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Mastering SaltStack

You're reading from   Mastering SaltStack Use Salt to the fullest

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786467393
Length 378 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Joseph Hall Joseph Hall
Author Profile Icon Joseph Hall
Joseph Hall
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Mastering SaltStack Second Edition
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Essentials Revisited FREE CHAPTER 2. Diving into Salt Internals 3. Managing States 4. Exploring Salt SSH 5. Managing Tasks Asynchronously 6. Taking Advantage of Salt Information Systems 7. Taking Salt Cloud to the Next Level 8. Using Salt with REST 9. Understanding the RAET and TCP Transports 10. Strategies for Scaling 11. Monitoring with Salt 12. Exploring Best Practices 13. Troubleshooting Problems

Looking at Salt's HTTP library


An increasing number of subsystems inside Salt are designed to make use of external APIs. At the moment, most of these are drivers for Salt Cloud, and most use either the Apache project's Libcloud library or the SDK maintained by the cloud provider.

Things have been changing in recent releases, though. Salt now has a library designed to make a generic, Salty HTTP client available to modules and for direct use by users. This library is already being used by some compute cloud providers as well as other services that provide a REST interface to their users.

Why a Salt-specific library?

Why go to all this trouble instead of just using an SDK? The biggest reason is portability. Take for example PagerDuty, which is a powerful service that manages incident alerting. The original Salt module used a community driver for PagerDuty. At the time, this driver didn't do much, but it did allow Salt to create alerts, which was all that was needed.

However, in practical use, it...

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