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- Salt 0.8.8 release notes
- ========================
- Salt 0.8.8 is here! This release adds a great deal of code and some serious new
- features.
- Improved Documentation has been set up for salt using sphinx thanks to the
- efforts of Seth House. This new documentation system will act as the back end
- to the salt website which is still under heavy development. The new sphinx
- documentation system has also been used to greatly clean up the salt manpages.
- The salt 7 manpage in particular now contains extensive information which was
- previously only in the wiki. The new documentation can be found at:
- http://docs.saltstack.com/
- We still have a lot to add, and when the domain is set up I will post another
- announcement.
- More additions have been made to the ZeroMQ setup, particularly in the realm
- of file transfers. Salt 0.8.8 introduces a built in, stateless, encrypted file
- server which allows salt minions to download files from the salt master using
- the same encryption system used for all other salt communications. The main
- motivation for the salt file server has been to facilitate the new salt state
- system.
- Much of the salt code has been cleaned up and a new cleaner logging system has
- been introduced thanks to the efforts of Pedro Algarvio. These additions will
- allow for much more flexible logging to be executed by salt, and fixed a great
- deal of my poor spelling in the salt docstrings! Pedro Algarvio has also
- cleaned up the API, making it easier to embed salt into another application.
- The biggest addition to salt found in 0.8.8 is the new state system. The salt
- module system has received a new front end which allows salt to be used as a
- configuration management system. The configuration management system allows for
- system configuration to be defined in data structures. The configuration
- management system, or as it is called in salt, the “salt state system” supports
- many of the features found in other configuration managers, but allows for
- system states to be written in a far simpler format, executes at blazing speeds,
- and operates via the salt minion matching system. The state system also operates
- within the normal scope of salt, and requires no additional configuration to
- use.
- The salt state system can enforce the following states with many more to come:
- Packages
- Files
- Services
- Executing commands
- Hosts
- The system used to define the salt states is based on a data structure, the
- data structure used to define the salt states has been made to be as easy to
- use as possible. The data structure is defined by default using a YAML file
- rendered via a Jinja template. This means that the state definition language
- supports all of the data structures that YAML supports, and all of the
- programming constructs and logic that Jinja supports. If the user does not
- like YAML or Jinja the states can be defined in yaml-mako, json-jinja, or
- json-mako. The system used to render the states is completely dynamic, and any
- rendering system can be added to the capabilities of Salt, this means that a
- rendering system that renders XML data in a cheetah template, or whatever you
- can imagine, can be easily added to the capabilities of salt.
- The salt state system also supports isolated environments, as well as matching
- code from several environments to a single salt minion.
- The feature base for Salt has grown quite a bit since my last serious
- documentation push. As we approach 0.9.0 the goals are becoming very clear, and
- the documentation needs a lot of work. The main goals for 0.9.0 are to further
- refine the state system, fix any bugs we find, get Salt running on as many
- platforms as we can, and get the documentation filled out. There is a lot more
- to come as Salt moves forward to encapsulate a much larger scope, while
- maintaining supreme usability and simplicity.
- If you would like a more complete overview of Salt please watch the Salt
- presentation:
- Slides:
- -Thomas S Hatch
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