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Infrastructure as Code Cookbook

You're reading from   Infrastructure as Code Cookbook Automate complex infrastructures

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464910
Length 440 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Pierre Pomès Pierre Pomès
Author Profile Icon Pierre Pomès
Pierre Pomès
Stephane Jourdan Stephane Jourdan
Author Profile Icon Stephane Jourdan
Stephane Jourdan
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Vagrant Development Environments FREE CHAPTER 2. Provisioning IaaS with Terraform 3. Going Further with Terraform 4. Automating Complete Infrastructures with Terraform 5. Provisioning the Last Mile with Cloud-Init 6. Fundamentals of Managing Servers with Chef and Puppet 7. Testing and Writing Better Infrastructure Code with Chef and Puppet 8. Maintaining Systems Using Chef and Puppet 9. Working with Docker 10. Maintaining Docker Containers Index

Using cloud-init on AWS, Digital Ocean, or OpenStack


As cloud-init is an initialization system for cloud instances, we need to find a way to send the cloud-config YAML file to the bootstrapping process. On all IaaS providers supporting cloud-init, there's a field where we can paste our file. We'll review how cloud-init works on three important IaaS providers—AWS, Digital Ocean, and OpenStack.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, you will need an account on Amazon Web Services, Digital Ocean, or some OpenStack deployment, or on all of them if you want to try them all!

How to do it…

To illustrate cloud-init usage, we'll create the simplest cloud-config file on Ubuntu 16.04 and CentOS 7.2, installing packages such as htop, tcpdump, docker, or nmap that aren't usually installed by default on most Linux distributions. This is how a very simple cloud-config file looks:

#cloud-config
# Install packages on first boot
packages:
  - tcpdump
  - docker
  - nmap

Using cloud-init on Amazon Web Services...

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