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Chapter 7. Installing and configuring web console by using RHEL system roles


With the cockpit RHEL system role, you can automatically deploy and enable the web console on multiple RHEL systems.

7.1. Installing the web console by using the cockpit RHEL system role

You can use the cockpit system role to automate installing and enabling the RHEL web console on multiple systems.

In this example, you use the cockpit system role to:

  • Install the RHEL web console.
  • Allow the firewalld and selinux system roles to configure the system for opening new ports.
  • Set the web console to use a certificate from the ipa trusted certificate authority instead of using a self-signed certificate.
Note

You do not have to call the firewall or certificate system roles in the playbook to manage the firewall or create the certificate. The cockpit system role calls them automatically as needed.

Prerequisites

Procedure

  1. Create a playbook file, for example, ~/playbook.yml, with the following content:

    ---
    - name: Manage the RHEL web console
      hosts: managed-node-01.example.com
      tasks:
        - name: Install RHEL web console
          ansible.builtin.include_role:
            name: redhat.rhel_system_roles.cockpit
          vars:
            cockpit_packages: default
            cockpit_port: 9090
            cockpit_manage_selinux: true
            cockpit_manage_firewall: true
            cockpit_certificates:
              - name: /etc/cockpit/ws-certs.d/01-certificate
                dns: ['localhost', 'www.example.com']
                ca: ipa
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    The settings specified in the example playbook include the following:

    cockpit_manage_selinux: true
    Allow using the selinux system role to configure SELinux for setting up the correct port permissions on the websm_port_t SELinux type.
    cockpit_manage_firewall: true
    Allow the cockpit system role to use the firewalld system role for adding ports.
    cockpit_certificates: <YAML_dictionary>

    By default, the RHEL web console uses a self-signed certificate. Alternatively, you can add the cockpit_certificates variable to the playbook and configure the role to request certificates from an IdM certificate authority (CA) or to use an existing certificate and private key that is available on the managed node.

    For details about all variables used in the playbook, see the /usr/share/ansible/roles/rhel-system-roles.cockpit/README.md file on the control node.

  2. Validate the playbook syntax:

    $ ansible-playbook --syntax-check ~/playbook.yml
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    Note that this command only validates the syntax and does not protect against a wrong but valid configuration.

  3. Run the playbook:

    $ ansible-playbook ~/playbook.yml
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