
Conflicts: - salt/config/__init__.py - salt/modules/win_lgpo.py - salt/utils/aws.py - tests/unit/utils/schema_test.py
5.3 KiB
! Mine, Salt Mine
The Salt Mine
The Salt Mine is used to collect arbitrary data from Minions and
store it on the Master. This data is then made available to all Minions
via the salt.modules.mine
module.
Mine data is gathered on the Minion and sent back to the Master where only the most recent data is maintained (if long term data is required use returners or the external job cache).
Mine vs Grains
Mine data is designed to be much more up-to-date than grain data.
Grains are refreshed on a very limited basis and are largely static
data. Mines are designed to replace slow peer publishing calls when
Minions need data from other Minions. Rather than having a Minion reach
out to all the other Minions for a piece of data, the Salt Mine, running
on the Master, can collect it from all the Minions every mine_interval
, resulting in
almost fresh data at any given time, with much less overhead.
Mine Functions
To enable the Salt Mine the mine_functions
option needs
to be applied to a Minion. This option can be applied via the Minion's
configuration file, or the Minion's Pillar. The
mine_functions
option dictates what functions are being
executed and allows for arguments to be passed in. If no arguments are
passed, an empty list must be added:
mine_functions:
test.ping: []
network.ip_addrs:
interface: eth0
cidr: '10.0.0.0/8'
Mine Functions Aliases
Function aliases can be used to provide friendly names, usage intentions or to allow multiple calls of the same function with different arguments. There is a different syntax for passing positional and key-value arguments. Mixing positional and key-value arguments is not supported.
2014.7.0
mine_functions:
network.ip_addrs: [eth0]
networkplus.internal_ip_addrs: []
internal_ip_addrs:
mine_function: network.ip_addrs
cidr: 192.168.0.0/16
ip_list:
- mine_function: grains.get
- ip_interfaces
Mine Interval
The Salt Mine functions are executed when the Minion starts and at a
given interval by the scheduler. The default interval is every 60
minutes and can be adjusted for the Minion via the
mine_interval
option:
mine_interval: 60
Mine in Salt-SSH
As of the 2015.5.0 release of salt, salt-ssh supports
mine.get
.
Because the Minions cannot provide their own
mine_functions
configuration, we retrieve the args for
specified mine functions in one of three places, searched in the
following order:
- Roster data
- Pillar
- Master config
The mine_functions
are formatted exactly the same as in
normal salt, just stored in a different location. Here is an example of
a flat roster containing mine_functions
:
test:
host: 104.237.131.248
user: root
mine_functions:
cmd.run: ['echo "hello!"']
network.ip_addrs:
interface: eth0
Note
Because of the differences in the architecture of salt-ssh,
mine.get
calls are somewhat inefficient. Salt must make a
new salt-ssh call to each of the Minions in question to retrieve the
requested data, much like a publish call. However, unlike publish, it
must run the requested function as a wrapper function, so we can
retrieve the function args from the pillar of the Minion in question.
This results in a non-trivial delay in retrieving the requested
data.
Minions Targeting with Mine
The mine.get
function supports various methods of Minions targeting
<targeting>
to fetch Mine data from particular hosts, such
as glob or regular expression matching on Minion id (name), grains,
pillars and compound
matches <targeting-compound>
. See the salt.modules.mine
module
documentation for the reference.
Note
Pillar data needs to be cached on Master for pillar targeting to work
with Mine. Read the note in relevant section <targeting-pillar>
.
Example
One way to use data from Salt Mine is in a State. The values can be retrieved via Jinja and used in the SLS file. The following example is a partial HAProxy configuration file and pulls IP addresses from all Minions with the "web" grain to add them to the pool of load balanced servers.
/srv/pillar/top.sls
:
base:
'G@roles:web':
- web
/srv/pillar/web.sls
:
mine_functions:
network.ip_addrs: [eth0]
/etc/salt/minion.d/mine.conf
:
mine_interval: 5
/srv/salt/haproxy.sls
:
haproxy_config:
file.managed:
- name: /etc/haproxy/config
- source: salt://haproxy_config
- template: jinja
/srv/salt/haproxy_config
:
<...file contents snipped...>
{% for server, addrs in salt['mine.get']('roles:web', 'network.ip_addrs', tgt_type='grain') | dictsort() %}
server {{ server }} {{ addrs[0] }}:80 check
{% endfor %}
<...file contents snipped...>
Note
The expr_form argument will be renamed to tgt_type
in
the Nitrogen release of Salt.