Puppetboard is a web interface to PuppetDB aiming to replace the reporting functionality of Puppet Dashboard.
Puppetboard relies on the pypuppetdb library to fetch data from PuppetDB and is built with the help of the Flask microframework.
As of version 0.1.0 and higher, Puppetboard requires PuppetDB 3.
- At the current time of writing, Puppetboard supports the following Python versions:
- Python 2.6
- Python 2.7
Contents
Puppetboard is very, very young but it works fairly well.
That being said a lot of the code is very experimental, just trying to figure out what works and what not, what we need to do different and what features we need on the PuppetDB side of things.
As such you should be at least comfortable handling a few errors this might throw at you.
Puppetboard is now packaged and available on PyPi.
There is a Puppet module by Spencer Krum that takes care of installing Puppetboard for you.
You can install it with:
puppet module install puppet-puppetboard
To install it simply issue the following command:
$ pip install puppetboard
This will install Puppetboard and take care of the dependencies. If you do this Puppetboard will be installed in the so called site-packages or dist-packages of your Python distribution.
The complete path on Debian and Ubuntu systems would be /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/lib/dist-packages/puppetboard
and on Fedora would be /usr/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages/puppetboard
where X and Y are replaced by your major and minor python versions.
You will need this path in order to configure your HTTPD and WSGI-capable application server.
Native packages for your operating system will be provided in the near future.
OS | Status | Â |
---|---|---|
Debian 6/Squeeze | planned | Requires Backports |
Debian 7/Wheezy | planned | Â |
Ubuntu 13.04 | planned | Â |
Ubuntu 13.10 | planned | Â |
CentOS/RHEL 5 | n/a | Python 2.4 |
CentOS/RHEL 6 | planned | Â |
OpenSuSE 12/13 | available | Maintained on OpenSuSE Build Service |
SuSE LE 11 SP3 | available | Maintained on OpenSuSE Build Service |
ArchLinux | available | Maintained by Tim Meusel |
OpenBSD | available | Maintained by Sebastian Reitenbach |
A Dockerfile was added to the source-code in the 0.2.0 release. An officially image is planned for the 0.2.x series.
Usage: .. code-block:: bash
$ docker build -t puppetboard . $ docker run -it -p 9080:80 -v /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl
-e PUPPETDB_HOST=<hostname> -e PUPPETDB_PORT=8081 -e PUPPETDB_SSL_VERIFY=/etc/puppetlabs/puppetdb/ssl/ca.pem -e PUPPETDB_KEY=/etc/puppetlabs/puppetdb/ssl/private.pem -e PUPPETDB_CERT=/etc/puppetlabs/puppetdb/ssl/public.pem -e INVENTORY_FACTS='Hostname,fqdn, IP Address,ipaddress' -e ENABLE_CATALOG=true -e GRAPH_FACTS='architecture,puppetversion,osfamily' puppetboard
If you wish to hack on Puppetboard you should fork/clone the Github repository and then install the requirements through:
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
You're advised to do this inside a virtualenv specifically created to work on Puppetboard as to not pollute your global Python installation.
The following instructions will help you configure Puppetboard and your HTTPD.
Puppetboard is built completely around PuppetDB which means your environment needs to be configured to do that.
In order to get the reports to show up in Puppetboard you need to configure your environment to store those reports in PuppetDB. Have a look at the documentation about this, specifically the Enabling report storage section.
Puppetboard will look for a file pointed at by the PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS
environment variable. The file has to be identical to default_settings.py
but should only override the settings you need changed.
You can grab a copy of default_settings.py
from the path where pip
installed Puppetboard to or by looking in the source checkout.
If you run PuppetDB and Puppetboard on the same machine the default settings provided will be enough to get you started and you won't need a custom settings file.
Assuming your webserver and PuppetDB machine are not identical you will at least have to change the following settings:
PUPPETDB_HOST
PUPPETDB_PORT
By default PuppetDB requires SSL to be used when a non-local client wants to connect. Therefor you'll also have to supply the following settings:
PUPPETDB_SSL_VERIFY = /path/to/ca/keyfile.pem
PUPPETDB_KEY = /path/to/private/keyfile.pem
PUPPETDB_CERT = /path/to/public/keyfile.crt
For information about how to generate the correct keys please refer to the pypuppetdb documentation.
