이 콘텐츠는 선택한 언어로 제공되지 않습니다.
Chapter 4. Registering hosts and setting up host integration
You must register hosts that have not been provisioned through Satellite to be able to manage them with Satellite. You can register hosts through Satellite Server or Capsule Server.
Note that the entitlement-based subscription model is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Red Hat recommends that you use the access-based subscription model of Simple Content Access instead.
You must also install and configure tools on your hosts, depending on which integration features you want to use. Use the following procedures to install and configure host tools:
4.1. Supported clients in registration
Satellite supports the following operating systems and architectures for registration.
- Supported host operating systems
The hosts can use the following operating systems:
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9, 8, 7
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 with the ELS Add-On
You can register the following hosts for converting to RHEL:
- CentOS Linux 7
- Oracle Linux 7 and 8
- Supported host architectures
The hosts can use the following architectures:
- i386
- x86_64
- s390x
- ppc_64
4.2. Registration methods
You can use the following methods to register hosts to Satellite:
- Global registration
You generate a
curl
command from Satellite and run this command from an unlimited number of hosts to register them using provisioning templates over the Satellite API. For more information, see Section 4.3, “Registering hosts by using global registration”.By using this method, you can also deploy Satellite SSH keys to hosts during registration to Satellite to enable hosts for remote execution jobs. For more information, see Chapter 12, Configuring and setting up remote jobs.
By using this method, you can also configure hosts with Red Hat Insights during registration to Satellite. For more information, see Chapter 9, Monitoring hosts using Red Hat Insights.
- (Deprecated) Katello CA Consumer
-
You download and install the consumer RPM from
satellite.example.com/pub/katello-ca-consumer-latest.noarch.rpm
on the host and then runsubscription-manager
. - (Deprecated) Bootstrap script
-
You download the bootstrap script from
satellite.example.com/pub/bootstrap.py
on the host and then run the script. For more information, see Section 4.4, “Registering hosts by using the bootstrap script”.
4.3. Registering hosts by using global registration
You can register a host to Satellite by generating a curl
command on Satellite and running this command on hosts. This method uses two provisioning templates: Global Registration template and Linux host_init_config default template. That gives you complete control over the host registration process.
You can also customize the default templates if you need greater flexibility. For more information, see Section 4.3.4, “Customizing the registration templates”.
4.3.1. Global parameters for registration
You can configure the following global parameters by navigating to Configure > Global Parameters:
-
The
host_registration_insights
parameter is used in theinsights
snippet. If the parameter is set totrue
, the registration installs and enables the Red Hat Insights client on the host. If the parameter is set tofalse
, it prevents Satellite and the Red Hat Insights client from uploading Inventory reports to your Red Hat Hybrid Cloud Console. The default value istrue
. When overriding the parameter value, set the parameter type toboolean
. -
The
host_packages
parameter is for installing packages on the host. -
The
host_registration_remote_execution
parameter is used in theremote_execution_ssh_keys
snippet. If it is set totrue
, the registration enables remote execution on the host. The default value istrue
. -
The
remote_execution_ssh_keys
,remote_execution_ssh_user
,remote_execution_create_user
, andremote_execution_effective_user_method
parameters are used in theremote_execution_ssh_keys
snippet. For more details, see the snippet.
You can navigate to snippets in the Satellite web UI through Hosts > Templates > Provisioning Templates.
4.3.2. Configuring a host for registration
Configure your host for registration to Satellite Server or Capsule Server. You can use a configuration management tool to configure multiple hosts at once.
Prerequisites
- The host must be using a supported operating system. For more information, see Section 4.1, “Supported clients in registration”.
- The system clock on your Satellite Server and any Capsule Servers must be synchronized across the network. If the system clock is not synchronized, SSL certificate verification might fail. For example, you can use the Chrony suite for timekeeping.
Procedure
Enable and start a time-synchronization tool on your host. The host must be synchronized with the same NTP server as Satellite Server and any Capsule Servers.
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 and later:
# systemctl enable --now chronyd
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6:
# chkconfig --add ntpd # chkconfig ntpd on # service ntpd start
Deploy the SSL CA file on your host so that the host can make a secured registration call.
- Find where Satellite stores the SSL CA file by navigating to Administer > Settings > Authentication and locating the value of the SSL CA file setting.
-
Transfer the SSL CA file to your host securely, for example by using
scp
. - Login to your host by using SSH.
Copy the certificate to the truststore:
# cp My_SSL_CA_file.pem /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors
Update the truststore:
# update-ca-trust
4.3.3. Registering a host
You can register a host by using registration templates and set up various integration features and host tools during the registration process.
