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Supermarket Belongs to the Community

Supermarket belongs to the community. While Chef has the responsibility to keep it running and be stewards of its functionality, what it does and how it works is driven by the community. The chef/supermarket repository will continue to be where development of the Supermarket application takes place. Come be part of shaping the direction of Supermarket by opening issues and pull requests or by joining us on the Chef Mailing List.

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The chef cookbook has been deprecated

Author provided reason for deprecation:

The chef cookbook has been deprecated and is no longer being maintained by its authors. Use of the chef cookbook is no longer recommended.

You may find that the chef-client cookbook is a suitable alternative.

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chef (10) Versions 0.21.0

Installs and configures Chef for chef-client and chef-server

Policyfile
Berkshelf
Knife
cookbook 'chef', '= 0.21.0', :supermarket
cookbook 'chef', '= 0.21.0'
knife supermarket install chef
knife supermarket download chef
README
Dependencies
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BOOTSTRAP CHANGES

The bootstrap cookbook's recipes for configuring a RubyGem installation of Chef have been merged into this cookbook.

bootstrap::client -> chef::bootstrap_client
bootstrap::server -> chef::bootstrap_server

Be aware of the following changes to this cookbook.

  • Bootstrap no longer generates a random password for the webui admin user. The default password is displayed on the webui login page and should be changed immediately after logging in.
  • Server configuration now has a setting for the cookbook tarballs. See the server.rb.erb template.
  • We now set the signing key/cert locations and set owner / group. See the server.rb.erb template.
  • The validation client name is configurable. See the attributes.

DESCRIPTION

This cookbook is used to configure the system to be a Chef Client or a Chef Server. It is a complex cookbook, please read this entire document to understand how it works. For more information on how Chef itself works, see the Chef Wiki

REQUIREMENTS

Chef 0.8.16 or later is required.

Chef 0.9.0 or later is required to use the chef.init_style attribute value init, in order to have the init scripts available.

Platform

If using this cookbook to manage a Chef Server system that was installed from Debian/Ubuntu packages, note that in the packages, the configuration files are split up for server.rb, solr.rb and webui.rb, and the chef::server recipe may not work as desired.

We recommend using a recent version of Ubuntu or Debian for the Chef Server.

  • Ubuntu 9.10/10.04
  • Debian testing/unstable

These versions have newer versions of CouchDB and RabbitMQ packaged.

chef::client is tested on Ubuntu 8.04+, Debian 5.0, CentOS 5.x, Fedora 10+, OpenBSD 4.6, FreeBSD 7.1 and Gentoo.

chef::bootstrap_client is tested on the above. OpenSolaris 11 is also tested, but there's a bug in Ohai that requires some manual intervention (OHAI-122).

chef::server is tested on Ubuntu 8.04+, Debian 5.0.

chef::bootstrap_server is tested on Ubuntu 8.04+, Debian 5.0.

Client

runit cookbook is suggested for RubyGems installation. No other cookbooks are required for clients.

Server

The chef::bootstrap_server recipe uses the following other cookbooks from the Opscode repository.

  • couchdb
  • rabbitmq_chef
  • openssl
  • zlib
  • xml
  • java

The chef::server_proxy recipe uses the following cookbook:

  • apache2

ATTRIBUTES

The attributes for configuring the chef cookbook are under the chef namespace on the node, i.e., @node[:chef] or @node.chef.

When using the bootstrap recipe, set the desired attributes using a JSON file. See "BOOTSTRAPPING" for examples.

umask

Sets the umask for files created by the server process via Chef::Config[:umask] in /etc/chef/server.rb

url_type

Set up the URLs the client should connect to with this. Default is http, which tells the client to connect to http://server:4000. If you set up your chef-server to use an SSL front-end for example with chef::server_proxy, set this to https for clients and the URLs will be https://server/.

By default the only URL config setting for Chef 0.8.x+ is Chef::Config[:chef_server_url]. The other older URLs are still supported so you can split out the various functions of the Chef Server, but configuration of those is outside the scope of this cookbook.

init_style

Specifies the init style to use. Default runit. Other possible values init, bsd, any other string will be treated as unknown and a message will be displayed during the Chef run.

If your platform doesn't have a runit package or if the cookbook doesn't detect it, but you still want to use runit, set init_style to none and install runit separately. You may need to configure the runit services separately.

Using the init value for this attribute will retrieve the init scripts that are distributed with the Chef gem.

This cookbook does not yet support Upstart for Ubuntu/Debian, but that is planned for a future release, and will be specified via this attribute.

path

This is the base location where Chef will store data and other artifacts. Default /srv/chef for RubyGems installed systems. If using Chef packages for your platform, the location preference varies. The default on Debian and Red Hat based systems is a filesystem hiearchy standard (FHS) suggestion. Some other locations you may consider, by platform:

Debian and Red Hat based Linux distros (Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora, etc):

  • /var/lib/chef

Any BSD and Gentoo:

  • /var/chef

run_path

Location for pidfiles on systems using init scripts. Default /var/run/chef.

If init_style is init, this is used, and should match what the init script itself uses for the PID files.

cache_path

Location where the client will cache cookbooks and other data. Default is cache underneath the chef[:path] location. Linux distributions adhering to the FHS prefer /var/cache/chef instead.

Base directory for data that is easily regenerated such as cookbook tarballs (Chef::Config[:cookbook_tarballs]) on the server, downloaded cookbooks on the client, etc. See the config templates.

backup_path

Location where backups of files, corresponds to the file_backup_path location. Defaults to backup under chef[:path] location. Set to false to use the old behavior which stores the backup files in the same directory as the target.

FHS location suggestion: /var/lib/chef/backup.

serve_path

Used by the Chef server as the base location to "serve" cookbooks, roles and other assets. Default is /srv/chef.

server_version

Version of Chef to install for the server. Used by the server_proxy recipe to set the location of the DocumentRoot of the WebUI. Automatically determined via ohai's chef_packages[:chef][:version] by default.

client_version

Version of Chef to install for the client. Used to display a log message about the location of the init scripts when init_style is init, and can be used to upgrade chef gem with the chef::bootstrap_client recipe. Automatically determined via ohai's chef_packages[:chef][:version] by default.

client_interval

Number of seconds to run chef-client periodically. Default 1800 (30 minutes).

client_splay

Splay interval to randomly add to interval. Default 20.

log_dir

When init_style is init, this directory needs to be created. The default is /var/log/chef.

client_log, indexer_log, server_log

These options are deprecated to reduce complexity and potential confusion.

server_port

Port for the Server API service to listen on. Default 4000.

webui_port

Port for the Server WebUI service to listen on. Default 4040.

webui_enabled

As of version 0.8.x+, the WebUI part of the Chef Server is optional, and disabled by default. To enable it, set this to true.

server_fqdn

Fully qualified domain name of the server. Default is chef.domain where domain is detected by Ohai. You should configure a DNS entry for your Chef Server.

On servers, this specifies the URL the server expects to use by default Chef::Config[:chef_server_url], plus it is used in the server_ssl_req as the canonical name (CN) and in server_proxy for the vhost name.

On clients, this specifies the URL the client uses to connect to the server as Chef::Config[:chef_server_url].

server_url

Full URI for the Chef Server. Used for chef_server_url config setting. The default value combines the attributes chef.url_type, chef.server_fqdn and chef.server_port, creating for example "http://chef.example.com:4000". If you are using the Opscode Platform, set this to "https://api.opscode.com/organizations/ORGNAME", where ORGNAME is your organization's simple string name.

SERVER PROXY

The following attributes are used by the server_proxy.rb recipe, and are stored in the server_proxy.rb attributes file.

doc_root

DocumentRoot for the WebUI. Also gets set in the vhost for the API, but it is not used since the vhost merely proxies to the server on port 4000.

server_ssl_req

Used by the server_proxy recipe, this attribute can be used to set up a self-signed SSL certificate automatically using OpenSSL. Fields:

  • C: country (two letter code)
  • ST: state/province
  • L: locality or city
  • O: organization
  • OU: organizational unit
  • CN: canonical name, usually the fully qualified domain name of the server (FQDN)
  • emailAddress: contact email address

This attribute is now in the server_proxy.rb attributes file, as it is specific to that context.

server_proxy.css_expire_hours

Sets expiration time for CSS in the WebUI.

server_proxy.js_expire_hours

Sets expiration time for JavaScript in the WebUI.

RECIPES AND USAGE

This section describes the recipes in the cookbook and how to use them in your environment.

BOOTSTRAPPING

The first two recipes described are for "bootstrapping" a system to be a Chef Client or Chef Server, respectively. Only use these recipes with RubyGems installations of Chef.

These recipes are typically used with chef-solo using a JSON file of attributes and a run list, and a solo config file. For more information see Bootstrap Chef RubyGems Installation on the Chef Wiki.

bootstrap_client

ONLY FOR RUBYGEMS INSTALLATIONS. Do not use this recipe if you installed Chef from packages for your platform.

Use this recipe to "bootstrap" a client so it can connect to a Chef Server. This recipe does the following:

  • Ensures the gem installed matches the version desired (client_version attribute).
  • Sets up the chef-client service depending on the init_style attribute (see above).
  • Sets up some directories for Chef to use.
  • Creates the client configuration file /etc/chef/client.rb based on the configuration passed via JSON.

