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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

Working with beacons

Beacons are a very new feature in Salt, but they've already gained quite a following. In past versions of Salt, if a third-party process needed to raise an event inside Salt, it would have to explicitly make a call to Salt to do so. Beacons overcome this by allowing events to be triggered by third-party processes without having to perform any work inside that process itself.

As you can imagine, beacons were designed for monitoring, and specifically, for alerting purposes. While monitoring states are fairly passive, in which they only run when called explicitly or via the scheduler, beacons are very proactive, in which they are constantly watching for changes.

Monitoring file changes

Beacons are run on a regular basis on the target Minion. When they pick up important changes, they will fire an event that describes these changes.

The first beacon that was ever added was for the inotify system. This is built-in the Linux kernel, starting with version 2.6.13. The inotify...

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