Changeset 13823
- Timestamp:
- 10 Apr 2016, 12:04:54 (9 years ago)
- Location:
- main/waeup-ansible
- Files:
-
- 1 added
- 1 edited
Legend:
- Unmodified
- Added
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main/waeup-ansible/README.rst
r13821 r13823 1 Playbooks for administrating WAeUP servers. 2 =========================================== 1 ============================================= 2 Playbooks for administrating WAeUP servers. 3 ============================================= 3 4 4 5 These are materials to use with our servers. 6 7 For starters: the tutorial given on 8 9 https://github.com/leucos/ansible-tuto 10 11 is a really nice hands-on intro to `ansible`. Please read it! 12 13 Vagrant 14 ======= 15 16 In `Vagrantfile` we set up a vagrant environment which provides three 17 hosts as virtualbox: 18 19 ``vh5.sample.org``, ``vh6.sample.org``, ``vh7.sample.org`` 20 21 running Ubuntu 14.04. ``vh5`` represents "virtual host 5" and should 22 reflect h5.waeup.org. The same holds for ``vh6`` and ``vh7`` 23 accordingly. 24 25 The three virtual hosts are for testing any upcoming ansible 26 playbooks. They should be used before running playbooks on the real 27 hosts! 28 29 30 Initialize Vagrant Env 31 ---------------------- 32 33 You must have `vagrant` installed, if possible in a fairly recent 34 version. I (uli) use `vagrant 1.8.1` (latest as time of writing). As 35 Ubuntu 14.04 is pretty outdated in that respect, I had to grab a .deb 36 package from 37 38 https://www.vagrantup.com/downloads.html 39 40 that could be installed with:: 41 42 $ sudo dpkg -i vagrant_1.8.1_x86_64.deb 43 44 45 When everything is in place, change into this directory and run:: 46 47 $ vagrant up 48 Bringing machine 'vh5' up with 'virtualbox' provider... 49 Bringing machine 'vh6' up with 'virtualbox' provider... 50 Bringing machine 'vh7' up with 'virtualbox' provider... 51 ==> vh5: Importing base box 'ubuntu/trusty32'... 52 ... 53 54 This will fetch Vagrant virtualbox images for trusty32, i.e. Ubuntu 55 14.04 images, 32bit version (plays nice also on 64bit hosts). 56 57 All three hosts provide ssh access via:: 58 59 $ vagrant ssh vh0 60 61 or equivalent commands. They have a user 'vagrant' installed, which 62 can sudo without password. 63 64 You can halt (all) the virtual hosts with:: 65 66 $ vagrant halt
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