Puppetboard is a web interface to PuppetDB aiming to replace the reporting functionality of Puppet Dashboard.
Puppetboard relies on the pypuppetdb library to fetch data from PuppetDB and is built with the help of the Flask microframework.
Note: As of the 28th of October the master branch and the upcoming 0.0.3 release require PuppetDB 1.5 / API v3.
- Because this project is powered by Flask we are restricted to:
- Python 2.6
- Python 2.7
Contents
Puppetboard is very, very young but it works fairly well.
That being said a lot of the code is very exeprimental, just trying to figure out what works and what not, what we need to do different and what features we need on the PuppetDB side of things.
As such you should be at least comfortable handling a few errors this might throw at you.
Currently you can only run from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/nedap/puppetboard
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
This will install all the requirements for Puppetboard.
You can run in it in development mode by simple executing:
$ python dev.py
For WSGI capable webservers a wsgi.py
is provided which mod_wsgi
and uwsgi
can deal with.
- Apache mod_wsgi configuration: http://flask.pocoo.org/docs/deploying/mod_wsgi/
- uwsgi configuration:
uwsgi --http :9090 --wsgi-file /path/to/puppetboard/wsgi.py
- Passenger
In the case of uwsgi you'll of course need something like nginx in front of it to proxy the requests to it.
Don't forget that you also need to serve the static/
folder on the
/static
URL of your vhost. (I'm considering embedding the little additional
Javascript and CSS this application has so no one has to bother with that).
From within the Puppetboard checkout:
mkdir public
mkdir tmp
ln -s wsgi.py passenger_wsgi.py
The apache vhost configuration:
<VirtualHost *:80> ServerName puppetboard.example.tld DocumentRoot /path/to/puppetboard/public RackAutoDetect On Alias /static /path/to/puppetboard/static <Directory /path/to/puppetboard/> Options None Order allow,deny allow from all </Directory> </VirtualHost>
Puppetboard has some configuration settings, their defaults can
be viewed in puppetboard/default_settings.py
.
Additionally Puppetboard will look for an environment variable
called PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS
pointing to a file with identical
markup as default_settings.py
. Any setting defined in
PUPPETBOARD_SETTINGS
will override the defaults.
Pypuppetdb and Puppetboard can query and display information from PuppetDB's experimental API endpoints.
However, if you haven't enabled them for Puppet it isn't particularily useful to enable them here as there will be no data to retrieve.
This project is still very new so it's not inconceivable you'll run into issues.
For bug reports you can file an issue. If you need help with something feel free to hit up @daenney by e-mail or find him on IRC. He can usually be found on IRCnet and Freenode and idles in #puppet.
There's now also the #puppetboard channel on Freenode where we hang out and answer questions related to pypuppetdb and Puppetboard.
Some people have already started building things with and around Puppetboard.
Hunter Haugen has provided a Vagrant setup:
Spencer Krum created a Puppet module to install Puppetboard with:
You can install it with:
puppet module install nibalizer-puppetboard
We welcome contributions to this project. However, there are a few ground rules contributors should be aware of.
This project is licensed under the Apache v2.0 License. As such, your contributions, once accepted, are automatically covered by this license.
Write decent commit messages. Don't use swear words and refrain from uninformative commit messages as 'fixed typo'.
The preferred format of a commit message:
docs/quickstart: Fixed a typo in the Nodes section. If needed, elaborate further on this commit. Feel free to write a complete blog post here if that helps us understand what this is all about. Fixes #4 and resolves #2.
If you'd like a more elaborate guide on how to write and format your commit messages have a look at this post by Tim Pope.