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Learning SaltStack

You're reading from   Learning SaltStack Learn how to manage your infrastructure by utilizing the power of SaltStack

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784394608
Length 174 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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 Myers Myers
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Myers
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Learning SaltStack
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Diving In – Our First Salt Commands FREE CHAPTER 2. Controlling Your Minions with Remote Execution 3. Execution Modules – Write Your Own Solution 4. Defining the State of Your Infrastructure 5. Expanding Our States with Jinja2 and Pillar 6. The Highstate and Environments 7. Using Salt Cloud to Manage Virtual Minions 8. The Reactor and the Event System Index

Exploring the source


By design, Salt makes it very easy to write your own custom execution modules and functions. It abstracts away much of the nitty-gritty about writing Python for system administration, yet leaves you with all the power of Python to get things done.

This means that we can write Salt modules that integrate with our own internal tools or proprietary software. We can even write quick modules just to reorganize or reformat data for use in other parts of Salt.

There will be more on that later. For now, let's inspect our first remote execution function in Salt, which is as follows:

def sleep(length):
    '''
    Instruct the minion to initiate a process that will sleep
    for a given period of time.

    CLI Example:

    .. code-block:: bash

        salt '*' test.sleep 20
    '''
    time.sleep(int(length))
    return True

This is the code for test.sleep, a function that we ran in the previous chapter. (Remember that execution modules take the form <module>.<function...

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