Configuring Capsules with a Load Balancer
Distributing load between Capsule Servers
Abstract
Chapter 1. Load Balancing Solution Architecture
You can configure Satellite Server to use a load balancer to distribute client requests and network load across multiple Capsule Servers. This results in an overall performance improvement on Capsule Servers.
This guide outlines how to prepare Satellite Server and Capsule Server for load balancing, and provides guidelines on how to configure a load balancer and register clients in a load-balanced setup.
A load-balanced setup consists of the following components:
- Satellite Server
- Two or more Capsule Servers
- A load balancer
- Multiple clients
Figure 1.1. Satellite Load Balancing Solution Architecture

In a load-balanced setup, nearly all Capsule functionality continues to work as expected when one Capsule Server is down, for planned or unplanned maintenance. Load balancer works with the following services and features:
-
Registration using
subscription-manager
-
Content Management with
yum
repositories - Optional: Puppet
In the load-balanced setup, a load balancer distributes load only for the services and features mentioned above. If other services, such as provisioning or virt-who, are running on the individual Capsules, you must access them directly through Capsules and not through the load balancer.
Managing Puppet Limitations
Puppet Certificate Authority (CA) management does not support certificate signing in a load-balanced setup. Puppet CA stores certificate information, such as the serial number counter and CRL, on the file system. Multiple writer processes that attempt to use the same data can corrupt it.
To manage this Puppet limitation, complete the following steps:
- Configure Puppet certificate signing on one Capsule Server, typically the first system where you configure Capsule Server for load balancing.
- Configure the clients to send CA requests to port 8141 on a load balancer.
- Configure a load balancer to redirect CA requests from port 8141 to port 8140 on the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates.
Chapter 2. Load Balancing Considerations
Distributing load between several Capsule Servers prevents any one Capsule from becoming a single point of failure. Configuring Capsules to use a load balancer can provide resilience against planned and unplanned outages. This improves availability and responsiveness.
Consider the following guidelines when configuring load balancing:
- If you use Puppet, Puppet certificate signing is assigned to the first Capsule that you configure. If the first Capsule is down, clients cannot obtain Puppet content.
- This solution does not use Pacemaker or other similar HA tools to maintain one state across all Capsules. To troubleshoot issues, reproduce the issue on each Capsule, bypassing the load balancer.
Additional Maintenance Required for Load Balancing
Configuring Capsules to use a load balancer results in a more complex environment and requires additional maintenance.
The following additional steps are required for load balancing:
- You must ensure that all Capsules have the same Content Views and synchronize all Capsules to the same Content View versions
- You must upgrade each Capsule in sequence
- You must backup each Capsule that you configure regularly
Upgrading Capsule Servers in a Load Balancing Configuration
To upgrade Capsule Servers from 6.8 to 6.9, complete the Upgrading Capsule Servers procedure in Upgrading and Updating Red Hat Satellite. There are no additional steps required for Capsule Servers in a load balancing configuration.
Chapter 3. Prerequisites for Configuring Capsule Servers for Load Balancing
To configure Capsule Servers for load balancing, complete the following procedures described in Installing Capsule Server. Satellite does not support configuring existing Capsule Servers for load balancing.
Chapter 4. Configuring Capsule Servers for Load Balancing
This chapter outlines how to configure Capsule Servers for load balancing. Proceed to one of the following sections depending on your Satellite Server configuration:
- Section 4.1, “Configuring Capsule Server with Default SSL Certificates for Load Balancing without Puppet”
- Section 4.2, “Configuring Capsule Server with Default SSL Certificates for Load Balancing with Puppet”
- Section 4.3, “Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing without Puppet”
- Section 4.4, “Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing with Puppet”
Use different file names for the Katello certificates you create for each Capsule Server. For example, name the certificate archive file with the Capsule Server FQDN.
4.1. Configuring Capsule Server with Default SSL Certificates for Load Balancing without Puppet
The following section describes how to configure Capsule Servers that use default SSL certificates for load balancing without Puppet.
