This module provides helpful definitions for dealing with yum.
Module has been tested on:
- Puppet 4.6.1 and newer
- CentOS 6, 7
- Amazon Linux 2017
- RHEL 7
class { 'yum':
keep_kernel_devel => false|true,
clean_old_kernels => false|true,
config_options => {
my_cachedir => {
ensure => '/home/waldo/.local/yum/cache',
key => 'cachedir',
},
gpgcheck => true,
debuglevel => 5,
assumeyes => {
ensure => 'absent',
},
},
},
}
NOTE: The config_options
parameter takes a Hash where keys are the names of Yum::Config
resources and the values are either the direct ensure
value (gpgcheck
or debuglevel
in the example above), or a Hash of the resource's attributes (my_cachedir
or assumeyes
in the example above). Values may be Strings, Integers, or Booleans. Booleans will be converted to either a 1
or 0
; use a quoted string to get a literal true
or false
.
If installonly_limit
is changed, purging of old kernel packages is triggered if clean_old_kernels
is true
.
yum::config { 'installonly_limit':
ensure => 2,
}
yum::config { 'debuglevel':
ensure => absent,
}
Using Hiera and automatic parameter lookup (APL), this module can manage Yumrepos. The repos
parameter takes a hash of hashes, where the first-level keys are the Yumrepo
resource names and their value hashes contain parameters and values to feed into the resource definition. On its own, the repos
parameter does nothing. The resource names from the hash must be selected via the managed_repos
parameter. This example defines a custom repo.
First, include the class.
include 'yum'
In Hiera data, add the name of the repo to the yum::managed_repos
key (an Array), and define the repo in the yum::repos
key:
---
yum::managed_repos:
- 'example_repo'
yum::repos:
example_repo:
ensure: 'present'
enabled: true
descr: 'Example Repo'
baseurl: 'https://repos.example.com/example/'
gpgcheck: true
gpgkey: 'file:///etc/pki/gpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-Example'
target: '/etc/yum.repos.d/example.repo'
This module includes several pre-defined Yumrepos for easy management. This example enables management of the EPEL repository using its default settings.
NOTE: This only works if the data for the repository is included with the module. Please see the /data
directory of this module for a list of available repos.
include 'yum'
---
yum::managed_repos:
- 'epel'
Here the Extras repository for CentOS is enabled and its settings are modified. Because the repos
parameter uses a deep merge strategy when fed via automatic parameter lookup (APL), only the values requiring modification need be defined.
By default, mirrorlist
contains some data, and baseurl
is undefined. To undefine the mirrorlist
, we pass it the knockout prefix, --
. This works with any key.
NOTE: This only works if the data for the repository is included with the module. Please see the /data
directory of this module for a list of available repos.
include 'yum'
---
yum::managed_repos:
- 'extras'
yum::repos:
extras:
enabled: true
baseurl: 'https://mirror.example.com/extras'
mirrorlist: '--'
The managed_repos
parameter uses the unique
Hiera merge strategy, so it's possible to define repos to be managed at multiple levels of the hierarchy. For example, given the following hierarchy and the following two yaml files, the module would receive the array ['base', 'extras', 'debug']
.
---
hierarchy:
- name: 'Common'
paths:
- "%{trusted.certname}"
- 'common.yaml'
---
# node01
yum::managed_repos:
- 'base'
- 'debug'
# common
yum::managed_repos:
- 'base'
- 'extras'
The repo_exclusions
parameter is used to exclude repos from management. It is mainly useful in complex Hiera hierarchies where repos need to be removed from a baseline. Here we define a baseline set of repos in common.yaml
, but disable one of them for a specific node.
---
hierarchy:
- name: 'Common'
paths:
- "%{trusted.certname}"
- 'common.yaml'
---
# node01
yum::repo_exclusions:
- 'updates' #yolo
---
# common
yum::managed_repos:
- 'base'
- 'updates'
- 'extras'
This module includes the boolean helper parameter manage_os_default_repos
easily select select OS repos. It uses module data to add the appropriate repos to the managed_repos
parameter based on OS facts. Just like adding them manually, they can be negated via the repo_exclusions
parameter.
NOTE: This only works for operating systems who's Yumrepos are defined in the module's data AND who's default repos are defined in the module's data.
On a CentOS 7 machine these two snippets are functionally equivalent.
class { 'yum':
manage_os_default_repos => true,
}
class { 'yum':
managed_repos => [
'base',
'updates',
'extras',
'centosplus',
'base-source',
'updates-source',
'extras-source',
'base-debuginfo',
'centos-media',
'cr',
]
}
yum::gpgkey { '/etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-puppet-smoketest1':
ensure => present,
content => '-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
...
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----',
}
yum::gpgkey { '/etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-elrepo.org':
ensure => present,
source => 'puppet:///modules/elrepo/RPM-GPG-KEY-elrepo.org',
}
yum::plugin { 'versionlock':
ensure => present,
}
Locks explicitly specified packages from updates. Package name must be precisely specified in format EPOCH:NAME-VERSION-RELEASE.ARCH
. Wild card in package name is allowed provided it does not span a field seperator.
yum::versionlock { '0:bash-4.1.2-9.el6_2.*':
ensure => present,
}
Use the following command to retrieve a properly-formated string:
PACKAGE_NAME='bash'
rpm -q "$PACKAGE_NAME" --qf '%|EPOCH?{%{EPOCH}}:{0}|:%{NAME}-%{VERSION}-%{RELEASE}.%{ARCH}\n'
yum::group { 'X Window System':
ensure => present,
timeout => 600,
}
This is a workaround for PUP-3323. It enables the installation of packages from non-repo sources while still providing dependency resolution. For example, say there is a package foo that requires the package bar. bar is in a Yum repository and foo is stored on a stand-alone HTTP server. Using the standard providers for the Package
resource type, rpm
and yum
, the rpm
provider would be required to install foo, because only it can install from a non-repo source, i.e., a URL. However, since the rpm
provider cannot do dependency resolution, it would fail on its own unless bar was already installed. This workaround enables foo to be installed without having to define its dependencies in Puppet.
From URL:
yum::install { 'package-name':
ensure => present,
source => 'http://example.com/path/to/package/filename.rpm',
}
From local filesystem:
yum::install { 'package-name':
ensure => present,
source => 'file:///path/to/package/filename.rpm',
}
Please note that resource name must be same as installed package name.
This module was donated by CERIT Scientific Cloud, [email protected] to Vox Pupuli