# This file managed by Salt, do not edit by hand!! # Based on salt version 2015.8.7 default config # {% set reserved_keys = ['master', 'minion', 'cloud', 'salt_cloud_certs', 'engines', 'beacons'] -%} {% set cfg_salt = pillar.get('salt', {}) -%} {% set cfg_minion = cfg_salt.get('minion', {}) -%} {% set default_keys = [] -%} {%- macro get_config(configname, default_value) -%} {%- do default_keys.append(configname) %} {%- if configname in cfg_minion -%} {{ configname }}: {{ cfg_minion[configname]|json }} {%- elif configname in cfg_salt and configname not in reserved_keys -%} {{ configname }}: {{ cfg_salt[configname]|json }} {%- else -%} #{{ configname }}: {{ default_value|json }} {%- endif -%} {%- endmacro -%} {%- from 'salt/formulas.jinja' import file_roots, formulas with context -%} ##### Primary configuration settings ##### ########################################## # This configuration file is used to manage the behavior of the Salt Minion. # With the exception of the location of the Salt Master Server, values that are # commented out but have an empty line after the comment are defaults that need # not be set in the config. If there is no blank line after the comment, the # value is presented as an example and is not the default. # Per default the minion will automatically include all config files # from minion.d/*.conf (minion.d is a directory in the same directory # as the main minion config file). {{ get_config('default_include', 'minion.d/*.conf') }} # Set the location of the salt master server. If the master server cannot be # resolved, then the minion will fail to start. {%- if 'master' in cfg_minion and cfg_minion['master'] is not string %} master: {% for name in cfg_minion['master'] -%} - {{ name }} {% endfor -%} {%- else %} {{ get_config('master', 'salt') }} {%- endif %} # Set http proxy information for the minion when doing requests {% if 'proxy_host' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('proxy_host') %} proxy_host: {{ cfg_minion['proxy_host'] }} {% else -%} #proxy_host: {%- endif %} {% if 'proxy_port' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('proxy_port') %} proxy_port: {{ cfg_minion['proxy_port'] }} {% else -%} #proxy_port: {%- endif %} {% if 'proxy_username' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('proxy_username') %} proxy_username: {{ cfg_minion['proxy_username'] }} {% else -%} #proxy_username: {%- endif %} {% if 'proxy_password' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('proxy_password') %} proxy_password: {{ cfg_minion['proxy_password'] }} {% else -%} #proxy_password: {%- endif %} # If multiple masters are specified in the 'master' setting, the default behavior # is to always try to connect to them in the order they are listed. If random_master is # set to True, the order will be randomized instead. This can be helpful in distributing # the load of many minions executing salt-call requests, for example, from a cron job. # If only one master is listed, this setting is ignored and a warning will be logged. # NOTE: If master_type is set to failover, use master_shuffle instead. {{ get_config('random_master', 'False') }} # Use if master_type is set to failover. {{ get_config('master_shuffle', 'False') }} # Minions can connect to multiple masters simultaneously (all masters # are "hot"), or can be configured to failover if a master becomes # unavailable. Multiple hot masters are configured by setting this # value to "str". Failover masters can be requested by setting # to "failover". MAKE SURE TO SET master_alive_interval if you are # using failover. {{ get_config('master_type', 'str') }} # verify_master_pubkey_sign {{ get_config('verify_master_pubkey_sign', 'False') }} # Poll interval in seconds for checking if the master is still there. Only # respected if master_type above is "failover". To disable the interval entirely, # set the value to -1. (This may be necessary on machines which have high numbers # of TCP connections, such as load balancers.) {{ get_config('master_alive_interval', '30') }} # Set whether the minion should connect to the master via IPv6: {{ get_config('ipv6', 'False') }} # Set the number of seconds to wait before attempting to resolve # the master hostname if name resolution fails. Defaults to 30 seconds. # Set to zero if the minion should shutdown and not retry. {{ get_config('retry_dns', '30') }} # Set the port used by the master reply and authentication server. {{ get_config('master_port', '4506') }} # The user to run salt. {{ get_config('user', 'root') }} # Setting sudo_user will cause salt to run all execution modules under an sudo # to the user given in sudo_user. The user under which the salt minion process # itself runs will still be that provided in the user config above, but all # execution modules run by the minion will be rerouted through sudo. {{ get_config('sudo_user', 'saltdev') }} # Specify the location of the daemon process ID file. {{ get_config('pidfile', '/var/run/salt-minion.pid') }} # The root directory prepended to these options: pki_dir, cachedir, log_file, # sock_dir, pidfile. {{ get_config('root_dir', '/') }} # The directory to store the pki information in {{ get_config('pki_dir', '/etc/salt/pki/minion') }} # Explicitly declare the id for this minion to use, if left commented the id # will be the hostname as returned by the python call: socket.getfqdn() # Since salt uses detached ids