Skip to content

bentlema/puppet-tutorial-pe

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Start Here

This is a Puppet Enterprise and Git tutorial. We will also use Vagrant and/or Docker to provision our training environment.

Puppet Git

Training Overview

What will we do in this tutorial?

  • Deploy your own training environment using either Docker or Vagrant + VirtualBox
  • Install Puppet Enterprise (Monolithic Install), GitLab, and one additional training VM/Container
  • Learn the basics of Puppet Enterprise (Config, CLI, Environments, Code, etc.)
  • Learn how to use Hiera for...
    • Node classification
    • Auto-lookup of class parameters
    • Hierarchical data lookup
  • Learn how to install and Setup GitLab, and how to use it to host your Puppet code
  • Learn how to setup R10K to automate code deployment
  • Learn basic Puppet Coding, Git usage, and Vagrant & Docker usage

How to use this repo?

     git clone https://github.com/bentlema/puppet-tutorial-pe
  • Change directory to...
     cd puppet-tutorial-pe
  • Begin following the Labs (links below)

Navigating This Tutorial

This entire tutorial is of course a Git repository! All of the tutorial files are written in Markdown. Make sure you're comfortable navigating this code repo before you start. At any time, if you wish to return to this main README.md file, you can click the bentlema/puppet-tutorial-pe link at the top of the page.

Minimum System Requirements

  • You will need the ability to install software on your workstation (Admin / Super-User privileges). We will use the following software:

    • Git
    • VirtualBox
    • Vagrant or Docker
  • The software we will use is available for Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X, so you should be able to use any platform.

  • Disk space:

    • 20GB of free disk space to acomodate software and VM/Container images
  • Memory:

    • minimum 8GB of RAM if using Docker Containers
    • minimum 12GB of RAM if using VirtualBox VMs
  • Note: You will use either Vagrant to spin up VM's or Docker to spin up Containers

    • We will not use both (at the same time), so choose one or the other
    • Although Vagrant is capable of spinning up Docker containers, we will not use this capability

Software Versions

As there can be compatibility issues between different versions of the software we will use (e.g. Vagrant and Virtualbox), I would recommend sticking to the versions that have been tested to work together nicely.

Docker Vagrant VirtualBox Platform
1.13.0 1.8.4 5.0.28 Mac OS X 10.11 El Capitan
Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite
Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks
Linux
Windows

All of my initial testing has been done using Mac OS X 10.11 El Capitan, Vagrant 1.8.4, and VirtualBox 4.0.28. Feel free to test other version/platform combinations, and contribute your results here.


Labs

There are enough differences between using Docker and Vagrant+VirtualBox, I've split this tutorial into two distinct tracks. I will cover all of the same core materials, but will use different examples in each track, so it may be worth it to go through both tracks if you have the time and energy.


TRACK: Vagrant + VirtualBox

Vagrant Logo VirtualBox Logo


TRACK: Docker Containers

Docker Logo


Further Reading


Copyright © 2016 by Mark Bentley

About

Puppet Enterprise Git Vagrant Docker Tutorial

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •