split tutorial into quickstart, make tutorial a guide

Signed-off-by: Nico Schottelius <nico@brief.schottelius.org>
This commit is contained in:
Nico Schottelius 2012-01-11 17:11:11 +01:00
parent d109c1bc3d
commit c5cd1ce89a
3 changed files with 117 additions and 80 deletions

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@ -146,5 +146,5 @@ SEE ALSO
COPYING
-------
Copyright \(C) 2011 Nico Schottelius. Free use of this software is
Copyright \(C) 2011-2012 Nico Schottelius. Free use of this software is
granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 (GPLv3).

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@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
cdist-quickstart(7)
===================
Nico Schottelius <nico-cdist--@--schottelius.org>
NAME
----
cdist-quickstart - jump in and enjoy cdist
INTRODUCTION
------------
This tutorial is aimed at people learning cdist and shows
typical approaches as well as gives an easy start into
the world of configuration management.
This tutorial assumes you are configuring **localhost**, because
it is always available. Just replace **localhost** with your target
host for real life usage.
QUICK START - GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY NOW
--------------------------------------
For those who just want to configure a system with the
cdist configuration management and do not need (or want)
to understand everything.
Cdist uses **ssh** for communication and transportation
and usually logs into the **target host** as the
**root** user. So you need to configure the **ssh server**
of the target host to allow root logins: Edit
the file **/etc/ssh/sshd_config** and add one of the following
lines:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Allow login only via public key
PermitRootLogin without-password
# Allow login via password and public key
PermitRootLogin yes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As cdist uses ssh intensively, it is recommended to setup authentication
with public keys:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Generate pubkey pair as a normal user
ssh-keygen
# Copy pubkey over to target host
ssh-copy-id root@localhost
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have a look at ssh-agent(1) and ssh-add(1) on how to cache the password for
your public key. Usually it looks like this:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Start agent and export variables
eval `ssh-agent`
# Add keys (requires password for every identity file)
ssh-add
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At this point you should be able to ***ssh root@localhost*** without
re-entering the password. If something failed until here, ensure that
all steps went successfully and you have read and understood the
documentation.
As soon as you are able to login without password to localhost,
we can use cdist to configure it. You can copy and paste the following
code into your shell to get started and configure localhost:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Get cdist
git clone git://git.schottelius.org/cdist
# Create manifest (maps configuration to host(s)
cd cdist
echo '__file /etc/cdist-configured' > conf/manifest/init
# Configure localhost in verbose mode
./bin/cdist config -v localhost
# Find out that cdist created /etc/cdist-configured
ls -l /etc/cdist-configured
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That's it, you've successfully used cdist to configure your first host!
Continue reading the next sections, to understand what you did and how
to create a more sophisticated configuration.
CONTINUE READING
-----------------
SEE ALSO
--------
- cdist(1)
- cdist-type(7)
- cdist-best-practice(7)
- cdist-stages(7)?
COPYING
-------
Copyright \(C) 2011-2012 Nico Schottelius. Free use of this software is
granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 (GPLv3).

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@ -10,85 +10,8 @@ cdist-tutorial - a guided introduction into cdist
INTRODUCTION
------------
This tutorial is aimed at people learning cdist and shows
typical approaches as well as gives an easy start into
the world of configuration management.
This tutorial assumes you are configuring **localhost**, because
it is always available. Just replace **localhost** with your target
host for real life usage.
QUICK START - GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY NOW
--------------------------------------
For those who just want to configure a system with the
cdist configuration management and do not need (or want)
to understand everything.
Cdist uses **ssh** for communication and transportation
and usually logs into the **target host** as the
**root** user. So you need to configure the **ssh server**
of the target host to allow root logins: Edit
the file **/etc/ssh/sshd_config** and add one of the following
lines:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Allow login only via public key
PermitRootLogin without-password
# Allow login via password and public key
PermitRootLogin yes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As cdist uses ssh intensively, it is recommended to setup authentication
with public keys:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Generate pubkey pair as a normal user
ssh-keygen
# Copy pubkey over to target host
ssh-copy-id root@localhost
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have a look at ssh-agent(1) and ssh-add(1) on how to cache the password for
your public key. Usually it looks like this:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Start agent and export variables
eval `ssh-agent`
# Add keys (requires password for every identity file)
ssh-add
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At this point you should be able to ***ssh root@localhost*** without
re-entering the password. If something failed until here, ensure that
all steps went successfully and you have read and understood the
documentation.
As soon as you are able to login without password to localhost,
we can use cdist to configure it. You can copy and paste the following
code into your shell to get started and configure localhost:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Get cdist
git clone git://git.schottelius.org/cdist
# Create manifest (maps configuration to host(s)
cd cdist
echo '__file /etc/cdist-configured' > conf/manifest/init
# Configure localhost in verbose mode
./bin/cdist config -v localhost
# Find out that cdist created /etc/cdist-configured
ls -l /etc/cdist-configured
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That's it, you've successfully used cdist to configure your first host!
Continue reading the next sections, to understand what you did and how
to create a more sophisticated configuration.
This document gives you a pointer on what to read in
which order and is thus more a "guide to the right locations".
@ -193,3 +116,8 @@ SEE ALSO
- cdist-type(7)
- cdist-best-practice(7)
- cdist-stages(7)?
COPYING
-------
Copyright \(C) 2011-2012 Nico Schottelius. Free use of this software is
granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 (GPLv3).