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Extending Puppet

You're reading from   Extending Puppet Design, manage, and deploy your Puppet architecture with the help of real-world scenarios.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783981441
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alessandro Franceschi Alessandro Franceschi
Author Profile Icon Alessandro Franceschi
Alessandro Franceschi
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Puppet Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. Hiera 3. PuppetDB 4. Designing Puppet Architectures 5. Using and Writing Reusable Modules 6. Higher Abstraction Modules 7. Deploying and Migrating Puppet 8. Code Workflow Management 9. Scaling Puppet Infrastructures 10. Writing Puppet Plugins 11. Beyond the System 12. Future Puppet Index

Custom faces


With the release of Puppet 2.6, a brand new concept was introduced: Puppet Faces.

Faces is an API that allows the easy creation of new Puppet (sub) commands. Whenever we execute Puppet, we specify at least one command that provides access to the functionalities of its subsystems.

The most common commands are agent, apply, master, and cert, and have existed for a long time. However, there are a lot more (we can see their full list with puppet help), and most of them are defined via the Faces API.

As you can guess, we can easily add new faces and, therefore, new subcommands to the puppet executable just by placing some files in a module of ours.

The typical synopsis of the Puppet command is as follows:

puppet [FACE] [ACTION] [ARGUMENTS] [OPTIONS]

Here, [FACE] is the Puppet subcommand to be executed, [ACTION] is the face's action we want to invoke, [ARGUMENTS] are its arguments, and [OPTIONS] are general Puppet options.

To create a face, we have to work on two files: lib/puppet/application...

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