Complete this procedure on each Capsule Server that you want to configure for load balancing.
Procedure
On Satellite Server, generate Katello certificates for Capsule Server, for example:
# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule.example.com \ --certs-tar "/root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command that is output by thecapsule-certs-generate
command for installing the Capsule Server certificate.Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server.
# scp /root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar \ root@capsule.example.com:capsule.example.com-certs.tar
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command. Set the--puppet-ca-server
option to point to the Capsule Server where you enter the command. You must install Puppet CA on your Capsule Servers, regardless of whether you intend to use it or not. Puppet is configured in its default single-node configuration.--certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:# satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
4.2. Configuring Capsule Server with Default SSL Certificates for Load Balancing with Puppet
The following section describes how to configure Capsule Servers that use default SSL certificates for load balancing with Puppet.
If you use Puppet in your Satellite configuration, you must complete the following procedures:
Configuring Capsule Server to Generate and Sign Puppet Certificates
Complete this procedure only for the system where you want to configure Capsule Server to generate and sign Puppet certificates for all other Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing. In the examples in this procedure, the FQDN of this Capsule Server is capsule-ca.example.com
.
On Satellite Server, generate Katello certificates for the system where you configure Capsule Server to generate and sign Puppet certificates:
# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule-ca.example.com \ --certs-tar "/root/capsule-ca.example.com-certs.tar" \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command that is output by thecapsule-certs-generate
command for installing the Capsule Server certificate.Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server:
# scp /root/capsule-ca.example.com-certs.tar \ root@capsule-ca.example.com:capsule-ca.example.com-certs.tar
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command:--certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:# satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "capsule-ca.example.com-certs.tar" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, stop the Puppet server:
# puppet resource service puppetserver ensure=stopped
Generate Puppet certificates for all other Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing, except the first system where you configure Puppet certificates signing:
# puppetserver ca generate --certname capsule.example.com \ --subject-alt-names loadbalancer.example.com --ca-client
This command creates the following files on the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates:
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
-
Resume the Puppet server:
# puppet resource service puppetserver ensure=running
Configuring Remaining Capsule Servers for Load Balancing
Complete this procedure on each Capsule Server excluding the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates.
On Satellite Server, generate Katello certificates for Capsule Server:
# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule.example.com \ --certs-tar "/root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command that is output by thecapsule-certs-generate
command for installing the Capsule Server certificate.Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server:
# scp /root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar \ root@capsule.example.com:capsule.example.com-certs.tar
On Capsule Server, install the
puppetserver
package:# satellite-maintain packages install puppetserver
On Capsule Server, create directories for puppet certificates:
# mkdir -p /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/ \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/
On Capsule Server, copy the Puppet certificates for this Capsule Server from the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates:
# scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
On Capsule Server, change the directory ownership to user
puppet
, grouppuppet
and set the SELinux contexts:# chown -R puppet:puppet /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/ # restorecon -Rv /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command:--certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "false" \ --puppet-server-ca "false" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:# satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "false" \ --puppet-server-ca :false" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
4.3. Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing without Puppet
The following section describes how to configure Capsule Servers that use custom SSL certificates for load balancing without Puppet.
4.3.1. Creating Custom SSL Certificates for Capsule Server
This procedure outlines how to create a configuration file for the Certificate Signing Request and include the load balancer and Capsule Server as Subject Alternative Names (SAN). Complete this procedure on each Capsule Server that you want to configure for load balancing.
Procedure
On Capsule Server, create a directory to contain all the source certificate files, accessible to only the
root
user:# mkdir /root/capsule_cert # cd /root/capsule_cert
Create a private key with which to sign the Certificate Signing Request (CSR).
Note that the private key must be unencrypted. If you use a password-protected private key, remove the private key password.
If you already have a private key for this Capsule Server, skip this step.
