This cookbook handles local bootstrapping and PXE booting life cycle:
- server: Configures a tftpd server for serving Ubuntu and Debian installers over PXE.
- installers: Downloads the Chef full stack installers and writes out Chef bootstraps.
- bootstrap_template: Builds a template for use with
knife
to take advantage of the locally mirrored content. - esxi: Bootstraps ESXi via PXE at tftp.
Requires Chef 10.12 or later since it now uses the full-chef installer.
Please refer to the TESTING file to see the currently (and passing) tested platforms. The release was tested on:
- Ubuntu 12.04
- Ubuntu 14.04
- Debian 6.0-7.1 (have with manual testing)
- VMware-VMvisor-Installer-5.0.0.update03
- VMware-VMvisor-Installer-201501001
- VMware-VMvisor-Installer-6.0.0.update01 (The boot.cfg is for this one)
Required: apache2, tftp
Optional (recommended): apt (for recipe[apt::cacher-ng]
).
DO NOT USE chef-client::delete-validator
in conjunction with this cookbook, since it uses the validation.pem to help bootstrap new machines.
In order to manage configuration of machines registering themselves with their Chef Server or Chef Software Hosted Chef, we will use the pxe_dust
data bag.
% knife data bag create pxe_dust
% knife data bag from file pxe_dust examples/default.json
Here is an example of the default.json:
{
"id": "default",
"platform": "ubuntu",
"arch": "amd64",
"version": "14.04",
"user": {
"fullname": "Ubuntu",
"username": "ubuntu",
"crypted_password": "$6$Trby4Y5R$bi90k7uYY5ImXe5MWGFW9kel2BnMCcYO9EnwngTFIXKG2/nWcLKTJZ3verMFnpFbITI9.eHwZ.HR1UPeKbCAV1"
}
}
Any settings provided by the data bag may be overridden by setting ['pxe_dust']['default']
attributes, for example:
node['pxe_dust']['default']['environment'] = 'qa'
Here are currently supported options available for inclusion in the example default.json
:
platform
: OS platform for the installer, (ie. 'ubuntu' or 'debian').arch
: Architecture of the netboot.tar.gz to use as the source of pxeboot images, default is 'amd64'.interface
: Which interface to install from, default is 'auto'.version
: Ubuntu version of the netboot.tar.gz to use as the source of pxeboot images and full stack clients, default is '12.04'.domain
: Default domain for nodes, default is none.boot_volume_size
: Size of the LVM boot volume to create, default is '30GB'.packages
: Additional operating system packages to add to the preseed file, default is none.run_list
: Run list for nodes, this value is NOT set as a default and will be passed to all boot types unless explicitly overwritten.environment
: Environment for nodes, this value is NOT set as a default and will be passed to all boot types unless explicitly overwritten.netboot_url
: URL of the netboot image to use for OS installation.bootstrap
: Optional additional bootstrapping configuration.http_proxy
: HTTP proxy, default is none.http_proxy_user
: HTTP proxy user, default is none.http_proxy_pass
: HTTP proxy pass, default is none.https_proxy
: HTTPS proxy, default is none.chef
: Whether or not to bootstrap the node with Chef, default is 'true'.halt
: Whether to wait for user input at end of bootstrap, default is 'false'.user
:crypted_password
: SHA512 password for the default user, default 'ubuntu'. This may be generated and added to the data bag.fullname
: Full name of the default user, default 'Ubuntu'.username
: Username of the default user, default 'ubuntu'.root
:crypted_password
: SHA512 password for the root user, default 'ubuntu'. This is used on Debian since Ubuntu does not have a root.external_preseed
: Direct pxeboot clients to an existing (unmanaged by pxe_dust) preseed file.
Additional data bag items may be used to support booting multiple operating systems. Examples of various Ubuntu and Debian installations are included in the examples
directory. Important to note is the use of the addresses
option to support tftp booting by MAC address (this is currently required for not using the default) and the explicit need for a run_list
and/or an environment
if one is to be provided.
Sets the URL to the preseed file, architecture, the domain and which interfaces to use.
The preseed file is full of opinions mostly exposed via attributes, you will want to update this. If there is a node providing an apt-cacher-ng caching proxy via recipe[apt::cacher-ng]
, it is provided in the preseed.cfg. The initial user and password is configured and any additional required packages may be added to the pxe_dust
data bag items. The preseed finishes by calling the chef-bootstrap
script.
This is the preseed/late_command
that bootstraps the node with Chef via the full stack installer.