it is possible to run multiple minions on the # same machine but with different ids, this can be useful for salt compute # clusters. {% if 'id' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('id') %} id: {{ cfg_minion['id'] }} {% else -%} #id: {%- endif %} # Append a domain to a hostname in the event that it does not exist. This is # useful for systems where socket.getfqdn() does not actually result in a # FQDN (for instance, Solaris). {{ get_config('append_domain', '') }} # Custom static grains for this minion can be specified here and used in SLS # files just like all other grains. This example sets 4 custom grains, with # the 'roles' grain having two values that can be matched against. #grains: # roles: # - webserver # - memcache # deployment: datacenter4 # cabinet: 13 # cab_u: 14-15 {{ get_config('grains', '{}') }} # Where cache data goes. # This data may contain sensitive data and should be protected accordingly. {{ get_config('cachedir', '/var/cache/salt/minion') }} # Verify and set permissions on configuration directories at startup. {{ get_config('verify_env', 'True') }} # The minion can locally cache the return data from jobs sent to it, this # can be a good way to keep track of jobs the minion has executed # (on the minion side). By default this feature is disabled, to enable, set # cache_jobs to True. {{ get_config('cache_jobs', 'False') }} # Set the directory used to hold unix sockets. {{ get_config('sock_dir', '/var/run/salt/minion') }} # Set the default outputter used by the salt-call command. The default is # "nested". {{ get_config('output', 'nested') }} # By default output is colored. To disable colored output, set the color value # to False. {{ get_config('color', 'True') }} # Do not strip off the colored output from nested results and state outputs # (true by default). {{ get_config('strip_colors', 'False') }} # Backup files that are replaced by file.managed and file.recurse under # 'cachedir'/file_backups relative to their original location and appended # with a timestamp. The only valid setting is "minion". Disabled by default. # # Alternatively this can be specified for each file in state files: # /etc/ssh/sshd_config: # file.managed: # - source: salt://ssh/sshd_config # - backup: minion # {{ get_config('backup_mode', 'minion') }} # When waiting for a master to accept the minion's public key, salt will # continuously attempt to reconnect until successful. This is the time, in # seconds, between those reconnection attempts. {{ get_config('acceptance_wait_time', '10') }} # If this is nonzero, the time between reconnection attempts will increase by # acceptance_wait_time seconds per iteration, up to this maximum. If this is # set to zero, the time between reconnection attempts will stay constant. {{ get_config('acceptance_wait_time_max', '0') }} # If the master rejects the minion's public key, retry instead of exiting. # Rejected keys will be handled the same as waiting on acceptance. {{ get_config('rejected_retry', 'False') }} # When the master key changes, the minion will try to re-auth itself to receive # the new master key. In larger environments this can cause a SYN flood on the # master because all minions try to re-auth immediately. To prevent this and # have a minion wait for a random amount of time, use this optional parameter. # The wait-time will be a random number of seconds between 0 and the defined value. {{ get_config('random_reauth_delay', '60') }} # When waiting for a master to accept the minion's public key, salt will # continuously attempt to reconnect until successful. This is the timeout value, # in seconds, for each individual attempt. After this timeout expires, the minion # will wait for acceptance_wait_time seconds before trying again. Unless your master # is under unusually heavy load, this should be left at the default. {{ get_config('auth_timeout', '60') }} # Number of consecutive SaltReqTimeoutError that are acceptable when trying to # authenticate. {{ get_config('auth_tries', '7') }} # If authentication fails due to SaltReqTimeoutError during a ping_interval, # cause sub minion process to restart. {{ get_config('auth_safemode', 'False') }} # Ping Master to ensure connection is alive (minutes). {{ get_config('ping_interval', '0') }} {%- if 'mine_functions' in cfg_minion %} {%- do default_keys.append('mine_functions') %} mine_functions: {%- for func, args in cfg_minion['mine_functions'].items() %} {{ func }}: {{ args }} {%- endfor %} {%- endif %} # To auto recover minions if master changes IP address (DDNS) # auth_tries: 10 # auth_safemode: False # ping_interval: 90 # # Minions won't know master is missing until a ping fails. After the ping fail, # the minion will attempt authentication and likely fails out and cause a restart. # When the minion restarts it will resolve the masters IP and attempt to reconnect. # If you don't have any problems with syn-floods, don't bother with the # three recon_* settings described below, just leave the defaults! # # The ZeroMQ pull-socket that binds to the masters publishing interface tries # to reconnect immediately, if the socket is disconnected (for example if # the master processes are restarted). In large setups this will have all # minions reconnect immediately which might flood the master (the ZeroMQ-default # is usually a 100ms delay). To prevent this, these three recon_* settings # can be