chake(1) -- serverless configuration management tool
SYNOPSIS
chake
init
chake
[rake arguments]
Description
chake is a tool that helps you manage multiple hosts without the need for a
central server. Configuration is managed in a local directory, which should
(but doesn't need to) be under version control with git(1) or any other
version control system.
Configuration is deployed to managed hosts remotely, either by invoking a
configuration management tool that will connect to them, or by first uploading
the necessary configuration and them remotely running a tool on the hosts.
Supported configuration managers.
chake supports the following configuration management tools:
- itamae: configuration is applied by running the itamae command line tool
on the management host; no configuration needs to be uploaded to the managed
hosts. See chake-itamae(7) for details.
- shell: the local repository is copied to the host, and the shell commands
specified in the node configuration is executed from the directory where that
copy is. See chake-shell(7) for details.
- chef: the local repository is copied to the host, and chef-solo is
executed remotely on the managed host. See chake-chef(7) for details.
Beyond applying configuration management recipes on the hosts, chake also
provides useful tools to manage multiple hosts, such as listing nodes, running
commands against all of them simultaneously, logging in to interactive
shells, and others.
creating the repository
$ chake init[:configmanager]
This will create an initial directory structure. Some of the files are specific
to your your chosen configmanager, which can be one of [SUPPORTED
CONFIGURATION MANAGERS]. The following files, though, will be common to any
usage of chake:
nodes.yaml
: where you will list the hosts you will be managing, and what
recipes to apply to each of them.nodes.d
: a directory with multiple files in the same format as nodes.yaml.
All files matching *.yaml
in it will be added to the list of nodes.Rakefile
: Contains just the require 'chake'
line. You can augment it with
other tasks specific to your intrastructure.
If you omit configmanager, itamae
will be used by default.
After the repository is created, you can call either chake
or rake
, as they
are completely equivalent.
Managing nodes
Just after you created your repository, the contents of nodes.yaml
is the
following:
host1.mycompany.com:
itamae:
- roles/basic.rb
The exact contents depends on the chosen configuration management tool.
You can list your hosts with rake nodes
:
$ rake nodes
host1.mycompany.com ssh
To add more nodes, just append to nodes.yaml
:
host1.mycompany.com:
itamae:
- roles/basic.rb
host2.mycompany.com:
itamae:
- roles/basic.rb
And chake now knows about your new node:
$ rake nodes
host1.mycompany.com ssh
host2.mycompany.com ssh
Preparings nodes to be managed
Nodes have very few initial requirements to be managed with chake
:
- The node must be accessible via SSH.
- The user you connect to the node must either be
root
, or be allowed to run
sudo
(in which case sudo
must be installed).
A note on password prompts: every time chake calls ssh on a node, you may
be required to type in your password; every time chake calls sudo on the node,
you may be require to type in your password. For managing one or two nodes this
is probably fine, but for larger numbers of nodes it is not practical. To avoid
password prompts, you can:
- Configure SSH key-based authentication. This is more secure than using passwords.
While you are at it, you also probably want disable password authentication
completely, and only allow key-based authentication
- Configure passwordless
sudo
access for the user you use to connect to your
nodes.
Checking connectivity and initial host setup
To check whether hosts are correctly configured, you can use the check
task:
$ rake check
That will run the the sudo true
command on each host. If that pass without
you having to type any passwords, it means that:
- you have SSH access to each host; and
- the user you are connecting as has password-less sudo correctly setup.
Applying configuration
Note that by default all tasks that apply to all hosts will run in parallel,
using rake's support for multitasks. If for some reason you need to prevent
that, you can pass -j1
(or --jobs=1) in the rake invocation. Note that by default rake will only run N+4 tasks in parallel, where N is the number of cores on the machine you are running it. If you have more than N+4 hosts and want all of them to be handled in parallel, you might want to pass
-j(or
--jobs`), without any number, as the last argument; with that rake will have
no limit on the number of tasks to perform in parallel.
To apply the configuration to all nodes, run
$ rake converge
To apply the configuration to a single node, run
$ rake converge:$NODE
To apply a single recipe on all nodes, run
$ rake apply[myrecipe]
What recipe
is depends on the configuration manager.
To apply a single recipe on a specific node, run
$ rake apply:$NODE[myrecipe]
If you don't inform a recipe in the command line, you will be prompted for one.
To run a shell command on all nodes, run
$ rake run
The above will prompt you for a command, then execute it on all nodes.
To pass the command to run in the command line, use the following syntax:
$ rake run[command]
If the command
you want to run contains spaces, or other characters that are
special do the shell, you have to quote them, for example:
$ rake run["cat /etc/hostname"]
To run a shell command on a specific node, run
$ rake run:$NODE[command]
As before, if you run just rake run:$NODE
, you will be prompted for the
command.
To list all existing tasks, run:
$ rake -T
Writing configuration management code
As chake supports different configuration management tools, the specifics of
configuration management code depends on the the tool you choose. See the
corresponding documentation.