Other settings that might be interesting in no particular order:
SECRET_KEY
: Refer to Flask documentation, section sessions: How to generate good secret keys, to set the value. Defaults to a random 24-char string generated by os.random(24)PUPPETDB_TIMEOUT
: Defaults to 20 seconds but you might need to increase this value. It depends on how big the results are when querying PuppetDB. This behaviour will change in a future release when pagination will be introduced.UNRESPONSIVE_HOURS
: The amount of hours since the last check-in after which a node is considered unresponsive.LOGLEVEL
: A string representing the loglevel. It defaults to'info'
but can be changed to'warning'
or'critical'
for less verbose logging or'debug'
for more information.ENABLE_QUERY
: Defaults toTrue
causing a Query tab to show up in the web interface allowing users to write and execute arbitrary queries against a set of endpoints in PuppetDB. Change this toFalse
to disable this.GRAPH_TYPE`
: Specify the type of graph to display. Default is pie, other good option is donut. Other choices can be found here: _C3JS_documentationGRAPH_FACTS
: A list of fact names to tell PuppetBoard to generate a pie-chart on the fact page. With some fact values being unique per node, like ipaddress, uuid, and serial number, as well as structured facts it was no longer feasible to generate a graph for everything.INVENTORY_FACTS
: A list of tuples that serve as the column header and the fact name to search for to create the inventory page. If a fact is not found for a node thenundef
is printed.ENABLE_CATALOG
: If set toTrue
allows the user to view a node's latest catalog. This includes all managed resources, their file-system locations and their relationships, if available. Defaults toFalse
.REFRESH_RATE
: Defaults to30
the number of seconds to wait until the index page is automatically refreshed.DEFAULT_ENVIRONMENT
: Defaults to'production'
, as the name suggests, load all information filtered by this environment value.REPORTS_COUNT
: Defaults to10
the limit of the number of reports to load on the node or any reports page.OFFLINE_MODE
: If set toTrue
load static assets (jquery, semantic-ui, etc) from the local web server instead of a CDN. Defaults toFalse
.
Puppet Enterprise maintains a certificate white-list for which certificates
are allowed to access data from PuppetDB. This whitelist is maintained in
/etc/puppetlabs/puppetdb/certificate-whitelist
and you have to add the
certificate name to that file.
Afterwards you'll need to restart pe-puppetdb
and you should be able to
query PuppetDB freely now.
You can run it in development mode by simply executing:
$ python dev.py
Use PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS
to change the different settings or patch
default_settings.py
directly. Take care not to include your local changes on
that file when submitting patches for Puppetboard. Place a settings.py file
inside the base directory of the git repository that will be used, if the
environment variable is not set.
To run Puppetboard in production we provide instructions for the following scenarios:
- Apache + mod_wsgi
- Apache + mod_passenger
- nginx + uwsgi
- nginx + gunicorn
If you deploy Puppetboard through a different setup we'd welcome a pull request that adds the instructions to this section.
First we need to create the necessary directories:
$ mkdir -p /var/www/html/puppetboard
Copy Puppetboard's default_settings.py
to the newly created puppetboard
directory and name the file settings.py
. This file will be available
at the path Puppetboard was installed, for example:
/usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/lib/dist-packages/puppetboard/default_settings.py
.
Change the settings that need changing to match your environment and delete
or comment with a #
the rest of the entries.
If you don't need to change any settings you can skip the creation of the
settings.py
file entirely.
Now create a wsgi.py
with the following content in the newly created
puppetboard directory:
from __future__ import absolute_import
import os
# Needed if a settings.py file exists
os.environ['PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS'] = '/var/www/html/puppetboard/settings.py'
from puppetboard.app import app as application
Make sure this file is readable by the user the webserver runs as.
Flask requires a static secret_key, see FlaskSession, in order to protect
itself from CSRF exploits. The default secret_key in default_settings.py
generates a random 24 character string, however this string is re-generated
on each request under httpd >= 2.4.
To generate your own secret_key create a python script with the following content and run it once:
import os
os.urandom(24)
'\xfd{H\xe5<\x95\xf9\xe3\x96.5\xd1\x01O<!\xd5\xa2\xa0\x9fR"\xa1\xa8'
Copy the output and add the following to your wsgi.py
file:
application.secret_key = '<your secret key>'
The last thing we need to do is configure Apache.
