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PSICK: Classify and manage with style

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This is the PSICK (Puppet Systems Infrastructure Construction Kit) module, a module than alone accomplishes a good slice of what you need to do with Puppet.

Example42's psick Puppet module provides the following features, all of which are optional:

The module is designed to:

It can be used together with the PSICK control-repo or as a strandalone module, just classify it on your nodes:

include psick

By default, this doesn't do anything at all, but is enough to let you manage everything via Hiera, in the psick namespace.

In the following examples we will use Hiera YAML files, but any backend can be used: psick is a normal, even if somehow unusual, Puppet module, with classes (a lot of them) whose params can be set as Hiera data, defines, templates, files, fuctions, custom data types etc.

Check the default PSICK hiera data module for various real world usage examples.

Classification

Psick can manage the whole classification of the nodes of an infrastructure. It can work side by side and External Node Classifier, or it can totally replace it.

When used for classification, you just need to include the psick class on all your nodes (typically in manifests/site.pp) and then configure it via Hiera, considering that:

Example of Hiera data to classifiy Linux and Windows nodes:

# First run mode must be enabled and each class to include there explicitely defined:
psick::enable_firstrun: true
psick::firstrun::linux_classes:
  hostname: psick::hostname
  packages: psick::aws::sdk
psick::firstrun::windows_classes:
  hostname: psick::hostname
  packages: psick::aws::sdk

# Pre and base classes, both on Linux and Windows
psick::pre::linux_classes:
  puppet: puppet
  dns: psick::dns::resolver
  hostname: psick::hostname
  hosts: psick::hosts::resource
  repo: psick::repo
psick::base::linux_classes:
  sudo: psick::sudo
  time: psick::time
  sysctl: psick::sysctl
  update: psick::update
  ssh: psick::openssh::tp
  mail: psick_profile::postfix
  mail: psick::users::ad

psick::pre::windows_classes:
  hosts: psick::hosts::resource
psick::base::windows_classes:
  features: psick::windows::features
  registry: psick::windows::registry
  services: psick::windows::services
  time: psick::time
  users: psick::users::ad

# Profiles for specific roles (ie: webserver)
psick::profiles::linux_classes:
  webserver: apache
psick::profiles::windows_classes:
  webserver: psick_profile::iis

Psick base profiles

Psick provides ready to use profiles for many common OS configurations: users management, time, openssh, keys, cronjobs, sysctl, different languages setups (php, ruby, python...), motd, hosts file, common packages, proxy...

Refer to the specific documentation for more details. Here is some example Hiera data to manage uan user with admin powers, the dns resolver and some limits, according to the profile used:

# User al creation with ssh_authorized_keys:
psick::users::users_hash:
  al:
    ensure: present
    comment: 'Al'
    groups:
      - users
      - wheel
    ssh_authorized_keys:
      - 'ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC...'
# Passwordless sudopowers for user al
psick::sudo::directives:
  al:
    content: 'al ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL'

# Example to manage resolver
psick::dns::resolver::nameservers:
  - 8.8.8.8
  - 1.1.1.1

# Sample Limits
psick::limits::limits_hash:
  '*/nofile':
    soft: 2048
    hard: 4096

psick_profile and applications profiles

For some very common applications and languages, there are dedicated profile classes and defines, in the psick and the psick_profile modules. Here's a list from psick:

Check the psick_profile module for more details.

Main variables and common parameters

The main psick class has some parameters which are used as defaults in all the psick and psick profile classes or can contain data (in Hashes of key-values) used by all the other psick profiless

You can use them as general switches or data sources which apply to psick and psick_profile classes.

Check for more details on the Main Parameters, here they are wit the default values:

# General psick switches
psick::manage: true
psick::auto_prereq: true
psick::noop_manage: false
psick::noop_value: false
psick::force_ordering: true

# Available data general enpoints
psick::settings: {}
psick::servers: {}
psick::tp: {}
psick::firewall: {}
psick::monitor: {}

Additional documentation

Check this list of blog posts about psick module: