Managing the network with Cfengine
Big Engine
© Kit-Wai-Chan, Fotolia
Automate admin tasks with the powerful Cfengine framework.
Cfengine [1] is a flexible framework for automating system administration tasks. With Cfengine, you can manage one machine or a heterogeneous network. The first version of Cfengine was released more than 15 years ago by Mark Burgess, a professor at Oslo University. According to usage estimates, Cfengine has managed more than 1 million computers over the years. Version 3 of the Cfengine framework rolls out some new capabilities and does away with all the old historical layers. The developers have even retooled the language so that all elements are handled in a uniform way.
To show what is possible with Cfengine 3, I introduce various Cfengine components in a running example. To follow along, you need two networked Linux machines that I call PolicyServer and Client. The end goal is to have the client machine running a fully configured and managed Apache web server, with no manual configuration required, other than installing Cfengine.
The basic model I use will store and distribute all of the policy code centrally from a single server. Cfengine can be used many ways because it is very flexible, but this is a common design, and it serves many sys admins well. PolicyServer will hold and make available the central repository of Cfengine code, and the Client machine will receive the Apache configuration.
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reply to pghpete
Can't believe the trouble...
'yum install openssl openssl-devel db4 db4-deve flex flex-devel bison bison-devel pcre pcre-devel'
Then your './configure && make && make install' should run without issues on either distro.
Many issues while trying to follow your article
I decided to use a package utility instead of compiling the source.
RHEL 5.4:
'yum install cfengine' worked without incident
CentOS 5.4
'yum install cfengine' reports package not found, nothing to do.
I thought this was quite strange since CentOS, from my knowledge, is near identical to RHEL 5.4 ( including their repository content)
Apparently, you have to install rpmforge just to get the package for CentOS 5.4. Here is what I did to accomplish that...
'wget http://packages.sw.be/rpmfo...elease-0.5.1-1.e15.rf.i386.rpm'
'rpm -Uvh rpmforge-release-0.5.1-1.e15.rf.i386.rpm'
(as rpmrepo.net/RPMforge instructs)
After that a 'yum install cfengine' worked without incident. At this point I figured my troubles where over,... nope!
While trying to follow your "Hello, World" instructions, I couldn't figure out why there was no command cf-key, or cf-agent on my systems... a quick 'man cfengine' showed me why... ah... it's cfkey and cfagent. I figured it was just the authors typo(s). Then, the files and directories that I was directed to create/alter were not on my systems either. Hum... strange. I was about to give up but then I ran 'rpm -q cfengine' on both systems and had my "Ah ha" moment... both of my test distros are Enterprise OS systems and therefore, their package versions are way behind the most recent versions of anything. I totally missed the first sentence of paragraph two in which Mr. Strejcek states clearly, "To show what is possible with Cfengine 3,..."
I can't believe I missed that! I had ton of problems, but they were all self-inflicted wounds. Had I just caught that line... aw well.