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Automation - Configuration management
Director has been designed to work in distributed environments. In case you're using tools like Puppet, Ansible, Salt (R)?ex or similar, this chapter is what you're looking for!
Generic hints
Director keeps all of it's configuration in a relational database. So, all you need to tell him is how it can reach and access that db. In case you already rolled out Icinga Web 2 you should already be used to handle resource definitions.
The Director needs a database resource
, and your RDMBS must either by
MySQL, MariaDB or PostgreSQL. This is how such a resource could look like
in your /etc/icingaweb2/resources.ini
:
[Director DB]
type = "db"
db = "mysql"
host = "localhost"
dbname = "director"
username = "director"
password = "***"
charset = "utf8"
Please note that the charset is required and MUST be utf8
.
Next you need to tell the Director to use this database resource. Create
it's config.ini
with the only required setting:
[db]
resource = "Director DB"
Hint: /etc/icingaweb2/modules/director/config.ini
is usually the full
path to this config file.
Schema migrations
You do not need to manually care about creating the schema and to migrate
it for newer versions. Just grant
the configured user all permissions on
his database.
On CLI then please run:
icingacli director migration run --verbose
You should run this command after each upgrade, or you could also run it at a regular interval. Please have a look at...
icingacli director migration pending --verbose
...in case you are looking for an idempotent way of managing the schema.
Use --help
to learn more about those commands.
If you have any good reason for doing so and feel experienced enough you
can of course also manage the schema on your own. All required files are
to be found in our schema
directories.
Deploy Icinga Director with Puppet
Drop the director source repository to a directory named director
in
one of your module_path
's and enable the module as you did with all the
others.
Deploy the mentioned database resource and config.ini
. Director could
now be configured and kick-started via the web frontend. But you are here
for automation, so please read on.
Handle schema migrations
It doesn't matter whether you already have a schema, did a fresh install or just an upgrade. Migrations are as easy as defining:
exec { 'Icinga Director DB migration':
path => '/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin',
command => 'icingacli director migration run',
onlyif => 'icingacli director migration pending',
}
Hint: please do not travel back in time, schema downgrades are not supported.
Kickstart an empty Director database
The Director kickstart wizard helps you with setting up a connection to Icinga2 master node, import it's endpoint and zone definition and it also syncs already configured command definitions. But this wizard is not only available through the web frontend, you can perfectly trigger it in an idempotent way with Puppet:
exec { 'Icinga Director Kickstart':
path => '/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin',
command => 'icingacli director kickstart run',
onlyif => 'icingacli director kickstart required',
require => Exec['Icinga Director DB migration'],
}
Nothing will happen so far. Kickstart will not do anything unless you
drop a kickstart.ini
allowing the CLI kickstart helper to do so:
[config]
endpoint = icinga-master
; host = 127.0.0.1
; port = 5665
username = director
password = ***
Usually /etc/icingaweb/modules/director/kickstart.ini
should be the
full path to this file. endpoint
(master certificate name), username
and password
(fitting an already configured ApiUser
) are required.
host
can be a resolvable hostname or an IP address. port
is 5665 per
default in case none is given. And of course your Icinga2 installation
needs to have a corresponding ApiListener
(look at your enabled
features) listening at the given port.