used. # recon_default: the interval in milliseconds that the socket should wait before # trying to reconnect to the master (1000ms = 1 second) # # recon_max: the maximum time a socket should wait. each interval the time to wait # is calculated by doubling the previous time. if recon_max is reached, # it starts again at recon_default. Short example: # # reconnect 1: the socket will wait 'recon_default' milliseconds # reconnect 2: 'recon_default' * 2 # reconnect 3: ('recon_default' * 2) * 2 # reconnect 4: value from previous interval * 2 # reconnect 5: value from previous interval * 2 # reconnect x: if value >= recon_max, it starts again with recon_default # # recon_randomize: generate a random wait time on minion start. The wait time will # be a random value between recon_default and recon_default + # recon_max. Having all minions reconnect with the same recon_default # and recon_max value kind of defeats the purpose of being able to # change these settings. If all minions have the same values and your # setup is quite large (several thousand minions), they will still # flood the master. The desired behavior is to have timeframe within # all minions try to reconnect. # # Example on how to use these settings. The goal: have all minions reconnect within a # 60 second timeframe on a disconnect. # recon_default: 1000 # recon_max: 59000 # recon_randomize: True # # Each minion will have a randomized reconnect value between 'recon_default' # and 'recon_default + recon_max', which in this example means between 1000ms # 60000ms (or between 1 and 60 seconds). The generated random-value will be # doubled after each attempt to reconnect. Lets say the generated random # value is 11 seconds (or 11000ms). # reconnect 1: wait 11 seconds # reconnect 2: wait 22 seconds # reconnect 3: wait 33 seconds # reconnect 4: wait 44 seconds # reconnect 5: wait 55 seconds # reconnect 6: wait time is bigger than 60 seconds (recon_default + recon_max) # reconnect 7: wait 11 seconds # reconnect 8: wait 22 seconds # reconnect 9: wait 33 seconds # reconnect x: etc. # # In a setup with ~6000 thousand hosts these settings would average the reconnects # to about 100 per second and all hosts would be reconnected within 60 seconds. {{ get_config('recon_default', '100') }} {{ get_config('recon_max', '5000') }} {{ get_config('recon_randomize', 'False') }} # The loop_interval sets how long in seconds the minion will wait between # evaluating the scheduler and running cleanup tasks. This defaults to a # sane 60 seconds, but if the minion scheduler needs to be evaluated more # often lower this value {{ get_config('loop_interval', '60') }} # The grains_refresh_every setting allows for a minion to periodically check # its grains to see if they have changed and, if so, to inform the master # of the new grains. This operation is moderately expensive, therefore # care should be taken not to set this value too low. # # Note: This value is expressed in __minutes__! # # A value of 10 minutes is a reasonable default. # # If the value is set to zero, this check is disabled. {{ get_config('grains_refresh_every', '1') }} # Cache grains on the minion. Default is False. {{ get_config('grains_cache', 'False') }} # Grains cache expiration, in seconds. If the cache file is older than this # number of seconds then the grains cache will be dumped and fully re-populated # with fresh data. Defaults to 5 minutes. Will have no effect if 'grains_cache' # is not enabled. {{ get_config('grains_cache_expiration', '300') }} # Windows platforms lack posix IPC and must rely on slower TCP based inter- # process communications. Set ipc_mode to 'tcp' on such systems {{ get_config('ipc_mode', 'ipc') }} # Overwrite the default tcp ports used by the minion when in tcp mode {{ get_config('tcp_pub_port', '4510') }} {{ get_config('tcp_pull_port', '4511') }} # Passing very large events can cause the minion to consume large amounts of # memory. This value tunes the maximum size of a message allowed onto the # minion event bus. The value is expressed in bytes. {{ get_config('max_event_size', '1048576') }} # To detect failed master(s) and fire events on connect/disconnect, set # master_alive_interval to the number of seconds to poll the masters for # connection events. # {{ get_config('master_alive_interval', '30') }} # The minion can include configuration from other files. To enable this, # pass a list of paths to this option. The paths can be either relative or # absolute; if relative, they are considered to be relative to the directory # the main minion configuration file lives in (this file). Paths can make use # of shell-style globbing. If no files are matched by a path passed to this # option then the minion will log a warning message. # # Include a config file from some other path: {% if 'include' in cfg_minion -%} {% do default_keys.append('include') -%} {% if cfg_minion['include'] is iterable and cfg_minion['include'] is not string -%} include: {%- for include in cfg_minion['include'] %} - {{ include }} {%- endfor -%} {% else -%} include: {{ cfg_minion['include'] }} {%- endif -%} {% elif 'include' in cfg_salt -%} {% if cfg_salt['include'] is iterable and cfg_salt['include'] is not string -%} include: {%- for include in cfg_salt['include'] %} - {{ include }} {%- endfor -%} {% else -%} include: {{ cfg_salt['include'] }} {%- endif -%} {% endif %} ##### Minion module management ##### ########################################## # Disable specific modules. This allows the admin to limit the level of # access the master has to the minion. {{ get_config('disable_modules', '[cmd,test]') }} {{ get_config('disable_returners', '[]') }} # Modules can be loaded from arbitrary paths. This enables the easy deployment # of third party modules. Modules for returners and minions can be loaded. # Specify a list of extra directories to search for minion modules and # returners. These paths must be fully qualified! {{ get_config('module_dirs', '[]') }} {{ get_config('returner_dirs', '[]') }} {{ get_config('states_dirs', '[]') }} {{ get_config('render_dirs', '[]') }} {{ get_config('utils_dirs', '[]') }} # A module provider can be statically overwritten or extended for the minion # via the providers option, in this case the default module will be # overwritten by the specified module. In this example the pkg module will # be provided by the yumpkg5 module instead of the system default. #providers: # pkg: yumpkg5 {{ get_config('providers', '{}') }} # Enable Cython modules searching and loading. (Default: False) {{ get_config('cython_enable', 'False') }} # Specify a max size (in bytes) for modules on import. This feature is currently # only supported on *nix operating systems and requires psutil. {{ get_config('modules_max_memory', '-1') }} ##### State Management Settings ##### ########################################### # The state management system executes all of the state templates on the minion # to enable more granular control of system state management. The type of # template and serialization used for state management needs to be configured # on the minion, the default renderer is yaml_jinja. This is a yaml file # rendered from a jinja template, the available options are: # yaml_jinja # yaml_mako # yaml_wempy # json_jinja # json_mako # json_wempy # {{ get_config('renderer', 'yaml_jinja') }} # The failhard option tells the minions to stop immediately after the first # failure detected in the state execution. Defaults to False. {{ get_config('failhard', 'False') }} # Reload the modules prior to a highstate run. {{ get_config('autoload_dynamic_modules', 'True') }} # clean_dynamic_modules keeps the dynamic modules on the minion in sync with # the dynamic modules on the master, this means that if a dynamic module is # not on the master it will be deleted from the minion. By default, this is # enabled and can be disabled by changing this value to False. {{ get_config('clean_dynamic_modules', 'True') }} # Normally, the minion is not isolated to any single environment on the master # when running states, but the environment can be isolated on the minion side # by statically setting it. Remember that the recommended way to manage # environments is to isolate via the top file. {{ get_config('environment', 'None') }} # If using the local file directory, then the state top file name needs to be # defined, by default this is top.sls. {{ get_config('state_top', 'top.sls') }} # Run states when the minion daemon starts. To enable, set startup_states to: # 'highstate' -- Execute state.highstate # 'sls' -- Read in the sls_list option and execute the named sls files # 'top' -- Read top_file option and execute based on that file on the Master {{ get_config('startup_states', "''") }} # List of states to run when the minion starts up if startup_states is 'sls': #sls_list: # - edit.vim # - hyper {{ get_config('sls_list', '[]') }} # Top file to execute if startup_states is 'top': {{ get_config('top_file', "''") }} # Automatically aggregate all states that have support for mod_aggregate by # setting to True. Or pass a list of state module names to automatically # aggregate just those types. # # state_aggregate: # - pkg # #state_aggregate: False {{ get_config('state_aggregate', '{}') }} ##### File Directory Settings ##### ########################################## # The Salt Minion can redirect all file server operations to a local directory, # this allows for the same state tree that is on the master to be used if # copied completely onto the minion. This is a literal copy of the settings on # the master but used to reference a local directory on the minion. # Set the file client. The client defaults to looking on the master server for # files, but can be directed to look at the local file directory setting # defined below by setting it to "local". Setting a local file_client runs the # minion in masterless mode. {%- if standalone %} file_client: local {%- else %} {{ get_config('file_client', 'remote') }} {%- endif %} # The file directory works on environments passed to the minion, each environment # can have multiple root directories, the subdirectories in the multiple file # roots cannot match, otherwise the downloaded files will not be able to be # reliably ensured. A base environment is required to house the top file. # Example: # file_roots: # base: # - /srv/salt/ # dev: # - /srv/salt/dev/services # - /srv/salt/dev/states # prod: # - /srv/salt/prod/services # - /srv/salt/prod/states {% if 'file_roots' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('file_roots') %} {{ file_roots(cfg_minion['file_roots']) }} {%- elif 'file_roots' in cfg_salt -%} {{ file_roots(cfg_salt['file_roots']) }} {%- elif formulas|length -%} {{ file_roots({'base': ['/srv/salt']}) }} {%- else -%} #file_roots: # base: # - /srv/salt {%- endif %} # File Server Backend # # Salt supports a modular fileserver backend system, this system allows # the salt minion to link directly to third party systems to gather and # manage the files available to minions. Multiple backends can be # configured and will be searched for the requested file in the order in which # they are defined here. The default setting only enables the standard backend # "roots" which uses the "file_roots" option. #fileserver_backend: # - roots # # To use multiple backends list them in the order they are searched: #fileserver_backend: # - git # - roots {% if 'fileserver_backend' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('fileserver_backend') %} fileserver_backend: {%- for backend in cfg_minion['fileserver_backend'] %} - {{ backend }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endif %} # By default, the Salt fileserver recurses fully into all defined environments # to attempt to find files. To limit this behavior so that the fileserver only # traverses directories with SLS files and special Salt directories like _modules, # enable the option below. This might be useful for installations where a file root # has a very large number of files and performance is negatively impacted. Default # is False. {{ get_config('fileserver_limit_traversal', 'False') }} # The hash_type is the hash to use when discovering the hash of a file in # the local fileserver. The default is md5, but sha1, sha224, sha256, sha384 # and sha512 are also supported. # # Warning: Prior to changing this value, the minion should be stopped and all # Salt caches should be cleared. {{ get_config('hash_type', 'md5') }} # gitfs provider {{ get_config('gitfs_provider', 'pygit2') }} # Along with gitfs_password, is used to authenticate to HTTPS remotes. {{ get_config('gitfs_user', 'git') }} # Along with gitfs_user, is used to authenticate to HTTPS remotes. # This parameter is not required if the repository does not use authentication. {{ get_config('gitfs_password', '') }} # By default, Salt will not authenticate to an HTTP (non-HTTPS) remote. # This parameter enables authentication over HTTP. Enable this at your own risk. {{ get_config('gitfs_insecure_auth', 'False') }} # Along with gitfs_privkey (and optionally gitfs_passphrase), is used to # authenticate to SSH remotes. This parameter (or its per-remote counterpart) # is required for SSH remotes. {{ get_config('gitfs_pubkey', '') }} # Along with gitfs_pubkey (and optionally gitfs_passphrase), is used to # authenticate to SSH remotes. This parameter (or its per-remote counterpart) # is required for SSH remotes. {{ get_config('gitfs_privkey', '') }} # This parameter is optional, required only when the SSH key being used to # authenticate is protected by a passphrase. {{ get_config('gitfs_passphrase', '') }} # When using the git fileserver backend at least one git remote needs to be # defined. The user running the salt master will need read access to the repo. # # The repos will be searched in order to find the file requested by a client # and the first repo to have the file will return it. # When using the git backend branches and tags are translated into salt # environments. # Note: file:// repos will be treated as a remote, so refs you want used must # exist in that repo as *local* refs. {% if 'gitfs_remotes' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('gitfs_remotes') %} gitfs_remotes: {%- for remote in cfg_minion['gitfs_remotes'] %} {%- if remote is iterable and remote is not string %} {%- for repo, children in remote.items() %} - {{ repo }}: {%- for child in children %} {%- for key, value in child.items() %} - {{ key }}: {{ value }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- else %} - {{ remote }} {%- endif -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- endif %} # The gitfs_ssl_verify option specifies whether to ignore ssl certificate # errors when contacting the gitfs backend. You might want to set this to # false if you're using a git backend that uses a self-signed certificate but # keep in mind that setting this flag to anything other than the default of True # is a security concern, you may want to try using the ssh transport. {{ get_config('gitfs_ssl_verify', 'True') }} # The gitfs_root option gives the ability to serve files from a subdirectory # within the repository. The path is defined relative to the root of the # repository and defaults to the repository root. {{ get_config('gitfs_root', 'somefolder/otherfolder') }} # The gitfs_env_whitelist and gitfs_env_blacklist parameters allow for greater # control over which branches/tags are exposed as fileserver environments. {% if 'gitfs_env_whitelist' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('gitfs_env_whitelist') %} gitfs_env_whitelist: {%- for git_env in cfg_minion['gitfs_env_whitelist'] %} - {{ git_env }} {%- endfor -%} {% else -%} # gitfs_env_whitelist: # - base # - v1.