# openssl genrsa -out /root/capsule_cert/capsule_cert_key.pem 4096
Create the certificate request configuration file with the following content:
[ req ] default_bits = 4096 distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name req_extensions = req_ext prompt = no [ req_distinguished_name ] countryName=2 Letter Country Code stateOrProvinceName=State or Province Full Name localityName=Locality Name 0.organizationName=Organization Name organizationalUnitName=Capsule Organization Unit Name commonName=capsule.example.com 1 emailAddress=Email Address [ req_ext ] #authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer #basicConstraints=CA:FALSE keyUsage = digitalSignature, nonRepudiation, keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment subjectAltName = @alt_names [alt_names] 2 DNS.1 = loadbalancer.example.com DNS.2 = capsule.example.com
- 1
- The certificate’s common name must match the FQDN of Capsule Server. Ensure to change this when running the command on each Capsule Server that you configure for load balancing. You can also set a wildcard value
*
. If you set a wildcard value, you must add the-t capsule
option when you use thekatello-certs-check
command. - 2
- Under
[alt_names]
, include the FQDN of the load balancer asDNS.1
and the FQDN of Capsule Server asDNS.2
.
Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) for the SAN certificate.
# openssl req -new \ -key /root/capsule_cert/capsule_cert_key.pem \ 1 -config SAN_config.cfg \ 2 -out /root/capsule_cert/capsule_cert_csr.pem 3
Send the certificate request to the Certificate Authority:
When you submit the request, specify the lifespan of the certificate. The method for sending the certificate request varies, so consult the Certificate Authority for the preferred method. In response to the request, you can expect to receive a Certificate Authority bundle and a signed certificate, in separate files.
- Copy the Certificate Authority bundle and Capsule Server certificate file that you receive from the Certificate Authority, and the Capsule Server private key to your Satellite Server.
On Satellite Server, validate the Capsule Server certificate input files:
# katello-certs-check \ -c /root/capsule_cert/capsule_cert.pem \ 1 -k /root/capsule_cert/capsule_cert_key.pem \ 2 -b /root/capsule_cert/ca_cert_bundle.pem 3
If you set the
commonName=
to a wildcard value*
, you must add the-t capsule
option to thekatello-certs-check
command.Retain a copy of the example
capsule-certs-generate
command that is output by thekatello-certs-check
command for creating the Certificate Archive File for this Capsule Server.
4.3.2. Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing without Puppet
Complete this procedure on each Capsule Server that you want to configure for load balancing.
Procedure
Append the following option to the
capsule-certs-generate
command that you obtain from the output of thekatello-certs-check
command:--foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
On Satellite Server, enter the
capsule-certs-generate
command to generate Capsule certificates. For example:# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule.example.com \ --certs-tar /root/capsule_cert/capsule.tar \ --server-cert /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ --server-key /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ --server-ca-cert /root/capsule_cert/ca_cert_bundle.pem \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command from the output for installing the Capsule Server certificates.Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server:
# scp /root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar \ root@capsule.example.com:capsule.example.com-certs.tar
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command. Set the--puppet-ca-server
option to point to the Capsule Server where you enter the command. You must install Puppet CA on your Capsule Servers, regardless of whether you intend to use it or not. Puppet is configured in its default single-node configuration.--certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:# satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
4.4. Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing with Puppet
The following section describes how to configure Capsule Servers that use custom SSL certificates for load balancing with Puppet.
4.4.1. Creating Custom SSL Certificates for Capsule Server
This procedure outlines how to create a configuration file for the Certificate Signing Request and include the load balancer and Capsule Server as Subject Alternative Names (SAN). Complete this procedure on each Capsule Server that you want to configure for load balancing.
Procedure
On Capsule Server, create a directory to contain all the source certificate files, accessible to only the
root
user:# mkdir /root/capsule_cert # cd /root/capsule_cert
Create a private key with which to sign the Certificate Signing Request (CSR).
Note that the private key must be unencrypted. If you use a password-protected private key, remove the private key password.
If you already have a private key for this Capsule Server, skip this step.
