Add code and set up Code Manager

Set up your control repo, create a Puppetfile, and configure Code Manager so you can start adding content to your PE environments.

The control repo is where you store your code. Code in your control repo is usually bundled in modules.

The Puppetfile specifies detailed information about each environment's Puppet code and data, including where to get that code and data from, where to install it, and whether to update it.

Code Manager automates the management and deployment of your Puppet code. It isn't required to use PE, but it is helpful for ensuring Puppet syncs code to your primary server and all your servers run new code at the same time.

Create a control repository from the Puppet template

To create a control repository (repo) that includes a standard recommended structure, code examples, and configuration scripts, base your control repo on the Puppet control repo template. This template covers most customer situations.

To base your control repo on the Puppet control repository template, you copy the control repo template to your development workstation, set your own remote Git repository as the default source, and then push the template contents to that source.

The control repo template contains the files needed to get you started with a functioning control repo, including:
  • An environment.conf file to implement a site-modules/ directory for roles, profiles, and custom modules.

  • config_version scripts to notify you which control repo version was applied to the agents.

  • Basic code examples for setting up roles and profiles.

  • An example hieradata directory that matches the default hierarchy .

  • A Puppetfile to manage content maintained in your environment.

Set up a private SSH key so that your primary server can identify itself to your Git host.

  1. Generate a private SSH key to allow access to the control repository.

    This SSH key cannot require a password.

    1. Generate the key pair:
      ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 -P '' -f /etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/ssh/id-control_repo.rsa
    2. Set appropriate permissions so that the pe-puppet user can access the key:
      puppet infrastructure configure

    Your keys are now located in /etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/ssh:

    • Private key: /etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/ssh/id-control_repo.rsa

    • Public key: /etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/ssh/id-control_repo.rsa.pub

    Configure your Git host to use the SSH public key you generated. The process to do this is different for every Git host. Usually, you create a user or service account, and then assign the SSH public key to it.

    Code management needs read access to your control repository, as well as any module repositories referenced in the Puppetfile.

    See the your Git host docs for detailed instructions on adding SSH keys to your Git server. Commonly used Git hosts include:

  2. Create a repository in your Git account, with the name you want your control repo to have.

    Steps for creating a repository vary, depending on what Git host you are using (GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, or another provider). See your Git host's documentation for complete instructions.

    For example, on GitHub:

    1. Click + at the top of the page, and choose New repository.
    2. Select the account Owner for the repository.
    3. Name the repository (for example, control-repo).
    4. Note the repository's SSH URL for later use.
  3. If you don't already have Git installed, run the following command on your primary server:
    yum install git
  4. From the command line, clone the Puppet control-repo template.
    git clone https://github.com/puppetlabs/control-repo.git
  5. Change directory into your contro repo.
    cd <NAME OF YOUR CONTROL REPO>
  6. Remove the template repository as your default source.
    git remote remove origin
  7. Add the control repository you created as the default source.
    git remote add origin <URL OF YOUR GIT REPOSITORY>
  8. Push the contents of the cloned control repo to your remote copy of the control repo:
    git push origin production
Results

You now have a control repository based on the Puppet control-repo template. When you make changes to this repo on your workstation and push those changes to the remote copy of the control repo on your Git server, Code Manager deploys your infrastructure changes.

You also now have a Puppetfile available for you to start adding and managing content, like module code.

Configure Code Manager

Code Manager stages, commits, and synchronizes your code, automatically managing your environments and modules when you make changes.

Enable Code Manager

To enable Code Manager set parameters in the console.

Before you begin
See Configure settings using the console for more details about setting parameters in the console.
  1. In the console, click Node groups, set the following parameters in the puppet_enterprise::profile::master class in the PE Master node group.
    • code_manager_auto_configure to true.
    • r10k_remote: This is the location of your control repository. Enter a string that is a valid URL for your Git control repository. For example: git@<YOUR.GIT.SERVER.COM>:puppet/control.git.
    • r10k_private_key: Enter a string specifying the path to the SSH private key that permits the pe-puppet user to access your Git repositories. This file must be located on the primary server, owned by the pe-puppet user, and located in a directory that the pe-puppet user has permission to view. We recommend /etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/ssh/id-control_repo.rsa
  2. Click Commit.
  3. On the command line, run puppet job run --nodes <NODE NAME> where <NODE NAME> is the name of your primary server.
    puppet job run --nodes small-doubt.delivery.puppetlabs.net
    Note: r10k is a code management tool that allows you to manage your environment configurations — production, testing, and development — in a source control repository.

    Next, test the connection to the control repo.

Set up authentication for Code Manager

To securely deploy environments, Code Manager needs an authentication token for both authentication and authorization.

To generate a token for Code Manager:

  1. Assign a user to the deployment role.
  2. In the console, create a deployment user.
    Tip: Create a dedicated deployment user for Code Manager use.
  3. Add the deployment user to the Code Deployers role.
    Note: This role is automatically created on install, with default permissions for code deployment and token lifetime management.
  4. Create a password by clicking Generate Password.
  5. Request an authentication token for deployments

Assign a user to the deployment role

To request an authentication token, you must first assign a user the correct permissions with role-based access control (RBAC).

  1. In the console, create a deployment user. We recommend that you create a dedicated deployment user for Code Manager use.
  2. Add the deployment user to the Code Deployers role. This role is automatically created on install, with default permissions for code deployment and token lifetime management.
  3. Create a password by clicking Generate Password.
What to do next
Request the authentication token.

Request an authentication token for deployments

Request an authentication token for the deployment user to enable secure deployment of your code.

By default, authentication tokens have a one-hour lifetime. With the Override default expiry permission set, you can change the lifetime of the token to a duration better suited for a long-running, automated process.

Generate the authentication token using the puppet-access command.

  1. From the command line on the primary server, run puppet-access login --lifetime 180d. This command both requests the token and sets the token lifetime to 180 days.
    Tip: You can add flags to the request specifying additional settings such as the token file's location or the URL for your RBAC API. See Configuration file settings for puppet-access.
  2. Enter the username and password of the deployment user when prompted.
Results

The generated token is stored in a file for later use. The default location for storing the token is ~/.puppetlabs/token. To view the token, run puppet-access show.

What to do next
Test the connection to the control repo.

Deploy your code

Use the command line to trigger Code Manager after making changes to your Puppetfile.

When you make changes to your Puppetfile, like adding a new module or creating a repo, you must deploy your code before Code Manager can recognize or start managing the content.
SSH into your primary server and run puppet-code deploy --all --wait.
Results
You have deployed code to all environments. The --wait flag returns results after the deployment is finished. Use the command puppet-code deploy <ENVIRONMENT> to deploy code to only a specific environment. You can also deploy code using a webhook or custom scripts.