* {% endif %} {% if 'gitfs_env_blacklist' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('gitfs_env_blacklist') %} gitfs_env_blacklist: {%- for git_env in cfg_minion['gitfs_env_blacklist'] %} - {{ git_env }} {%- endfor -%} {% else -%} # gitfs_env_blacklist: # - bug/* # - feature/* {% endif %} ##### Pillar settings ##### ########################################## # The Salt pillar is searched for locally if file_client is set to local. If # this is the case, and pillar data is defined, then the pillar_roots need to # also be configured on the minion: {% if 'pillar_roots' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('pillar_roots') %} pillar_roots: {%- for name, roots in cfg_minion['pillar_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {%- for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {% elif 'pillar_roots' in cfg_salt -%} pillar_roots: {%- for name, roots in cfg_salt['pillar_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {%- for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- else -%} #pillar_roots: # base: # - /srv/pillar {%- endif %} {% if 'ext_pillar' in cfg_minion %} {%- do default_keys.append('ext_pillar') %} ext_pillar: {%- for pillar in cfg_minion['ext_pillar'] -%} {%- for key in pillar -%} {%- if pillar[key] is string %} - {{ key }}: {{ pillar[key] }} {#- Workaround for missing `is mapping` on CentOS 6, see #193: #} {%- elif pillar[key] is iterable and 'dict' not in pillar[key].__class__.__name__ %} - {{ key }}: {%- for parameter in pillar[key] %} - {{ parameter }} {%- endfor -%} {#- Workaround for missing `is mapping` on CentOS 6, see #193: #} {%- elif 'dict' in pillar[key].__class__.__name__ and pillar[key] is not string %} - {{ key }}: {%- for parameter in pillar[key] %} {{ parameter }}: {{pillar[key][parameter]}} {%- endfor %} {%- else %} # Error in rendering {{ key }}, please read https://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/topics/development/external_pillars.html#configuration {% endif %} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor %} {% elif 'ext_pillar' in cfg_salt %} ext_pillar: {% for pillar in cfg_salt['ext_pillar'] %} - {{ pillar.items()[0][0] }}: {{ pillar.items()[0][1] }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #ext_pillar: # - hiera: /etc/hiera.yaml # - cmd_yaml: cat /etc/salt/yaml {% endif %} # The ext_pillar_first option allows for external pillar sources to populate # before file system pillar. This allows for targeting file system pillar from # ext_pillar. {{ get_config('ext_pillar_first', 'False') }} # The pillar_gitfs_ssl_verify option specifies whether to ignore ssl certificate # errors when contacting the pillar gitfs backend. You might want to set this to # false if you're using a git backend that uses a self-signed certificate but # keep in mind that setting this flag to anything other than the default of True # is a security concern, you may want to try using the ssh transport. {{ get_config('pillar_gitfs_ssl_verify', 'True') }} # The pillar_opts option adds the master configuration file data to a dict in # the pillar called "master". This is used to set simple configurations in the # master config file that can then be used on minions. {{ get_config('pillar_opts', 'True') }} # The pillar_safe_render_error option prevents the master from passing pillar # render errors to the minion. This is set on by default because the error could # contain templating data which would give that minion information it shouldn't # have, like a password! When set true the error message will only show: # Rendering SLS 'my.sls' failed. Please see master log for details. {{ get_config('pillar_safe_render_error', 'True') }} # The pillar_source_merging_strategy option allows you to configure merging strategy # between different sources. It accepts four values: recurse, aggregate, overwrite, # or smart. Recurse will merge recursively mapping of data. Aggregate instructs # aggregation of elements between sources that use the #!yamlex renderer. Overwrite # will verwrite elements according the order in which they are processed. This is # behavior of the 2014.1 branch and earlier. Smart guesses the best strategy based # on the "renderer" setting and is the default value. {{ get_config('pillar_source_merging_strategy', 'smart') }} # Recursively merge lists by aggregating them instead of replacing them. {{ get_config('pillar_merge_lists', False) }} # Git External Pillar (git_pillar) Configuration Options # # Specify the provider to be used for git_pillar. Must be either pygit2 or # gitpython. If unset, then both will be tried in that same order, and the # first one with a compatible version installed will be the provider that # is used. {{ get_config('git_pillar_provider', 'pygit2') }} # If the desired branch matches this value, and the environment is omitted # from the git_pillar configuration, then the environment for that git_pillar # remote will be base. {{ get_config('git_pillar_base', 'master') }} # If the branch is omitted from a git_pillar remote, then this branch will # be used instead. {{ get_config('git_pillar_branch', 'master') }} # Environment to use for git_pillar remotes. This is normally derived from # the branch/tag (or from a per-remote env parameter), but if set this will # override the process of deriving the env from the branch/tag name. {{ get_config('git_pillar_env', '') }} # Path relative to the root of the repository where the git_pillar top file # and SLS files are located. {{ get_config('git_pillar_root', 'pillar') }} # Specifies whether or not to ignore SSL certificate errors when contacting # the remote repository. {{ get_config('git_pillar_ssl_verify', True) }} # When set to False, if there is an update/checkout lock for a git_pillar # remote and the pid written to it is not running on the master, the lock # file will be automatically cleared and a new