Prerequisites
- Your Satellite account has the Register hosts role assigned or a role with equivalent permissions.
- You must have root privileges on the host that you want to register.
- You have configured the host for registration. For more information, see Section 4.3.2, “Configuring a host for registration”.
- An activation key must be available for the host. For more information, see Managing Activation Keys in Managing content.
-
Optional: If you want to register hosts to Red Hat Insights, you must synchronize the
rhel-8-for-x86_64-baseos-rpms
andrhel-8-for-x86_64-appstream-rpms
repositories and make them available in the activation key that you use. This is required to install theinsights-client
package on hosts. - Red Hat Satellite Client 6 repository for the operating system version of the host is synchronized on Satellite Server and enabled in the activation key you use. For more information, see Importing Content in Managing content. This repository is required for the remote execution pull client, Puppet agent, Tracer, and other tools.
- If you want to use Capsule Servers instead of your Satellite Server, ensure that you have configured your Capsule Servers accordingly. For more information, see Configuring Capsule for Host Registration and Provisioning in Installing Capsule Server.
- If your Satellite Server or Capsule Server is behind an HTTP proxy, configure the Subscription Manager on your host to use the HTTP proxy for connection. For more information, see How to access Red Hat Subscription Manager (RHSM) through a firewall or proxy in the Red Hat Knowledgebase.
Procedure
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Hosts > Register Host.
- Enter the details for how you want the registered hosts to be configured.
- On the General tab, in the Activation Keys field, enter one or more activation keys to assign to hosts.
-
Click Generate to generate a
curl
command. -
Run the
curl
command asroot
on the host that you want to register. After registration completes, any Ansible roles assigned to a host group you specified when configuring the registration template will run on the host.
The registration details that you can specify include the following:
- On the General tab, in the Capsule field, you can select the Capsule to register hosts through. A Capsule behind a load balancer takes precedence over a Capsule selected in the Satellite web UI as the content source of the host.
On the General tab, you can select the Insecure option to make the first call insecure. During this first call, the host downloads the CA file from Satellite. The host will use this CA file to connect to Satellite with all future calls making them secure.
Red Hat recommends that you avoid insecure calls.
If an attacker, located in the network between Satellite and a host, fetches the CA file from the first insecure call, the attacker will be able to access the content of the API calls to and from the registered host and the JSON Web Tokens (JWT). Therefore, if you have chosen to deploy SSH keys during registration, the attacker will be able to access the host using the SSH key.
- On the Advanced tab, in the Repositories field, you can list repositories to be added before the registration is performed. You do not have to specify repositories if you provide them in an activation key.
On the Advanced tab, in the Token lifetime (hours) field, you can change the validity duration of the JSON Web Token (JWT) that Satellite uses for authentication. The duration of this token defines how long the generated
curl
command works.Note that Satellite applies the permissions of the user who generates the
curl
command to authorization of hosts. If the user loses or gains additional permissions, the permissions of the JWT change too. Therefore, do not delete, block, or change permissions of the user during the token duration.The scope of the JWTs is limited to the registration endpoints only and cannot be used anywhere else.
CLI procedure
-
Use the
hammer host-registration generate-command
to generate thecurl
command to register the host. -
On the host that you want to register, run the
curl
command asroot
.
For more information, see the Hammer CLI help with hammer host-registration generate-command --help
.
Ansible procedure
-
Use the
redhat.satellite.registration_command
module.
For more information, see the Ansible module documentation with ansible-doc redhat.satellite.registration_command
.
API procedure
-
Use the
POST /api/registration_commands
resource.
For more information, see the full API reference at https://satellite.example.com/apidoc/v2.html
.
4.3.4. Customizing the registration templates
You can customize the registration process by editing the provisioning templates. Note that all default templates in Satellite are locked. If you want to customize the registration templates, you must clone the default templates and edit the clones.
Red Hat only provides support for the original unedited templates. Customized templates do not receive updates released by Red Hat.
The registration process uses the following provisioning templates:
-
The Global Registration template contains steps for registering hosts to Satellite. This template renders when hosts access the
/register
Satellite API endpoint. - The Linux host_init_config default template contains steps for initial configuration of hosts after they are registered.
Procedure
- Navigate to Hosts > Templates > Provisioning Templates.
- Search for the template you want to edit.
- In the row of the required template, click Clone.
- Edit the template as needed. For more information, see Appendix A, Template writing reference.
- Click Submit.
- Navigate to Administer > Settings > Provisioning.
