chef-solo (executable)¶
chef-solo is a command that executes chef-client in a way that does not require the Chef server in order to converge cookbooks. chef-solo uses chef-client’s Chef local mode, and does not support the following functionality present in chef-client / server configurations:
- Centralized distribution of cookbooks
- A centralized API that interacts with and integrates infrastructure components
- Authentication or authorization
Note
chef-solo can be run as a daemon.
The chef-solo executable is run as a command-line tool.
Options¶
This command has the following syntax:
chef-solo OPTION VALUE OPTION VALUE ...
This command has the following options:
-c CONFIG,--config CONFIG- The configuration file to use.
-d,--daemonizeRun the executable as a daemon. This option may not be used in the same command with the
--[no-]forkoption.This option is only available on machines that run in UNIX or Linux environments. For machines that are running Microsoft Windows that require similar functionality, use the
chef-client::servicerecipe in thechef-clientcookbook: https://supermarket.chef.io/cookbooks/chef-client. This will install a chef-client service under Microsoft Windows using the Windows Service Wrapper.-E ENVIRONMENT_NAME,--environment ENVIRONMENT_NAME- The name of the environment.
-f,--[no-]fork- Contain the chef-client run in a secondary process with dedicated RAM. When the chef-client run is complete, the RAM is returned to the master process. This option helps ensure that a chef-client uses a steady amount of RAM over time because the master process does not run recipes. This option also helps prevent memory leaks such as those that can be introduced by the code contained within a poorly designed cookbook. Use
--no-forkto disable running the chef-client in fork node. Default value:--fork. This option may not be used in the same command with the--daemonizeand--intervaloptions. -F FORMAT,--format FORMATThe output format:
doc(default) ormin.- Use
docto print the progress of the chef-client run using full strings that display a summary of updates as they occur. - Use
minto print the progress of the chef-client run using single characters.
A summary of updates is printed at the end of the chef-client run. A dot (
.) is printed for events that do not have meaningful status information, such as loading a file or synchronizing a cookbook. For resources, a dot (.) is printed when the resource is up to date, anSis printed when the resource is skipped bynot_iforonly_if, and aUis printed when the resource is updated.Other formatting options are available when those formatters are configured in the client.rb file using the
add_formatteroption.- Use
--force-formatter- Show formatter output instead of logger output.
--force-logger- Show logger output instead of formatter output.
-g GROUP,--group GROUP- The name of the group that owns a process. This is required when starting any executable as a daemon.
-h,--help- Show help for the command.
-i SECONDS,--interval SECONDS- The frequency (in seconds) at which the chef-client runs. When the chef-client is run at intervals,
--splayand--intervalvalues are applied before the chef-client run. This option may not be used in the same command with the--[no-]forkoption. -j PATH,--json-attributes PATHThe path to a file that contains JSON data.
Use this option to define a
run_listobject. For example, a JSON file similar to:"run_list": [ "recipe[base]", "recipe[foo]", "recipe[bar]", "role[webserver]" ],
may be used by running
chef-client -j path/to/file.json.In certain situations this option may be used to update
normalattributes.Warning
Any other attribute type that is contained in this JSON file will be treated as a
normalattribute. Setting attributes at other precedence levels is not possible. For example, attempting to updateoverrideattributes using the-joption:{ "name": "dev-99", "description": "Install some stuff", "override_attributes": { "apptastic": { "enable_apptastic": "false", "apptastic_tier_name": "dev-99.bomb.com" } } }
will result in a node object similar to:
{ "name": "maybe-dev-99", "normal": { "name": "dev-99", "description": "Install some stuff", "override_attributes": { "apptastic": { "enable_apptastic": "false", "apptastic_tier_name": "dev-99.bomb.com" } } } }
-l LEVEL,--log_level LEVEL- The level of logging to be stored in a log file.
-L LOGLOCATION,--logfile c- The location of the log file. This is recommended when starting any executable as a daemon.
--legacy-modeCause the chef-client to not use chef local mode, but rather the original chef-solo mode. This is not recommended unless really required.
Removed in Chef Client 14.
--minimal-ohai- Run the Ohai plugins for name detection and resource/provider selection and no other Ohai plugins. Set to
trueduring integration testing to speed up test cycles. --[no-]color- View colored output. Default setting:
--color. -N NODE_NAME,--node-name NODE_NAME- The name of the node.
-o RUN_LIST_ITEM,--override-runlist RUN_LIST_ITEM- Replace the current run-list with the specified items.
-r RECIPE_URL,--recipe-url RECIPE_URLThe URL of the remote cookbook
tar.gzfile that you want to download.In Chef Client 14, the short
-rform will be removed, as it conflicts with the ability to specify a run list.--run-lock-timeout SECONDS- The amount of time (in seconds) to wait for a chef-client lock file to be deleted. Default value: not set (indefinite). Set to
0to cause a second chef-client to exit immediately. -s SECONDS,--splay SECONDS- A random number between zero and
splaythat is added tointerval. Use splay to help balance the load on the Chef server by ensuring that many chef-client runs are not occurring at the same interval. When the chef-client is run at intervals,--splayand--intervalvalues are applied before the chef-client run. -u USER,--user USER- The user that owns a process. This is required when starting any executable as a daemon.
-v,--version- The version of the chef-client.
-W,--why-run- Run the executable in why-run mode, which is a type of chef-client run that does everything except modify the system. Use why-run mode to understand why the chef-client makes the decisions that it makes and to learn more about the current and proposed state of the system.
Run as Non-root User¶
chef-solo may be run as a non-root user. For example, the sudoers file can be updated similar to:
# chef-solo privilege specification
chef ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chef-solo
where chef is the name of the non-root user. This would allow chef-solo to run any command on the node without requiring a password.
Examples¶
Run chef-solo using solo.rb settings
$ chef-solo -c ~/chef/solo.rb
Use a URL
$ chef-solo -c ~/solo.rb -j ~/node.json -r http://www.example.com/chef-solo.tar.gz
The tar.gz is archived into the file_cache_path, and then extracted to cookbooks_path.
Use a directory
$ chef-solo -c ~/solo.rb -j ~/node.json
chef-solo will look in the solo.rb file to determine the directory in which cookbooks are located.
Use a URL for cookbook and JSON data
$ chef-solo -c ~/solo.rb -j http://www.example.com/node.json --recipe-url http://www.example.com/chef-solo.tar.gz
where --recipe-url corresponds to recipe_url and -j corresponds to json_attribs, both of which are configuration options in solo.rb.