The lsyncd cookbook installs lsyncd, creates a basic config, and starts the service. Additionally, it exposes the lsyncd_target resource to easily add sync configs.
Through some ugly Lua hackery, the main config, /etc/lsyncd/lsyncd.conf.lua
,
is setup such that it will include all sync configs in /etc/lsyncd/conf.d/
.
The lsyncd_target resource pretty much just creates the configs in
/etc/lsyncd/conf.d/
.
The basis for this cookbook came from bflad's lsyncd cookbook.
- Chef 11 or greater
Tested on:
- Debian 7.x (Wheezy)
- Ubuntu 12.04
- Ubuntu 14.04
- CentOS 6.5
- CentOS 7.0
:create
- creates a sync config:delete
- deletes the sync config
mode
- lsyncd sync mode. Defaults torsync
source
- source directory. Requiredtarget
- target directory to sync files to. Requireduser
- User name to use when syncing content. Optional, will assume root if a user name is not provided.host
- IP or hostname of remote host. Required for remote syncing with thersync
orrsyncssh
modes.rsync_opts
- list of rsync optionsexclude
- list of exclusionsexclude_from
- path to file containing exclusions
Sync a directory to another local directory:
include_recipe 'lsyncd'
lsyncd_target 'foo' do
source '/tmp/foo'
target '/tmp/bar'
notifies :restart, 'service[lsyncd]', :delayed
end
You can also do remote rsync by specifying rsync
or rsyncssh
for the mode:
include_recipe 'lsyncd'
lsyncd_target 'foo' do
host 'test'
source '/tmp/foo'
target '/tmp/bar'
notifies :restart, 'service[lsyncd]', :delayed
end
Installs lsyncd, creates /etc/lsyncd/conf.d
, sets up base config, and starts
lsyncd service. Note that the service will not actually start until you have a sync config in place.
default[:lsyncd][:conf_d] = '/etc/lsyncd/conf.d'
default[:lsyncd][:log_file] = '/var/log/lsyncd.log'
default[:lsyncd][:status_file] = '/var/log/lsyncd-status.log'
default[:lsyncd][:interval] = 20
This cookbook includes chefspec unit tests and integration tests via test-kitchen and serverspec. There is a test cookbook to exercise the lsync_target LWRP included.
I've included a custom matcher for chefspec. The methods available are:
create_lsyncd_target
delete_lsyncd_target
There is also an lsyncd_target
chef_runner method, so you can do things like:
resource = chef_run.lsyncd_target('test1')
expect(resource).to notify('service[lsyncd]').to(:restart).delayed
Authors:: Daniel Givens ([email protected]) Authors:: Brian Flad ([email protected])
Copyright 2014, Rackspace, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.