Change the following settings as needed:
- Point the Default Global registration template setting to your custom global registration template,
- Point the Default 'Host initial configuration' template setting to your custom initial configuration template.
4.4. Registering hosts by using the bootstrap script
Deprecated Use Section 4.3, “Registering hosts by using global registration” instead.
Use the bootstrap script to automate content registration and Puppet configuration. You can use the bootstrap script to register new hosts, or to migrate existing hosts from RHN, SAM, RHSM, or another Red Hat Satellite instance.
The katello-client-bootstrap
package is installed by default on Satellite Server’s base operating system. The bootstrap.py
script is installed in the /var/www/html/pub/
directory to make it available to hosts at satellite.example.com/pub/bootstrap.py
. The script includes documentation in the /usr/share/doc/katello-client-bootstrap-version/README.md
file.
To use the bootstrap script, you must install it on the host. As the script is only required once, and only for the root
user, you can place it in /root
or /usr/local/sbin
and remove it after use. This procedure uses /root
.
Prerequisites
-
You have a Satellite user with the permissions required to run the bootstrap script. The examples in this procedure specify the
admin
user. If this is not acceptable to your security policy, create a new role with the minimum permissions required and add it to the user that will run the script. For more information, see Section 4.4.1, “Setting permissions for the bootstrap script”. - You have an activation key for your hosts with the Red Hat Satellite Client 6 repository enabled. For information on configuring activation keys, see Managing Activation Keys in Managing content.
- You have created a host group. For more information about creating host groups, see Section 3.2, “Creating a host group”.
Puppet considerations
If a host group is associated with a Puppet environment created inside a Production
environment, Puppet fails to retrieve the Puppet CA certificate while registering a host from that host group.
To create a suitable Puppet environment to be associated with a host group, follow these steps:
Manually create a directory:
# mkdir /etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/example_environment
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Configure > Puppet ENC > Environments.
- Click Import environment from. The button name includes the FQDN of the internal or external Capsule.
- Choose the created directory and click Update.
Procedure
-
Log in to the host as the
root
user. Download the script:
# curl -O http://satellite.example.com/pub/bootstrap.py
Make the script executable:
# chmod +x bootstrap.py
Confirm that the script is executable by viewing the help text:
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py -h
On other Red Hat Enterprise Linux versions:
# ./bootstrap.py -h
Enter the bootstrap command with values suitable for your environment.
For the
--server
option, specify the FQDN of Satellite Server or a Capsule Server. For the--location
,--organization
, and--hostgroup
options, use quoted names, not labels, as arguments to the options. For advanced use cases, see Section 4.4.2, “Advanced bootstrap script configuration”.On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key"
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# ./bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key"
Enter the password of the Satellite user you specified with the
--login
option.The script sends notices of progress to stdout.
-
When prompted by the script, approve the host’s Puppet certificate. In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Infrastructure > Capsules and find the Satellite or Capsule Server you specified with the
--server
option. - From the list in the Actions column, select Certificates.
- In the Actions column, click Sign to approve the host’s Puppet certificate.
- Return to the host to see the remainder of the bootstrap process completing.
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Hosts > All Hosts and ensure that the host is connected to the correct host group.
Optional: After the host registration is complete, remove the script:
# rm bootstrap.py
4.4.1. Setting permissions for the bootstrap script
Use this procedure to configure a Satellite user with the permissions required to run the bootstrap script. To use the CLI instead of the Satellite web UI, see the CLI procedure.
Procedure
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Administer > Users.
- Select an existing user by clicking the required Username. A new pane opens with tabs to modify information about the selected user. Alternatively, create a new user specifically for the purpose of running this script.
- Click the Roles tab.
Select Edit hosts and Viewer from the Roles list.
ImportantThe Edit hosts role allows the user to edit and delete hosts as well as being able to add hosts. If this is not acceptable to your security policy, create a new role with the following permissions and assign it to the user:
-
view_organizations
-
view_locations
-
view_domains
-
view_hostgroups
-
view_hosts
-
view_architectures
-
view_ptables
-
view_operatingsystems
-
create_hosts
-
- Click Submit.
CLI procedure
Create a role with the minimum permissions required by the bootstrap script. This example creates a role with the name Bootstrap:
# ROLE='Bootstrap' hammer role create --name "$ROLE" hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_organizations hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_locations hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_domains hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_hostgroups hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_hosts hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_architectures hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_ptables hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions view_operatingsystems hammer filter create --role "$ROLE" --permissions create_hosts
Assign the new role to an existing user:
# hammer user add-role --id user_id --role Bootstrap
Alternatively, you can create a new user and assign this new role to them. For more information on creating users with Hammer, see Managing Users and Roles in Administering Red Hat Satellite.
