A saltstack formula to install and configure [carbon-relay-ng](https://github.com/graphite-ng/carbon-relay-ng), an alternative carbon-cache written in Go.
Table of Contents
See the full SaltStack Formulas installation and usage instructions.
If you are interested in writing or contributing to formulas, please pay attention to the Writing Formula Section.
If you want to use this formula, please pay attention to the FORMULA
file and/or git tag
,
which contains the currently released version. This formula is versioned according to Semantic Versioning.
See Formula Versioning Section for more details.
If you need (non-default) configuration, please refer to:
- how to configure the formula with map.jinja
- the
pillar.example
file - the Special notes section
Commit message formatting is significant!!
Please see How to contribute for more details.
pre-commit is configured for this formula, which you may optionally use to ease the steps involved in submitting your changes.
First install the pre-commit
package manager using the appropriate method, then run bin/install-hooks
and
now pre-commit
will run automatically on each git commit
.
$ bin/install-hooks pre-commit installed at .git/hooks/pre-commit pre-commit installed at .git/hooks/commit-msg
None.
Meta-state (This is a state that includes other states).
Calls the install, config and service states below.
Installs the carbon-relay-ng package and manages some directories and files.
Manages the configuration file using defined pillars.
Manages the carbon-relay-ng service.
this state will undo everything performed in the carbon-relay-ng
meta-state in reverse order, i.e.
stops the service,
removes the configuration file and
then uninstalls the package.
Linux testing is done with kitchen-salt
.
- Ruby
- Docker
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
$ bin/kitchen test [platform]
Where [platform]
is the platform name defined in kitchen.yml
,
e.g. debian-9-2019-2-py3
.
Creates the docker instance and runs the carbon-relay-ng
main state, ready for testing.
Runs the inspec
tests on the actual instance.
Removes the docker instance.
Runs all of the stages above in one go: i.e. destroy
+ converge
+ verify
+ destroy
.
Gives you SSH access to the instance for manual testing.