lock will be obtained. {{ get_config('git_pillar_global_lock', False) }} # Git External Pillar Authentication Options # # Along with git_pillar_password, is used to authenticate to HTTPS remotes. {{ get_config('git_pillar_user', '') }} # Along with git_pillar_user, is used to authenticate to HTTPS remotes. # This parameter is not required if the repository does not use authentication. {{ get_config('git_pillar_password', '') }} # By default, Salt will not authenticate to an HTTP (non-HTTPS) remote. # This parameter enables authentication over HTTP. {{ get_config('git_pillar_insecure_auth', False) }} # Along with git_pillar_privkey (and optionally git_pillar_passphrase), # is used to authenticate to SSH remotes. {{ get_config('git_pillar_pubkey', '') }} # Along with git_pillar_pubkey (and optionally git_pillar_passphrase), # is used to authenticate to SSH remotes. {{ get_config('git_pillar_privkey', '') }} # This parameter is optional, required only when the SSH key being used # to authenticate is protected by a passphrase. {{ get_config('git_pillar_passphrase', '') }} ###### Security settings ##### ########################################### # Enable "open mode", this mode still maintains encryption, but turns off # authentication, this is only intended for highly secure environments or for # the situation where your keys end up in a bad state. If you run in open mode # you do so at your own risk! {{ get_config('open_mode', 'False') }} # Enable permissive access to the salt keys. This allows you to run the # master or minion as root, but have a non-root group be given access to # your pki_dir. To make the access explicit, root must belong to the group # you've given access to. This is potentially quite insecure. {{ get_config('permissive_pki_access', 'False') }} # The state_verbose and state_output settings can be used to change the way # state system data is printed to the display. By default all data is printed. # The state_verbose setting can be set to True or False, when set to False # all data that has a result of True and no changes will be suppressed. {{ get_config('state_verbose', 'True') }} # The state_output setting changes if the output is the full multi line # output for each changed state if set to 'full', but if set to 'terse' # the output will be shortened to a single line. {{ get_config('state_output', 'full') }} # The state_output_diff setting changes whether or not the output from # successful states is returned. Useful when even the terse output of these # states is cluttering the logs. Set it to True to ignore them. {{ get_config('state_output_diff', 'False') }} # The state_output_profile setting changes whether profile information # will be shown for each state run. {{ get_config('state_output_profile', 'True') }} # Fingerprint of the master public key to validate the identity of your Salt master # before the initial key exchange. The master fingerprint can be found by running # "salt-key -F master" on the Salt master. {{ get_config('master_finger', "''") }} ###### Thread settings ##### ########################################### # Disable multiprocessing support, by default when a minion receives a # publication a new process is spawned and the command is executed therein. {{ get_config('multiprocessing', 'True') }} ##### Logging settings ##### ########################################## # The location of the minion log file # The minion log can be sent to a regular file, local path name, or network # location. Remote logging works best when configured to use rsyslogd(8) (e.g.: # ``file:///dev/log``), with rsyslogd(8) configured for network logging. The URI # format is: ://:/ #log_file: /var/log/salt/minion #log_file: file:///dev/log #log_file: udp://loghost:10514 # {{ get_config('log_file', '/var/log/salt/minion') }} {{ get_config('key_logfile', ' /var/log/salt/key') }} # The level of messages to send to the console. # One of 'garbage', 'trace', 'debug', info', 'warning', 'error', 'critical'. # # The following log levels are considered INSECURE and may log sensitive data: # ['garbage', 'trace', 'debug'] # # Default: 'warning' {{ get_config('log_level', 'warning') }} # The level of messages to send to the log file. # One of 'garbage', 'trace', 'debug', info', 'warning', 'error', 'critical'. # If using 'log_granular_levels' this must be set to the highest desired level. # Default: 'warning' {{ get_config('log_level_logfile', '') }} # The date and time format used in log messages. Allowed date/time formating # can be seen here: http://docs.python.org/library/time.html#time.strftime {{ get_config('log_datefmt', "'%H:%M:%S'") }} {{ get_config('log_datefmt_logfile', "'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'") }} # The format of the console logging messages. Allowed formatting options can # be seen here: http://docs.python.org/library/logging.html#logrecord-attributes # # Console log colors are specified by these additional formatters: # # %(colorlevel)s # %(colorname)s # %(colorprocess)s # %(colormsg)s # # Since it is desirable to include the surrounding brackets, '[' and ']', in # the coloring of the messages, these color formatters also include padding as # well. Color LogRecord attributes are only available for console logging. # {{ get_config('log_fmt_console', "'%(colorlevel)s %(colormsg)s'") }} {{ get_config('log_fmt_console', "'[%(levelname)-8s] %(message)s'") }} # {{ get_config('log_fmt_logfile', "'%(asctime)s,%(msecs)03.0f [%(name)-17s][%(levelname)-8s] %(message)s'") }} # This can be used to control logging levels more specificically. This # example sets the main salt library at the 'warning' level, but sets # 'salt.modules' to log at the 'debug' level: # log_granular_levels: # 'salt': 'warning' # 'salt.modules': 'debug' # {{ get_config('log_granular_levels', '{}') }} # To diagnose issues with minions disconnecting or missing returns, ZeroMQ # supports the use of monitor sockets to log connection events. This # feature requires ZeroMQ 4.0 or higher. # # To enable ZeroMQ monitor sockets, set 'zmq_monitor' to 'True' and log at a # debug level or higher. # # A sample log event is as follows: # # [DEBUG ] ZeroMQ event: {'endpoint': 'tcp://127.0.0.1:4505', 'event': 512, # 'value': 27, 'description': 'EVENT_DISCONNECTED'} # # All events logged will include the string 'ZeroMQ event'. A connection event # should be logged as the minion starts up and initially connects to the # master. If not, check for debug log level and that the necessary version of # ZeroMQ is installed. # {{ get_config('zmq_monitor', 'False') }} ###### Module configuration ##### ########################################### # Salt allows for modules to be passed arbitrary configuration data, any data # passed here in valid yaml format will be passed on to the salt minion modules # for use. It is STRONGLY recommended that a naming convention be used in which # the module name is followed by a . and then the value. Also, all top level # data must be applied via the yaml dict construct, some examples: # # You can specify that all modules should run in test mode: {{ get_config('test', 'True') }} # A simple value for the test module: #test.foo: foo # # A list for the test module: #test.bar: [baz,quo] # # A dict for the test module: #test.baz: {spam: sausage, cheese: bread} # {%- if 'module_config' in cfg_minion %} {%- do default_keys.append('module_config') %} {%- for modkey, modval in cfg_minion.module_config.items() %} {{ modkey }}: {{ modval }} {%- endfor %} {%- endif %} # ###### Update settings ###### ########################################### # Using the features in Esky, a salt minion can both run as a frozen app and # be updated on the fly. These options control how the update process # (saltutil.update()) behaves. # # The url for finding and downloading updates. Disabled by default. {{ get_config('update_url', 'False') }} # # The list of services to restart after a successful update. Empty by default. {{ get_config('update_restart_services', '[]') }} ###### Keepalive settings ###### ############################################ # ZeroMQ now includes support for configuring SO_KEEPALIVE if supported by # the OS. If connections between the minion and the master pass through # a state tracking device such as a firewall or VPN gateway, there is # the risk that it could tear down the connection the master and minion # without informing either party that their connection has been taken away. # Enabling TCP Keepalives prevents this from happening. # Overall state of TCP Keepalives, enable (1 or True), disable (0 or False) # or leave to the OS defaults (-1), on Linux, typically disabled. Default True, enabled. {{ get_config('tcp_keepalive', 'True') }} # How long before the first keepalive should be sent in seconds. Default 300 # to send the first keepalive after 5 minutes, OS default (-1) is typically 7200 seconds # on Linux see /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_time. {{ get_config('tcp_keepalive_idle', '300') }} # How many lost probes are needed to consider the connection lost. Default -1 # to use OS defaults, typically 9 on Linux, see /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_probes. {{ get_config('tcp_keepalive_cnt', '-1') }} # How often, in seconds, to send keepalives after the first one. Default -1 to # use OS defaults, typically 75 seconds on Linux, see # /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_intvl. {{ get_config('tcp_keepalive_intvl', '-1') }} ###### Windows Software settings ###### ############################################ # Location of the repository cache file on the master: {{ get_config('win_repo_cachefile', 'salt://win/repo/winrepo.p') }} ###### Returner settings ###### ############################################ # Which returner(s) will be used for minion's result: {{ get_config('return', '') }} ###### Miscellaneous settings ###### ############################################ # Default match type for filtering events tags: startswith, endswith, find, regex, fnmatch #event_match_type: startswith {{ get_config('event_match_type', 'startswith') }} {% if 'mongo' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('mongo') %} ##### mongodb connection settings ##### ########################################## {%- for name, value in cfg_minion['mongo'].items() %} mongo.{{ name }}: {{ value }} {%- endfor %} {% if 'alternative.mongo' in cfg_minion -%} {%- do default_keys.append('alternative.mongo') %} {%- for name, value in cfg_minion['alternative.mongo'].items() %} alternative.mongo.{{ name }}: {{ value }} {%- endfor %} {% endif %} {%- endif %} {%- for configname in cfg_minion %} {%- if configname not in reserved_keys and configname not in default_keys %} {{ configname }}: {{ cfg_minion[configname]|json }} {%- endif %} {%- endfor %}