# openssl genrsa -out /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem 4096
Create the certificate request configuration file with the following content:
[ req ] default_bits = 4096 distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name req_extensions = req_ext prompt = no [ req_distinguished_name ] countryName=2 Letter Country Code stateOrProvinceName=State or Province Full Name localityName=Locality Name 0.organizationName=Organization Name organizationalUnitName=Capsule Organization Unit Name commonName=capsule.example.com 1 emailAddress=Email Address [ req_ext ] #authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer #basicConstraints=CA:FALSE keyUsage = digitalSignature, nonRepudiation, keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment subjectAltName = @alt_names [alt_names] 2 DNS.1 = loadbalancer.example.com DNS.2 = capsule.example.com
- 1
- The certificate’s common name must match the FQDN of Capsule Server. Ensure to change this when running the command on each Capsule Server. You can also set a wildcard value
*
. If you set a wildcard value, you must add the-t capsule
option when you use thekatello-certs-check
command. - 2
- Under
[alt_names]
, include the FQDN of the load balancer asDNS.1
and the FQDN of Capsule Server asDNS.2
.
Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) for the SAN certificate:
# openssl req -new \ -key /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ 1 -config SAN_config.cfg \ 2 -out /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem 3
Send the certificate request to the Certificate Authority:
When you submit the request, specify the lifespan of the certificate. The method for sending the certificate request varies, so consult the Certificate Authority for the preferred method. In response to the request, you can expect to receive a Certificate Authority bundle and a signed certificate, in separate files.
- Copy the Certificate Authority bundle and Capsule Server certificate file that you receive from the Certificate Authority, and the Capsule Server private key to your Satellite Server to validate them.
On Satellite Server, validate the Capsule Server certificate input files:
# katello-certs-check \ -c /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ 1 -k /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ 2 -b /root/capsule_cert/ca_cert_bundle.pem 3
- 1
- Capsule Server certificate file, provided by your Certificate Authority
- 2
- Capsule Server’s private key that you used to sign the certificate
- 3
- Certificate Authority bundle, provided by your Certificate Authority
If you set the
commonName=
to a wildcard value*
, you must add the-t capsule
option to thekatello-certs-check
command.Retain a copy of the example
capsule-certs-generate
command that is output by thekatello-certs-check
command for creating the Certificate Archive File for this Capsule Server.
4.4.2. Configuring Capsule Server with Custom SSL Certificates for Load Balancing with Puppet
If you use Puppet in your Satellite configuration, then you must complete the following procedures:
Configuring Capsule Server to Generate and Sign Puppet Certificates
Complete this procedure only for the system where you want to configure Capsule Server to generate Puppet certificates for all other Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing. In the examples in this procedure, the FQDN of this Capsule Server is capsule-ca.example.com
.
Append the following option to the
capsule-certs-generate
command that you obtain from the output of thekatello-certs-check
command:--foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
On Satellite Server, enter the
capsule-certs-generate
command to generate Capsule certificates. For example:# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule-ca.example.com \ --certs-tar /root/capsule_cert/capsule-ca.tar \ --server-cert /root/capsule_cert/capsule-ca.pem \ --server-key /root/capsule_cert/capsule-ca.pem \ --server-ca-cert /root/capsule_cert/ca_cert_bundle.pem \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command from the output for installing the Capsule Server certificates.- Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server.
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command:--puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "certs.tgz" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "true" \ --puppet-server-ca "true" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, generate Puppet certificates for all other Capsules that you configure for load balancing, except this first system where you configure Puppet certificates signing:
# puppet cert generate capsule.example.com \ --dns_alt_names=loadbalancer.example.com
This command creates the following files on the Puppet certificate signing Capsule Server instance:
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
-
/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
-
Configuring Remaining Capsule Servers for Load Balancing
Complete this procedure for each Capsule Server excluding the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates.
