Table of Contents
This document describes the usual steps recommended for a new cdist setup. It is recommended that you have read and understood cdist-quickstart(7) before digging into this.
First of all, you should think about where to store your configuration database and who will be accessing or changing it. Secondly you have to think about where to configure your hosts from, which may be a different location.
For starters, having cdist (which includes the configuration database) on your notebook should be fine. Additionally an external copy of the git repository the configuration relies in is recommended, for use as backup as well to allow easy collaboration with others.
For more sophisticated setups developing cdist configurations with multiple people, have a look at cdist-best-practice(7).
I assume you have a fresh copy of the cdist tree in ~/cdist, cloned from one of the official urls (see cdist-quickstart(7) if you don’t). Entering the command "git branch" should show you "* master", which indicates you are on the master branch.
The master branch reflects the latest development of cdist. As this is the development branch, it may or may not work. There are also version branches available, which are kept in a stable state. Let’s use git branch -r to list all branches:
cdist% git branch -r origin/1.0 origin/1.1 origin/1.2 origin/1.3 origin/1.4 origin/1.5 origin/1.6 origin/1.7 origin/2.0 origin/HEAD -> origin/master origin/archive_shell_function_approach origin/master
So 2.0 is the latest version branch in this example. All versions (2.0.x) within one version branch (2.0) are compatible to each other and won’t break your configuration when updating.
It’s up to you to decide which branch you want to base your own work on: master contains more recent changes, newer types, but may also break. The version branches are stable, but may lack the latest features. Your decision can be changed later on, but may result in merge conflicts, which you will need to solve.
Let’s assume you want latest stuff and select the master branch as base for your own work. Now it’s time to create your branch, which contains your local changes. I usually name it by the company/area I am working for: ethz-systems, localch, customerX, … But this is pretty much up to you.
In this tutorial I use the branch mycompany:
cdist% git checkout -b mycompany origin/master Branch mycompany set up to track remote branch master from origin. Switched to a new branch 'mycompany' cdist-user% git branch master * mycompany
From now on, you can use git as usual to commit your changes in your own branch.
Usually a development machine like a notebook should be considered temporary only. For this reason and to enable shareability, the configuration should be published to another device as early as possible. The following example shows how to publish the configuration to another host that is reachable via ssh and has git installed:
# Create bare git repository on the host named "loch" cdist% ssh loch "GIT_DIR=/home/nutzer/cdist git init" Initialized empty Git repository in /home/nutzer/cdist/ # Add remote git repo to git config cdist% git remote add loch loch:/home/nutzer/cdist # Configure the mycompany branch to push to loch cdist% git config branch.mycompany.remote loch # Configure mycompany branch to push into remote master branch cdist% git config branch.mycompany.merge refs/heads/master # Push mycompany branch to remote branch master initially cdist% git push loch mycompany:refs/heads/master
Now you have setup the git repository to synchronise the mycompany branch with the master branch on the host loch. Thus you can commit as usual in your branch and push out changes by entering git push.
Whenever you want to update your cdist installation, you can use git to do so:
# Update git repository with latest changes from origin cdist% git fetch origin # Update current branch with master branch from origin cdist% git merge origin/master # Alternative: Update current branch with 2.0 branch from origin cdist% git merge origin/2.0