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  1. puppet/
  2. .gitignore
  3. .kitchen.cloud.yml
  4. .kitchen.yml
  5. Gemfile
  6. LICENSE
  7. README.md
README.md

puppet-kitchen

Test Kitchen + Puppet

Overview

Provisioning an Apache Software Foundation VM requires a lot of moving parts -- things with names like apt, gem, hiera, kitchen, puppet, and r10k. To make things easier, the Apache infrastructure team provides a base definition on top of which you install and configure ‘modules’. Modules can be pretty much anything, examples being ldap and tomcat.

There are two sets of modules that you can draw from: 3rd party modules and ASF modules modules.

As an alternative to a full configuration (which would involve DNS setup, etc), the recommended process is to copy the relevant configuration file from the infrastructure-puppet repository to the default-ubuntu1464, make changes to that subset of the configuration, and only copying, committing, and pushing the results when done.

Requirements

Installation

Clone Repositories

git clone https://github.com/apache/infrastructure-puppet-kitchen
git clone https://github.com/apache/infrastructure-puppet

Install required gems

export ipr=<path to infrastructure-puppet repo>
export ipk=<path to infrastructure-puppet-kitchen repo>
gem install bundler test-kitchen kitchen-puppet kitchen-vagrant kitchen-sync
cd $ipr
bundle install
cd $ipk
bundle install

Get modules

cd $ipr # this will pull in all the 3rd party modules at the specified versions we use in production
./bin/pull # this should only take a minute or two to run, check the output of $ipr/3rdParty

Make modules useable

cd $ipk/puppet/modules
for i in $(ls $ipr/3rdParty); do ln -s $ipr/3rdParty/$i ./; done
for i in $(ls $ipr/modules); do ln -s $ipr/modules/$i ./; done

Boostrapping Default VM

This section is for the Default VM

To upgrade to the latest RubyGems:

$ gem update --system # may need to be administrator or root

NOTE: RubyGems 1.1 and 1.2 have problems upgrading when there is no rubygems-update installed.

You will need to use the following instructions if you see Nothing to update. If you have an older version of RubyGems installed, then you can still do it in two steps:

$ gem install rubygems-update  # again, might need to be admin/root
$ update_rubygems              # ... here too

In the suites section add the excludes in $ipk/.kitchen.yml as follows:

suites:
  - name: default
    manifest: site.pp
    driver_config:
      network:
        - ["private_network", {ip: "192.168.33.2"}]
    excludes:
        - ubuntu1464  #you get this name from the "platforms"section in the .kitchen.yml file
$ cd $ipk
$ kitchen create default
$ kitchen converge default

Usage

Basic

Start by copying a machine configuration from the data/nodes repository to puppet/data/node/default-ubuntu1464.yaml, editing it as needed, and then running:

$ cd $ipk
$ kitchen converge default

This will bring up a vm, run puppet apply. From there, you can continue modifying the definition and/or writing new puppet module(s) (in puppet/modules/$module) and testing by rerunning the above command.

You can directly ssh into your virtual machine using the following command:

$ kitchen login default

If you have started a service like Apache httpd on this machine, you can access it at the following IP address: 192.168.33.2.

If you don't want to use the default image, you can also do kitchen list to get a list of available VMs.

Modules

Modules are organized into two types: “third party” and “ASF custom”.

Third party modules are listed in infrastructure-puppet/Puppetfile, and updated using the bin/pull command described above. Information on locating a module can be found at puppet labs documentation.

Custom modules are stored in infrastructure-puppet/modules/. Again, documentation on how to write a module can be found in the puppet labs documentation.

Cleanup

When done, you can take down and remove the VM with the following command:

$ kitchen destroy default

Further reading

Most the the test-kitchen option work with puppet, however make sure to see the kitchen-puppet documentation (even though the explanations aren't nearly as detailed as it needs to be).

Most information has been taken from here