The node bootstrapping process
Some of the configuration management tools require some software to be
installed on the managed hosts. When that's the case, chake acts on a node for
the first time, it has to bootstrap it. The bootstrapping process includes
doing the following:
- installing and configuring the needed software
- setting up the hostname
Node URLs
The keys in the hash that is represented in nodes.yaml
is a node URL. All
components of the URL but the hostname are optional, so just listing hostnames
is the simplest form of specifying your nodes. Here are all the components of
the node URLs:
[connection://][username@]hostname[:port][/path]
connection
: what to use to connect to the host. ssh
or local
(default: ssh
)username
: user name to connect with (default: the username on your local workstation)hostname
: the hostname to connect to (default: none)port
: port number to connect to (default: 22)/path
: where to store the cookbooks at the node (default: /var/tmp/chef.$USERNAME
)
Hooks
You can define rake tasks that will be executed before bootstrapping nodes,
before uploading configuration management content to nodes, and before
converging. To do this, you just need to enhance the corresponding tasks:
bootstrap_common
: executed before bootstrapping nodes (even if nodes have
already been bootstrapped)upload_common
: executed before uploading content to the nodeconverge_common
: executed before converging (i.e. running chef)connect_common
: executed before doing any action that connects to any of
the hosts. This can be used for example to generate a ssh configuration file
based on the contents of the nodes definition files.
Example:
task :bootstrap_common do
sh './scripts/pre-bootstrap-checks'
end
Encrypted files
chake
supports encrypted files matching either \*.gpg
or \*.asc
. There are
two ways of specicying per-host encrypted files:
-
listing them in the encrypted
attribute in the node configuration file.
Example:
host1.mycompany.com:
itamae:
- roles/basic.rb
encrypted:
- foo.txt.asc
-
(deprecated) any files matching
\*\*/files/{default,host-#{node}}/\*.{asc,gpg}
and
\*\*/files/\*.{asc,gpg}
, if encrypted
is not defined in the node
configuration.
They will be decrypted with GnuPG before being sent to the node (for the
configuration management tools that required files to be sent), without the
\*.asc
or \*.gpg
extension. You can use them to store passwords and other
sensitive information (SSL keys, etc) in the repository together with the rest
of the configuration.
For configuration managers that don't require uploading files to the managed
node, this decryption will happen right before converging or applying single
recipes, and the decrypted files will be wiped right after that.
If you use this feature, make sure that you have the wipe
program installed.
This way chake will be able to delete the decrypted files in a slightly more
secure way, after being done with them.
repository-local SSH configuration
If you need special SSH configuration parameters, you can create a file called
.ssh_config
(or whatever file name you have in the $CHAKE_SSH_CONFIG
environment variable, see below for details) in at the root of your repository,
and chake will use it when calling ssh
.
Logging in to a host
To easily login to one of your host, just run rake login:$HOSTNAME
. This will
automatically use the repository-local SSH configuration as above so you don't
have to type -F .ssh_config
all the time.
Running all SSH invocations with some prefix command
Some times, you will also want or need to prefix your SSH invocations with some
prefix command in order to e.g. tunnel it through some central exit node. You
can do this by setting $CHAKE_SSH_PREFIX
on your environment. Example:
CHAKE_SSH_PREFIX=tsocks rake converge
The above will make all SSH invocations to all hosts be called as tsocks ssh [...]
Converging local host
If you want to manage your local workstation with chake, you can declare a
local node using the "local" connection type, like this (in nodes.yaml
):
local://thunderbolt:
itamae:
- role/workstation.rb
To apply the configuration to the local host, you can use the conventional
rake converge:thunderbolt
, or the special target rake local
.
When converging all nodes, chake
will skip nodes that are declared with the
local://
connection and whose hostname does not match the hostname in the
declaration. For example:
local://desktop:
itamae:
- role/workstation.rb
local://laptop:
itamae:
- role/workstation.rb
When you run rake converge
on desktop
, laptop
will be skipped, and
vice-versa.
Accessing node data from your own tasks
It's often useful to be able to run arbitrary commands against the data you
have about nodes. You can use the Chake.nodes
for that. For example, if you
want to geolocate each of yours hosts:
task :geolocate do
Chake.nodes.each do |node|
puts "#{node.hostname}: %s" % `geoiplookup #{node.hostname}`.strip
end
end
Environment variables
$CHAKE_SSH_CONFIG
:
Local SSH configuration file. Defaults to .ssh_config
.$CHAKE_SSH_PREFIX
:
Command to prefix SSH (and rsync over SSH) calls with.$CHAKE_RSYNC_OPTIONS
:
extra options to pass to rsync
. Useful to e.g. exclude large files from
being upload to each server.$CHAKE_NODES
:
File containing the list of servers to be managed. Default: nodes.yaml
.$CHAKE_NODES_D
:
Directory containing node definition files servers to be managed. Default: nodes.d
.$CHAKE_TMPDIR
:
Directory used to store temporary cache files. Default: tmp/chake
.$CHAKE_CHEF_CONFIG
:
Chef configuration file, relative to the root of the repository. Default: config.rb
.
See also