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- .. _proxy-minion-end-to-end-example:
- ====================================
- Salt Proxy Minion End-to-End Example
- ====================================
- The following is walkthrough that documents how to run a sample REST service
- and configure one or more proxy minions to talk to and control it.
- 1. Ideally, create a Python virtualenv in which to run the REST service. This
- is not strictly required, but without a virtualenv you will need to install
- ``bottle`` via pip globally on your system
- 2. Clone https://github.com/saltstack/salt-contrib
- and copy the contents of the directory ``proxyminion_rest_example``
- somewhere on a machine that is reachable from the machine on which you want to
- run the salt-proxy. This machine needs Python 2.7 or later.
- 3. Install bottle version 0.12.8 via pip or easy_install
- .. code-block:: bash
- pip install bottle==0.12.8
- 4. Run ``python rest.py --help`` for usage
- 5. Start the REST API on an appropriate port and IP.
- 6. Load the REST service's status page in your browser by going to the IP/port
- combination (e.g. http://127.0.0.1:8000)
- 7. You should see a page entitled "Salt Proxy Minion" with two sections,
- one for "services" and one for "packages" and you should see a log entry in
- the terminal where you started the REST process indicating that the index
- page was retrieved.
- .. image:: /_static/rest_status_screen.png
- Now, configure your salt-proxy.
- 1. Edit ``/etc/salt/proxy`` and add an entry for your master's location
- .. code-block:: yaml
- master: localhost
- 2. On your salt-master, ensure that pillar is configured properly. Select an ID
- for your proxy (in this example we will name the proxy with the letter 'p'
- followed by the port the proxy is answering on). In your pillar topfile,
- place an entry for your proxy:
- .. code-block:: yaml
- base:
- 'p8000':
- - p8000
- This says that Salt's pillar should load some values for the proxy ``p8000``
- from the file ``/srv/pillar/p8000.sls`` (if you have not changed your default pillar_roots)
- 3. In the pillar root for your base environment, create the ``p8000.sls`` file with the
- following contents:
- .. code-block:: yaml
- proxy:
- proxytype: rest_sample
- url: http://<IP your REST listens on>:port
- In other words, if your REST service is listening on port 8000 on 127.0.0.1
- the 'url' key above should say ``url: http://127.0.0.1:8000``
- 4. Make sure your salt-master is running.
- 5. Start the salt-proxy in debug mode
- .. code-block:: bash
- salt-proxy --proxyid=p8000 -l debug
- 6. Accept your proxy's key on your salt-master
- .. code-block:: bash
- salt-key -y -a p8000
- The following keys are going to be accepted:
- Unaccepted Keys:
- p8000
- Key for minion p8000 accepted.
- 7. Now you should be able to ping your proxy. When you ping, you should see
- a log entry in the terminal where the REST service is running.
- .. code-block:: bash
- salt p8000 test.version
- 8. The REST service implements a degenerately simple pkg and service provider as
- well as a small set of grains. To "install" a package, use a standard
- ``pkg.install``. If you pass '==' and a verrsion number after the package
- name then the service will parse that and accept that as the package's
- version.
- 9. Try running ``salt p8000 grains.items`` to see what grains are available. You
- can target proxies via grains if you like.
- 10. You can also start and stop the available services (apache, redbull, and
- postgresql with ``service.start``, etc.
- 11. States can be written to target the proxy. Feel free to experiment with
- them.
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