4.4.2. Advanced bootstrap script configuration
This section has more examples for using the bootstrap script to register or migrate a host.
These examples specify the admin
Satellite user. If this is not acceptable to your security policy, create a new role with the minimum permissions required by the bootstrap script. For more information, see Section 4.4.1, “Setting permissions for the bootstrap script”.
4.4.2.1. Migrating a host from one Satellite to another Satellite
Use the script with --force
to remove the katello-ca-consumer-*
packages from the old Satellite and install the katello-ca-consumer-*
packages on the new Satellite.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --force
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --force
4.4.2.2. Migrating a host from Red Hat Network (RHN) or Satellite 5 to Satellite
The bootstrap script detects the presence of /etc/syconfig/rhn/systemid
and a valid connection to RHN as an indicator that the system is registered to a legacy platform. The script then calls rhn-classic-migrate-to-rhsm
to migrate the system from RHN. By default, the script does not delete the system’s legacy profile due to auditing reasons. To remove the legacy profile, use --legacy-purge
, and use --legacy-login
to supply a user account that has appropriate permissions to remove a profile. Enter the user account password when prompted.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --legacy-purge \ --legacy-login rhn-user
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --legacy-purge \ --legacy-login rhn-user
4.4.2.3. Registering a host to Satellite without Puppet
By default, the bootstrap script configures the host for content management and configuration management. If you have an existing configuration management system and do not want to install Puppet on the host, use --skip-puppet
.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --skip-puppet
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --skip-puppet
4.4.2.4. Registering a host to Satellite for content management only
To register a system as a content host, and omit the provisioning and configuration management functions, use --skip-foreman
.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --server satellite.example.com \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --skip-foreman
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --server satellite.example.com \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --skip-foreman
4.4.2.5. Changing the method the bootstrap script uses to download the consumer RPM
By default, the bootstrap script uses HTTP to download the consumer RPM from http://satellite.example.com/pub/katello-ca-consumer-latest.noarch.rpm
. In some environments, you might want to allow HTTPS only between the host and Satellite. Use --download-method
to change the download method from HTTP to HTTPS.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --download-method https
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --download-method https
4.4.2.6. Providing the host’s IP address to Satellite
On hosts with multiple interfaces or multiple IP addresses on one interface, you might need to override the auto-detection of the IP address and provide a specific IP address to Satellite. Use --ip
.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --ip 192.x.x.x
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --ip 192.x.x.x
4.4.2.7. Enabling remote execution on the host
Use --rex
and --rex-user
to enable remote execution and add the required SSH keys for the specified user.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --rex \ --rex-user root
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --rex \ --rex-user root
4.4.2.8. Creating a domain for a host during registration
To create a host record, the DNS domain of a host needs to exist in Satellite prior to running the script. If the domain does not exist, add it using --add-domain
.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py \ --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --add-domain
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --add-domain
4.4.2.9. Providing an alternative FQDN for the host
If the host’s host name is not an FQDN, or is not RFC-compliant (containing a character such as an underscore), the script will fail at the host name validation stage. If you cannot update the host to use an FQDN that is accepted by Satellite, you can use the bootstrap script to specify an alternative FQDN.
Procedure
Set
create_new_host_when_facts_are_uploaded
andcreate_new_host_when_report_is_uploaded
to false using Hammer:# hammer settings set \ --name create_new_host_when_facts_are_uploaded \ --value false # hammer settings set \ --name create_new_host_when_report_is_uploaded \ --value false
Use
--fqdn
to specify the FQDN that will be reported to Satellite:On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, enter the following command:
# /usr/libexec/platform-python bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --fqdn node100.example.com
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 or 7, enter the following command:
# bootstrap.py --login=admin \ --server satellite.example.com \ --location="My_Location" \ --organization="My_Organization" \ --hostgroup="My_Host_Group" \ --activationkey="My_Activation_Key" \ --fqdn node100.example.com
4.5. Installing Tracer
Use this procedure to install Tracer on Red Hat Satellite and access Traces. Tracer displays a list of services and applications that are outdated and need to be restarted. Traces is the output generated by Tracer in the Satellite web UI.
Prerequisites
- The host is registered to Red Hat Satellite.
- Red Hat Satellite Client 6 repository for the operating system version of the host is synchronized on Satellite Server, available in the content view and the lifecycle environment of the host, and enabled for the host. For more information, see Changing the repository sets status for a host in Satellite in Managing content.