Here is a sample configuration for Debian and Ubuntu:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName puppetboard.example.tld
WSGIDaemonProcess puppetboard user=www-data group=www-data threads=5
WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/html/puppetboard/wsgi.py
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/puppetboard.error.log
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/puppetboard.access.log combined
Alias /static /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard/static
<Directory /usr/local/lib/pythonX.X/dist-packages/puppetboard/static>
Satisfy Any
Allow from all
</Directory>
<Directory /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard>
WSGIProcessGroup puppetboard
WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL}
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Here is a sample configuration for Fedora:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName puppetboard.example.tld
WSGIDaemonProcess puppetboard user=apache group=apache threads=5
WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/html/puppetboard/wsgi.py
ErrorLog logs/puppetboard-error_log
CustomLog logs/puppetboard-access_log combined
Alias /static /usr/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages/puppetboard/static
<Directory /usr/lib/python2.X/site-packages/puppetboard/static>
Satisfy Any
Allow from all
</Directory>
<Directory /usr/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages/puppetboard>
WSGIProcessGroup puppetboard
WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL}
Require all granted
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Note the directory path, it's the path to where pip installed Puppetboard; X.Y
must be replaced with your python version. We also alias the /static
path
so that Apache will serve the static files like the included CSS and Javascript.
It is possible to run Python applications through Passenger. Passenger has supported this since version 3 but it's considered experimental. Since the release of Passenger 4 it's a 'core' feature of the product.
Performance wise it also leaves something to be desired compared to the mod_wsgi powered solution. Application start up is noticeably slower and loading pages takes a fraction longer.
First we need to create the necessary directories:
$ mkdir -p /var/www/puppetboard/{tmp,public}
Copy Puppetboard's default_settings.py
to the newly created puppetboard
directory and name the file settings.py
. This file will be available
at the path Puppetboard was installed, for example:
/usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/lib/dist-packages/puppetboard/default_settings.py
.
Change the settings that need changing to match your environment and delete
or comment with a #
the rest of the entries.
If you don't need to change any settings you can skip the creation of the
settings.py
file entirely.
Now create a passenger_wsgi.py
with the following content in the newly
created puppetboard directory:
from __future__ import absolute_import
import os
import logging
logging.basicConfig(filename='/path/to/file/for/logging', level=logging.INFO)
# Needed if a settings.py file exists
os.environ['PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS'] = '/var/www/puppetboard/settings.py'
try:
from puppetboard.app import app as application
except Exception, inst:
logging.exception("Error: %s", str(type(inst)))
Unfortunately due to the way Passenger works we also need to configure logging
inside passenger_wsgi.py
else application start up issues won't be logged.
This means that even though LOGLEVEL
might be set in your settings.py
this setting will take precedence over it.
Now the only thing left to do is configure Apache:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName puppetboard.example.tld
DocumentRoot /var/www/puppetboard/public
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/puppetboard.error.log
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/puppetboard.access.log combined
RackAutoDetect On
Alias /static /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard/static
</VirtualHost>
Note the /static
alias path, it's the path to where pip installed
Puppetboard. This is needed so that Apache will serve the static files like
the included CSS and Javascript.
A common Python deployment scenario is to use the uwsgi application server (which can also serve rails/rack, PHP, Perl and other applications) and proxy to it through something like nginx or perhaps even HAProxy.
uwsgi has a feature that every instance can run as its own user. In this
example we'll use the www-data
user but you can create a separate user
solely for running Puppetboard and use that instead.
First we need to create the necessary directories:
$ mkdir -p /var/www/puppetboard
Copy Puppetboard's default_settings.py
to the newly created puppetboard
directory and name the file settings.py
. This file will be available
at the path Puppetboard was installed, for example:
/usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/lib/dist-packages/puppetboard/default_settings.py
.
Change the settings that need changing to match your environment and delete
or comment with a #
the rest of the entries.
If you don't need to change any settings you can skip the creation of the
settings.py
file entirely.
Now create a wsgi.py
with the following content in the newly created
puppetboard directory:
from __future__ import absolute_import
import os
# Needed if a settings.py file exists
os.environ['PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS'] = '/var/www/puppetboard/settings.py'
from puppetboard.app import app as application
Make sure this file is owned by the user and group the uwsgi instance will run as.
Now we need to start uwsgi:
$ uwsgi --socket :9090 --wsgi-file /var/www/puppetboard/wsgi.py
Feel free to change the port to something other than 9090
.
