**Purpose**: Puppet is another declarative configuration management tool that excels in system configuration and enforcement. Like Ansible, it's designed to maintain the desired state of a system's configuration but uses a client-server (master-agent) architecture by default. !!! note "Assumptions" This document assumes you are deploying Puppet server onto Rocky Linux 9.4. Any version of RHEL/CentOS/Alma/Rocky should behave similarily. ## Deployment Steps: You will need to perform a few steps outlined in the [official Puppet documentation](https://www.puppet.com/docs/puppet/7/install_puppet.html) to get a Puppet server operational. A summarized workflow is seen below: ### Install Puppet Repository **Installation Scope**: Puppet Server / Managed Devices ``` sh # Add Puppet Repository / Enable Puppet on YUM sudo rpm -Uvh https://yum.puppet.com/puppet7-release-el-9.noarch.rpm ``` ### Install Puppet Server **Installation Scope**: Puppet Server ``` sh # Install the Puppet Server yum install -y puppetserver systemctl enable --now puppetserver # Validate Successful Deployment exec bash puppetserver -v # Open Necessary Firewall Port for Agent Communication sudo firewall-cmd --add-port=8140/tcp --permanent sudo firewall-cmd --reload ``` ### Install Puppet Agent **Installation Scope**: Puppet Server / Managed Devices ``` sh # Install Puppet Agent sudo yum install -y puppet-agent # Enable the Puppet Agent sudo /opt/puppetlabs/bin/puppet resource service puppet ensure=running enable=true # Configure Puppet Server to Connect To puppet config set server lab-puppet-01.bunny-lab.io --section main # Establish Secure Connection to Puppet Server puppet ssl bootstrap # ((On the Puppet Server)) # You will see an error stating: "Couldn't fetch certificate from CA server; you might still need to sign this agent's certificate (fedora.bunny-lab.io)." # Run the following command (as root) on the Puppet Server to generate a certificate puppetserver ca sign --certname fedora.bunny-lab.io ``` #### Validate Agent Functionality At this point, you want to ensure that the device being managed by the agent is able to pull down configurations from the Puppet Server. You will know if it worked by getting a message similar to `Notice: Applied catalog in X.XX seconds` after running the following command: ``` sh puppet agent --test ``` ### Install PuppetDB At this point, we will install PuppetDB, which will add extra reporting and management functionality for Puppet to the Puppet server. ``` sh # Install PuppetDB yum install -y puppetdb # Install PuppetDB Module puppet module install puppetlabs-puppetdb ``` Now we need to configure a manifest file on the Puppet Server running PuppetDB, in this case, the same exact server that runs the Puppet Server itself. Create the following file if it does not already exist: ```json title="/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/production/manifests/site.pp" node 'lab-puppet-01.bunny-lab.io' { # Include the puppetdb class with custom parameters class { 'puppetdb': listen_address => '0.0.0.0', # Allows access from all network interfaces } # Configure the Puppet Server to use PuppetDB include puppetdb::master::config } ``` Finally, we want to apply the configuration changes we made: ``` sh sudo puppet agent -t ``` ## Install r10k At this point, we need to configure Gitea as the storage repository for the Puppet "Environments" (e.g. `Production` and `Development`). We can do this by leveraging a tool called "r10k" which pulls a Git repository and configures it as the environment in Puppet. ``` sh # Install r10k Pre-Requisites sudo dnf install -y ruby ruby-devel gcc make # Install r10k Gem (The Software) # Note: If you encounter any issues with permissions, you can install the gem with "sudo gem install r10k --no-document". sudo gem install r10k # Verify the Installation (Run this as a non-root user) r10k version ``` ## Configure r10k ``` sh # Create the r10k Configuration Directory sudo mkdir -p /etc/puppetlabs/r10k # Create the r10k Configuration File sudo nano /etc/puppetlabs/r10k/r10k.yaml ``` ```yaml title="/etc/puppetlabs/r10k/r10k.yaml" --- # Cache directory for r10k cachedir: '/var/cache/r10k' # Sources define which repositories contain environments (Be sure to use the SSH URL, not the Git URL) sources: puppet: remote: 'https://git.bunny-lab.io/GitOps/Puppet.git' basedir: '/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments' ``` ``` sh # Create r10k Cache Directory sudo mkdir -p /var/cache/r10k sudo chown -R puppet:puppet /var/cache/r10k ``` ## Configure Gitea At this point, we need to set up the branches and file/folder structure of the Puppet repository on Gitea. !!! warning "Incomplete" This section needs a copy of all of the folder structure explained, as well as the branch structure, and example files for things like `site.pp`, `environment.conf`, and `init.pp`. That will be added at a later time soon. ## Storing Credentials to Gitea We need to be able to pull down the data from Gitea's Puppet repository under the root user so that r10k can automatically pull down any changes made to the Puppet environments (e.g. `Production` and `Development`). Each Git branch represents a different Puppet environment. We will use an application token to do this. Navigate to "**Gitea > User (Top-Right) > Settings > Applications - Token Name: `Puppet r10k` - Permissions: `Repository > Read Only` - Click the "**Generate Token**" button to finish.