Procedure
On the content host, install the
katello-host-tools-tracer
RPM package:# yum install katello-host-tools-tracer
Enter the following command:
# katello-tracer-upload
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Hosts > All Hosts, then click the required host name.
- Click the Traces tab to view Traces. If it is not installed, an Enable Traces button initiates a remote execution job that installs the package.
4.6. Installing and configuring Puppet agent during host registration
You can install and configure the Puppet agent on the host during registration. A configured Puppet agent is required on the host for Puppet integration with your Satellite. For more information about Puppet, see Managing configurations using Puppet integration.
Prerequisites
- Puppet must be enabled in your Satellite. For more information, see Enabling Puppet Integration with Satellite in Managing configurations using Puppet integration.
- Red Hat Satellite Client 6 repository for the operating system version of the host is synchronized on Satellite Server and enabled in the activation key you use. For more information, see Importing Content in Managing content.
- You have an activation key. For more information, see Managing Activation Keys in Managing content.
Procedure
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Configure > Global Parameters to add host parameters globally. Alternatively, you can navigate to Configure > Host Groups and edit or create a host group to add host parameters only to a host group.
-
Enable the Puppet agent using a host parameter in global parameters or a host group. Add a host parameter named
enable-puppet7
, select the boolean type, and set the value totrue
. Specify configuration for the Puppet agent using the following host parameters in global parameters or a host group:
-
Add a host parameter named
puppet_server
, select the string type, and set the value to the hostname of your Puppet server, such aspuppet.example.com
. -
Optional: Add a host parameter named
puppet_ca_server
, select the string type, and set the value to the hostname of your Puppet CA server, such aspuppet-ca.example.com
. Ifpuppet_ca_server
is not set, the Puppet agent will use the same server aspuppet_server
. -
Optional: Add a host parameter named
puppet_environment
, select the string type, and set the value to the Puppet environment you want the host to use.
Until the BZ2177730 is resolved, you must use host parameters to specify the Puppet agent configuration even in integrated setups where the Puppet server is a Capsule Server.
-
Add a host parameter named
- Navigate to Hosts > Register Host and register your host using an appropriate activation key. For more information, see Registering Hosts in Managing hosts.
- Navigate to Infrastructure > Capsules.
- From the list in the Actions column for the required Capsule Server, select Certificates.
- Click Sign to the right of the required host to sign the SSL certificate for the Puppet agent.
4.7. Installing and configuring Puppet agent manually
You can install and configure the Puppet agent on a host manually. A configured Puppet agent is required on the host for Puppet integration with your Satellite. For more information about Puppet, see Managing configurations using Puppet integration.
Prerequisites
- Puppet must be enabled in your Satellite. For more information, see Enabling Puppet Integration with Satellite in Managing configurations using Puppet integration.
- The host must have a Puppet environment assigned to it.
- Red Hat Satellite Client 6 repository for the operating system version of the host is synchronized on Satellite Server, available in the content view and the lifecycle environment of the host, and enabled for the host. For more information, see Changing the repository sets status for a host in Satellite in Managing content.
Procedure
-
Log in to the host as the
root
user. Install the Puppet agent package.
On hosts running Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and above:
# dnf install puppet-agent
On hosts running Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 and below:
# yum install puppet-agent
Add the Puppet agent to
PATH
in your current shell using the following script:. /etc/profile.d/puppet-agent.sh
Configure the Puppet agent. Set the
environment
parameter to the name of the Puppet environment to which the host belongs:# puppet config set server satellite.example.com --section agent # puppet config set environment My_Puppet_Environment --section agent
Start the Puppet agent service:
# puppet resource service puppet ensure=running enable=true
Create a certificate for the host:
# puppet ssl bootstrap
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Infrastructure > Capsules.
- From the list in the Actions column for the required Capsule Server, select Certificates.
- Click Sign to the right of the required host to sign the SSL certificate for the Puppet agent.
On the host, run the Puppet agent again:
# puppet ssl bootstrap
4.8. Running Ansible roles during host registration
You can run Ansible roles when you are registering a host to Satellite.
Prerequisites
- The required Ansible roles have been imported from your Capsule to Satellite. For more information, see Importing Ansible roles and variables in Managing configurations using Ansible integration.
Procedure
- Create a host group with Ansible roles. For more information, see Section 3.2, “Creating a host group”.
- Register the host by using the host group with assigned Ansible roles. For more information, see Section 4.3.3, “Registering a host”.