The last thing we need to do is configure nginx to proxy the requests:
upstream puppetboard {
server 127.0.0.1:9090;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name puppetboard.example.tld;
charset utf-8;
location /static {
alias /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard/static;
}
location / {
uwsgi_pass puppetboard;
include /path/to/uwsgi_params/probably/etc/nginx/uwsgi_params;
}
}
If all went well you should now be able to access to Puppetboard. Note the
/static
location block to make nginx serve static files like the included
CSS and Javascript.
Because nginx natively supports the uwsgi protocol we use uwsgi_pass
instead of the traditional proxy_pass
.
You can use gunicorn instead of uwsgi if you prefer, the process doesn't
differ too much. As we can't use uwsgi_pass
with gunicorn, the nginx configuration file is going to differ a bit:
server {
listen 80;
server_name puppetboard.example.tld;
charset utf-8;
location /static {
alias /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard/static;
}
location / {
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Origin *;
proxy_pass_header Server;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Scheme $scheme;
proxy_connect_timeout 10;
proxy_read_timeout 10;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:9090;
}
}
Now, for running it with gunicorn:
$ cd /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages/puppetboard
$ gunicorn -b 127.0.0.1:9090 puppetboard.app:app
As we may want to serve in the background, and we need PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS
as an environment variable, is recommendable to run this under supervisor. An example supervisor config with basic settings is the following:
[program:puppetboard]
command=gunicorn -b 127.0.0.1:9090 puppetboard.app:app
user=www-data
stdout_logfile=/var/log/supervisor/puppetboard/puppetboard.out
stderr_logfile=/var/log/supervisor/puppetboard/puppetboard.err
environment=PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS="/var/www/puppetboard/settings.py"
For newer systems with systemd (for example CentOS7), you can use the following service file (/usr/lib/systemd/system/gunicorn@.service
):
[Unit]
Description=gunicorn daemon for %i
After=network.target
[Service]
ExecStart=/usr/bin/gunicorn --config /etc/sysconfig/gunicorn/%i.conf %i
ExecReload=/bin/kill -s HUP $MAINPID
PrivateTmp=true
User=gunicorn
Group=gunicorn
And the corresponding gunicorn config (/etc/sysconfig/gunicorn/puppetboard.app\:app.conf
):
import multiprocessing
bind = '127.0.0.1:9090'
workers = multiprocessing.cpu_count() * 2 + 1
chdir = '/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/puppetboard'
raw_env = ['PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS=/var/www/puppetboard/settings.py', 'http_proxy=']
If you wish to make users authenticate before getting access to Puppetboard you can use one of the following configuration snippets.
Inside the VirtualHost
:
<Location "/">
AuthType Basic
AuthName "Puppetboard"
Require valid-user
AuthBasicProvider file
AuthUserFile /path/to/a/file.htpasswd
</Location>
Inside the location / {}
block that has the uwsgi_pass
directive:
auth_basic "Puppetboard";
auth_basic_user_file /path/to/a/file.htpasswd;
This project is still very new so it's not inconceivable you'll run into issues.
For bug reports you can file an issue. If you need help with something feel free to hit up the maintainers by e-mail or on IRC. They can usually be found on IRCnet and Freenode and idles in #puppetboard.
There's now also the #puppetboard channel on Freenode where we hang out and answer questions related to pypuppetdb and Puppetboard.
There is also a GoogleGroup to exchange questions and discussions. Please note that this group contains discussions of other Puppet Community projects.
Some people have already started building things with and around Puppetboard.
Hunter Haugen has provided a Vagrant setup:
- An OpenBSD port is being maintained by Sebastian Reitenbach and can be viewed here.
- A Docker image is being maintained by Julien K. and can be viewed here.
We welcome contributions to this project. However, there are a few ground rules contributors should be aware of.
This project is licensed under the Apache v2.0 License. As such, your contributions, once accepted, are automatically covered by this license.
Write decent commit messages. Don't use swear words and refrain from uninformative commit messages as 'fixed typo'.
The preferred format of a commit message:
docs/quickstart: Fixed a typo in the Nodes section. If needed, elaborate further on this commit. Feel free to write a complete blog post here if that helps us understand what this is all about. Fixes #4 and resolves #2.
If you'd like a more elaborate guide on how to write and format your commit messages have a look at this post by Tim Pope.
A vagrant project to show off the puppetboard functionallity using the puppetboard puppet module on a puppetserver with puppetdb.