Append the following option to the
capsule-certs-generate
command that you obtain from the output of thekatello-certs-check
command:--foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
On Satellite Server, enter the
capsule-certs-generate
command to generate Capsule certificates. For example:# capsule-certs-generate \ --foreman-proxy-fqdn capsule.example.com \ --certs-tar /root/capsule_cert/capsule.tar \ --server-cert /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ --server-key /root/capsule_cert/capsule.pem \ --server-ca-cert /root/capsule_cert/ca_cert_bundle.pem \ --foreman-proxy-cname loadbalancer.example.com
Retain a copy of the example
satellite-installer
command from the output for installing the Capsule Server certificates.Copy the certificate archive file from Satellite Server to Capsule Server.
# scp /root/capsule.example.com-certs.tar \ root@capsule.example.com:capsule.example.com-certs.tar
On Capsule Server, install the
puppetserver
package:# satellite-maintain packages install puppetserver
On Capsule Server, create directories for puppet certificates:
# mkdir -p /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/ \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/
On Capsule Server, copy the Puppet certificates for this Capsule Server from the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates:
# scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/certs/capsule.example.com.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/private_keys/capsule.example.com.pem # scp root@capsule-ca.example.com:/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem \ /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/public_keys/capsule.example.com.pem
On Capsule Server, change the directory ownership to user
puppet
, grouppuppet
and set the SELinux contexts:# chown -R puppet:puppet /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/ # restorecon -Rv /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/ssl/
Append the following options to the
satellite-installer
command that you obtain from the output of thecapsule-certs-generate
command:--certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "false" \ --puppet-server-ca "false" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
On Capsule Server, enter the
satellite-installer
command, for example:# satellite-installer --scenario capsule \ --foreman-proxy-content-parent-fqdn "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-register-in-foreman "true" \ --foreman-proxy-foreman-base-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "satellite.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-trusted-hosts "capsule.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-key "oauth key" \ --foreman-proxy-oauth-consumer-secret "oauth secret" \ --certs-tar-file "capsule.example.com-certs.tar" \ --puppet-server-foreman-url "https://satellite.example.com" \ --certs-cname "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-dns-alt-names "loadbalancer.example.com" \ --puppet-ca-server "capsule-ca.example.com" \ --foreman-proxy-puppetca "false" \ --puppet-server-ca "false" \ --enable-foreman-proxy-plugin-remote-execution-ssh
Chapter 5. Installing the Load Balancer
The following example provides general guidance for configuring an HAProxy load balancer. However, you can install any suitable load balancing software solution that supports TCP forwarding and sticky sessions.
On a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host, install HAProxy:
# yum install haproxy
Install the following package that includes the
semanage
tool:# yum install policycoreutils-python
Configure SELinux to allow HAProxy to bind any port:
# semanage boolean --modify --on haproxy_connect_any
Configure the load balancer to balance the network load for the ports as described in Table 5.1, “Ports Configuration for the Load Balancer”. For example, to configure ports for HAProxy, edit the
/etc/haproxy/haproxy.cfg
file to correspond with the table.You must configure sticky session on TCP port 443 to request yum metadata for RPM repositories from different Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing.
Table 5.1. Ports Configuration for the Load Balancer Service Port Mode Balance Mode Destination HTTP
80
TCP
roundrobin
port 80 on all Capsule Servers
HTTPS
443
TCP
source
port 443 on all Capsule Servers
RHSM
8443
TCP
roundrobin
port 8443 on all Capsule Servers
AMQP
5647
TCP
roundrobin
port 5647 on all Capsule Servers
Puppet (Optional)
8140
TCP
roundrobin
port 8140 on all Capsule Servers
PuppetCA (Optional)
8141
TCP
roundrobin
port 8140 only on the system where you configure Capsule Server to sign Puppet certificates
SmartProxy (Optional for OpenScap)
9090
TCP
roundrobin
port 9090 on all Capsule Servers
Docker (Optional)
5000
TCP
roundrobin
port 5000 on all Capsule Servers
- Configure the load balancer to disable SSL offloading and allow client-side SSL certificates to pass through to back end servers. This is required because communication from clients to Capsule Servers depends on client-side SSL certificates.
Start and enable the HAProxy service:
# systemctl start haproxy # systemctl enable haproxy
Chapter 6. Registering Clients
You can register a client running a Red Hat Enterprise Linux version 6, 7 or 8 operating system to Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing. For more information about registering clients and configuring them to use Puppet, see Registering Hosts in the Managing Hosts guide.