This is a basic kickstart to bootstrap ESXi 6.0. It installs ESXi on the main harddrive and enables DHCP on the first NIC.
This is the boot.cfg for ESXi 6.0 to work with the tftp setup with this cookbook.
The default recipe includes recipe pxe_dust::server
.
recipe[pxe_dust::server]
includes the apache2
, tftp::server
and pxe_dust::bootstrap_template
recipes.
The recipe does the following:
- Downloads the proper netboot.tar.gzs to boot from.
- Untars them to the
['tftp']['directory']
directory. - Instructs the installer prompt to automatically install.
- Passes the URL of the preseed.cfgs to the installer.
- Uses the preseed.cfg template to pass in any
apt-cacher-ng
caching proxies or other additional settings.
Downloads the full stack installers listed in the pxe_dust
data bag and writes out the Chef bootstrap templates for the initial chef-client run connecting to the Chef server.
This recipe sets up PXE to help deploy ESXi from VMware. You need to acquire the
ISO from VMWare before running this recipe. There is an attribute default['pxe_dust']['esx_iso']
that defaults to: VMware-VMvisor-Installer-6.0.0.update01-3029758.x86_64.iso
which at the time
of creating this recipe was the most up-to-date. You may need to override this with
a different version so keep that in mind. If you put that ISO in the /tmp
directory
on the tftp machine the recipe will take the ISO and extract what it needs and
add the option to the PXE boot menu. You can start up the machine and select the
3rd menu label and boot into installing ESXi on that host.
The root password is Ubuntu!!
due to the ESXi security restrictions.
This recipe has been tested from ESXi 5.0
,5.5
,6.0 update 1
.
This recipe creates a bootstrap template that uses a local install.sh
that uses the cached full stack installers from the installers
recipe. It may then be downloaded from http://NODE/NODE.erb
and put in your .chef/bootstrap/
directory for use with knife
. You may also use the http://NODE/NODE-install.sh
if you want a local install.sh
, perhaps for use with https://github.com/schisamo/vagrant-omnibus's OMNIBUS_INSTALL_URL
setting.
Add recipe[pxe_dust::server]
to a node's or role's run list. Create the pxe_dust
data bag and update the defaults.json
item before adding it.
On an Ubuntu system, the password can be generated by installing the mkpasswd
package and running:
mkpasswd -m sha-512
The default is the hash of the password ubuntu
, if you'd like to test. This must be set in the pxe_dust
data bag to a valid sha-512 hash of the password or you will not be able to log in.
If you do not need PXE booting, you may still want to use the pxe_dust::installers
and pxe_dust::bootstrap_template
for bootstrapping nodes (like with LXC or Vagrant).
If you would like to bootstrap ESXi, add the node run_list recipe[pxe_dust::esxi]
after you've done the previous steps,
you'll get a new menu item to bootstrap into ESXi, with a kickstart that sets everything up as DHCP.
node['pxe_dust']['chefversion']
the Chef version that pxe_dust should provide, unset by default which downloads latestnode['pxe_dust']['dir']
the location where apache will serve pxe_dust content, default is '/var/www/pxe_dust'node['pxe_dust']['default']
attributes that may be used to override any settings provided by thepxe_dust
data bag itemsnode['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_server']
defaults totrue
where this cookbook will set up a dhcp server for you.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_interface']
defaults toeth1
as the interface you want your dhcp server to listen on.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_subnet']
defaults to192.168.10.0
as the subnet that the leases will be.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_netmask']
defaults to255.255.255.0
as the netmask for the leases.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_range']
defaults to192.168.10.20 192.168.10.100
as the range of the leases.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_dns']
defaults to192.168.1.1, 8.8.8.8
as your offered DNS servers.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_domain']
defaults to anexample.com
domain.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_gateway']
defaults to the192.168.10.1
as your externally routed address.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_broadcast']
defaults to192.168.10.255
as the broadcast address.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_lease_time']
defaults to600
as your minimum lease time.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_max_lease_time']
defaults to7200
as your max lease time.node['pxe_dust']['dhcpd_next_server']
defaults to your tftp server192.168.10.1
node['pxe_dust']['esxi_iso]
The name of the VMWare ESXi ISO that you'd like to install. The recipe expects it in/tmp
of the machine that will host the tftp server.node['pxe_dust']['esxi_rootpasswd']
defaults toUbuntu!!
, you can override it here.
Author | JJ Asghar (jj@chef.io) |
Author | Matt Ray (matt@chef.io) |
Author | Joshua Timberman joshua@chef.io |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2011-2016, Chef Software, Inc. |
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.