For configuring a new client to connect to the Opscode Platform:

{
  "chef": {
    "server_url": "https://api.opscode.com/organizations/ORGNAME"
  },
  "run_list": "recipe[chef::bootstrap_client]"
}

For configuring a new client to connect to a local Chef Server:

{
  "chef": {
    "server_url": "http://chef.example.com:4000"
  },
  "run_list": "recipe[chef::bootstrap_client]"
}

This is the minimal JSON to use for the client configuration. See the ATTRIBUTES section above for more options.

bootstrap_server

ONLY FOR RUBYGEMS INSTALLATIONS. Do not use this recipe if you installed Chef from packages for your platform.

Use this recipe to "bootstrap" a system to become a Chef Server. This recipe does the following:

  • Includes the chef::bootstrap_client recipe to configure itself to be its own client.
  • Installs CouchDB from package or source depending on the platform.
  • Installs Java for the chef-solr search engine.
  • Installs RabbitMQ (rabbitmq_chef cookbook) for the chef-solr-indexer consumer.
  • Installs all the Server-related Gems.
  • Creates the server configuration file /etc/chef/server.rb based on the configuration passed via JSON.
  • Sets up some directories for the server to use.
  • Sets up the chef-server, chef-solr, chef-solr-indexer services depending on the init_style attribute (see above).

Minimal JSON to use for the server configuration:

{
  "chef": {
    "server_url": "http://localhost.localdomain:4000",
  },
  "run_list": "recipe[chef::bootstrap_server]"
}

Note that the chef-server-webui is optional and can be enabled if desired by adding this to the JSON under "chef":

"webui_enabled": true

client

The client recipe is used to manage the configuration of an already-installed and configured Chef client. It can be used after a RubyGems installation bootstrap (per above), or with clients that were installed from platform packaging.

The recipe itself manages the /etc/chef/client.rb config file based on the attributes in this cookbook. When the client config is updated, the recipe will also reread the configuration during the Chef run, so the current Chef run can be dynamically changed.

This recipe does not manage the chef-client service. It is assumed to have been set up and started from the bootstrap_client recipe above, or from OS / distribution packaging. The chef-client service should not be restarted as a result of /etc/chef/client.rb changing, as that can cause the current process running the client to be restarted, having unpredictable results.

default

There is no spoon :-).

delete_validation

This is a standalone recipe that merely deletes the validation certificate (default /etc/chef/validation.pem). Use this if managing the client config file is not required in your environment.

Beware if using this on your Chef Server. First copy the validation.pem certificate file to another location, such as your knife configuration directory (~/.chef) or Chef Repository.

server

The server recipe includes the chef::client recipe above.

The recipe itself manages the services and the Server config file /etc/chef/server.rb. See above under Platform requirements for cavaet when running Chef Server installed via Debian/Ubuntu packages. Changes to the recipe to manage additional templates may be required.

The following services are managed:

  • chef-solr
  • chef-solr-indexer
  • chef-server
  • chef-webui (if installed)

Changes to the /etc/chef/server.rb will trigger a restart of these services.

Since the Chef Server itself typically runs the CouchDB service for the data store, the recipe will do a compaction on the Chef database and all the views associated with the Chef Server. These compactions only occur if the database/view size is more than 100Mb. It will use the configured CouchDB URL, which is http://localhost:5984 by default. The actual value used for the CouchDB server is from the Chef::Config[:couchdb_url], so this can be dynamically changed.

server_proxy

This recipe sets up an Apache2 VirtualHost to proxy HTTPS for the Chef Server API and WebUI.

The API will be proxied on port 443. If the chef-serer-webui is installed, it will be proxied on port 444. The recipe dynamically creates the OpenSSL certificate based on the chef.server_ssl_req attribute. It uses some additional configuration for Apache to improve performance of the webui. The virtual host template is chef_server.conf.erb. The DocumentRoot setting is used for the WebUI, but not the API, and is set with the attribute chef.doc_root.

TEMPLATES

chef_server.conf.erb

VirtualHost file used by Apache2 in the chef::server_proxy recipe.

client.rb.erb

Configuration for the client, lands in /etc/chef/client.rb.

server.rb.erb

Configuration for the server and server components, lands in /etc/chef/server.rb. See above regarding Debian/Ubuntu packaging config files when using packages to install Chef.

sv-*run.erb

Various runit "run" scripts for the Chef services that get configured when init_style is "runit".

LICENSE AND AUTHORS

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and

Dependent cookbooks

xml >= 0.0.0
zlib >= 0.0.0
runit >= 0.0.0
couchdb >= 0.0.0
java >= 0.0.0
openssl >= 0.0.0
rabbitmq_chef >= 0.0.0
apache2 >= 0.0.0

Contingent cookbooks

There are no cookbooks that are contingent upon this one.

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