_signed_cert tls Note that certs generated by the above command can be found under the ``/etc/pki/tls/certs/`` directory. When using self-signed certs, browsers will need approval before accepting the cert. If the web application page has been cached with a non-HTTPS version of the app, then the browser cache will have to be cleared before it will recognize and prompt to accept the self-signed certificate. Starting Halite =============== Once you've configured the halite section of your /etc/salt/master, you can restart the salt-master service, and your halite instance will be available. Depending on your configuration, the instance will be available either at https://localhost:8080/app, https://domain:8080/app, or https://123.456.789.012:8080/app . .. note:: halite requires an HTML 5 compliant browser. All logs relating to halite are logged to the default /var/log/salt/master file.