To register clients, proceed to one of the following procedures:
6.1. Registering Clients Using the Bootstrap Script
To register clients, enter the following command on the client. You must complete the registration procedure for each client.
Prerequisite
Ensure that you install the bootstrap script on the client and change the script’s file permissions to executable. For more information, see Registering Hosts to Red Hat Satellite Using The Bootstrap Script in the Managing Hosts guide.
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server loadbalancer.example.com \ --organization="Your_Organization" \ --location="Your_Location" \ --hostgroup="Your_Hostgroup" \ --activationkey=your_activation_key \ --enablerepos=rhel-7-server-satellite-tools-6.9-rpms \ --puppet-ca-port 8141 \ 1 --force 2
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, 6, or 5, enter the following command:
# python bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server loadbalancer.example.com \ --organization="Your_Organization" \ --location="Your_Location" \ --hostgroup="Your_Hostgroup" \ --activationkey=your_activation_key \ --enablerepos=rhel-7-server-satellite-tools-6.9-rpms \ --puppet-ca-port 8141 \ 1 --force 2
The script prompts for the password corresponding to the Satellite user name you entered with the --login
option.
6.2. Registering Clients Manually
To register clients manually, complete the following procedure on each client that you register.
Procedure
Remove the
katello-ca-consumer
package if it is installed:# yum remove 'katello-ca-consumer*'
Install the
katello-ca-consumer
package from the load balancer:# rpm -Uvh \ http://loadbalancer.example.com/pub/katello-ca-consumer-latest.noarch.rpm
Register the client and include the
--serverurl
and--baseurl
options:# subscription-manager register --org=Your_Organization \ --activationkey=Your_Activation_Key \ --serverurl=https://loadbalancer.example.com:8443/rhsm \ --baseurl=https://loadbalancer.example.com/pulp/repos
Chapter 7. Promoting SCAP Content to Clients
The following section describes how to promote Security Content Automation Protocol (SCAP) content to clients registered to Capsule Servers that you configure for load balancing.
Prerequisites
- Ensure that you configure the SCAP content. For more information, see Configuring SCAP Content in Administering Red Hat Satellite.
Procedure
-
In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Configure > Classes and click
foreman_scap_client
. - Click the Smart Class Parameter tab.
-
In the pane to the left of the Smart Class Parameter window, click
port
. - In the Default Behavior area, select the Override check box.
-
From the Key Type list, select
integer
. -
In the Default Value field, enter
9090
. -
In the pane to the left of the Smart Class Parameter window, click
server
. - In the Default Behavior area, select the Override check box.
-
From the Key Type list, select
string
. -
In the Default Value field, enter the FQDN of your load balancer. For example,
loadbalancer.example.com
. - In the lower left of the Smart Class Parameter window, click Submit.
-
Add the puppet module that contains the
foreman_scap_client
puppet class to a Content View. Publish and promote this Content View to your client’s environment. If you want to verify the configuration, run the Puppet agent on the client to promote the changes. Do not run the Puppet agent on every client manually because the Puppet agent runs on the clients every 30 minutes.
# puppet agent -t --noop
On the client, verify that the
/etc/foreman_scap_client/config.yaml
file contains the following lines:# Foreman proxy to which reports should be uploaded :server: 'loadbalancer.example.com' :port: 9090
Additional Resources
- For more information about adding puppet modules to Satellite Server, see Adding Puppet Modules to Red Hat Satellite 6 in the Puppet Guide.
- For more information about Content Views, see Managing Content Views in the Content Management Guide.
Chapter 8. Verifying the Load Balancing Configuration
You can verify the load balancing configuration by completing the following steps for each Capsule Server that you configure:
- Shut down the base operating system for your Capsule Server.
-
Verify that content or subscription management features are available on the client registered to this Capsule. For example, enter the
subscription-manager refresh
command on the client. - Restart the base operating system for your Capsule Server.