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Mastering SaltStack

You're reading from   Mastering SaltStack Take charge of SaltStack to automate and configure enterprise-grade environments

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785282164
Length 306 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Joseph Hall Joseph Hall
Author Profile Icon Joseph Hall
Joseph Hall
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Reviewing a Few Essentials 2. Diving into Salt Internals FREE CHAPTER 3. Exploring Salt SSH 4. Managing Tasks Asynchronously 5. Taking Salt Cloud to the Next Level 6. Using Salt with REST 7. Understanding the RAET Protocol 8. Strategies for Scaling 9. Monitoring with Salt 10. Exploring Best Practices 11. Troubleshooting Problems Index

All about syndication

In order to understand what syndication is all about in Salt, let's step back a few years to when an infrastructure's size did not often go beyond a few dozen nodes. Server management software didn't really need to handle a lot of connections, and often didn't.

Different folks, different strokes

Puppet was one of the earlier configuration management platforms which really started addressing scale. Since Puppet uses an HTTP-based methodology, early documentation discussed the pros and cons, and the various configurations of different web servers.

As we discussed in the previous chapter, Salt doesn't use HTTP, and so needs to employ different strategies to address scale. On its own, some users report using Salt to manage over 10,000 machines. However, not everybody has the kind of beefy hardware that those users have available for their Masters.

The Syndic system was designed for infrastructures where the Master was not expected to be powerful enough...

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