Forge Home

aerospike

Aerospike servers management via Puppet

2,255 downloads

359 latest version

4.7 quality score

We run a couple of automated
scans to help you access a
module's quality. Each module is
given a score based on how well
the author has formatted their
code and documentation and
modules are also checked for
malware using VirusTotal.

Please note, the information below
is for guidance only and neither of
these methods should be considered
an endorsement by Puppet.

Version information

  • 2.0.0 (latest)
  • 1.6.0
  • 1.5.0
  • 1.4.0
released Jun 25th 2024
This version is compatible with:
  • Puppet Enterprise 2023.8.x, 2023.7.x, 2023.6.x, 2023.5.x, 2023.4.x, 2023.3.x, 2023.2.x, 2023.1.x, 2023.0.x, 2021.7.x, 2021.6.x, 2021.5.x, 2021.4.x, 2021.3.x, 2021.2.x, 2021.1.x, 2021.0.x
  • Puppet >= 7.0.0 < 9.0.0
  • , , , ,

Start using this module

  • r10k or Code Manager
  • Bolt
  • Manual installation
  • Direct download

Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'deric-aerospike', '2.0.0'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add deric-aerospike
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install deric-aerospike --version 2.0.0

Direct download is not typically how you would use a Puppet module to manage your infrastructure, but you may want to download the module in order to inspect the code.

Download

Documentation

deric/aerospike — version 2.0.0 Jun 25th 2024

Aerospike Puppet module

Tests Puppet Forge latest release Puppet Forge downloads Puppet Forge score

Overview

This module installs the Aerospike NoSQL database engine and configures it. It can optionally install the Aerospike Management Console (aka. amc) and manage the corresponding service.

Module Description

What is this module capable of doing?

  • Download and install the Aerospike database engine in a specific version
  • Optionally download and install the Aerospike Management Console in a specific version
  • Optionally download and install specific version of the Aerospike Tools
  • Manage a specific user and group (with their corresponding fixed uid/gid) dedicated to the service
  • Manage all the contexts configurable in an Aerospike server installation
  • Manage the Aerospike database server service
  • Optionnally manage the Aerospike Management Console service

Setup

What aerospike affects

Files managed by the module:

  • /etc/aerospike/aerospike.conf

Setup Requirements

The module requires:

Beginning with aerospike

The module can be used out of the box directly, it just requires puppet-community's archive module and puppetlab's stdlib to be in your modulepath.

To install, just use the following, puppet software will take care of puling the dependencies:

puppet module install deric/aerospike

If you are working on a version not coming from the forge but directly from the github repo, here is how you can install the dependencies of the module:

puppet module install puppetlabs/stdlib
puppet module install puppet/archive

Usage

Those examples include the puppet-only configuration, and the corresponding configuration for those who use hiera (I find it more convienient for copy/paste of a full configuration when you have both - yes, I'm lazy ;-) ).

Using the aerospike enterprise version

In this example you will setup an installation of an aerospike server 3.8.4 enterprise version using the default namespace:

class { 'aerospike':
  version       => '3.8.4',
  edition       => 'enterprise',
  download_user => 'myuser',
  download_pass => 'mypassword',
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera (of course, you use eyaml and encrypt your password with it! ;-) ):

---
aerospike::version: 3.8.4
aerospike::edition: enterprise
aerospike::download_user: myuser
aerospike::download_pass: mypassword

Note: If you plan to switch from a community installation to an enterprise one, you will need to uninstall the aerospike-server-community and optionally the aerospike-tools packages.

Defining namespaces

Configuring 2 namespaces 'bar' (stored in memory) and 'foo' (store in files on ssd devices) containing a hahaha set protected from eviction:

class { 'aerospike':
  config_ns => {
    'bar'                  => {
      'replication-factor' => 2,
      'memory-size'        => '10G',
      'default-ttl'        => '30d',
      'storage-engine'     => 'memory',
    },
    'foo'                     => {
      'replication-factor'    => 2,
      'memory-size'           => '1G',
      'default-ttl'           => 172800,
      'high-water-disk-pct'   => 90,
      'high-water-memory-pct' => 90,
      'set hahaha'            => [ 'set-disable-eviction true', ],
      'storage-engine device' => [
        'file /data/aerospike/foo1.dat',
        'file /data/aerospike/foo2.dat',
        'filesize 10G',
        'data-in-memory false',
        'write-block-size 128K',
        'scheduler-mode noop',
      ]
    },
  },
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera:

---
aerospike::config_ns:
  bar:
    replication-factor: 2
    memory-size: 10G
    default-ttl: 30d
    storage-engine: memory
  foo:
    replication-factor: 2
    memory-size: 1G
    default-ttl: 172800
    high-water-disk-pct: 90
    high-water-memory-pct: 90
    set hahaha:
      - set-disable-eviction true'
    storage-engine device:
      - 'file /data/aerospike/foo1.dat'
      - 'file /data/aerospike/foo2.dat'
      - 'filesize 10G'
      - 'data-in-memory false'
      - 'write-block-size 128K'
      - 'scheduler-mode noop'

Installing the Aerospike Management Console

To install and the management console and have the service managed by puppet, use:

class { 'aerospike':
  amc_install        => true,
  amc_manage_service => true,
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera:

---
aerospike::amc_install: true
aerospike::amc_manage_service: true

Installing specific version of the Aerospike Tools

To install specific version of the Aerospike Tools, use:

class { 'aerospike':
  tools_version => '3.16.0',
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera:

---
aerospike::tools_version: '3.16.0'

Configuring a rack-aware cluster

In this example we will be configuring a 3 nodes rack-aware cluster in a non-multicast environment like in most cloud provider environments (so using Mesh heartbeats). The cluster group id is a totally arbitrary choice.

In this example, the servers IP are 192.168.1.100, 192.168.1.101 and 192.168.1.102

Note: You will need aerospike 3.7.0 or higher to support some of those parameters.

class { 'aerospike':
  config_service => {
    'paxos-single-replica-limit'    => 1,
    'pidfile'                       => '/var/run/aerospike/asd.pid',
    'service-threads'               => 4,
    'transaction-queues'            => 4,
    'transaction-threads-per-queue' => 4,
    'proto-fd-max'                  => 15000,
    'paxos-protocol'                => 'v4',
    'paxos-recovery-policy'         => 'auto-reset-master',
  },
  config_net_hb => {
    'mode'                                 => 'mesh',
    'address'                              => 'any',
    'port'                                 => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.100' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.101' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.102' => 3002,
    'interval'                             => 150,
    'timeout'                              => 20,
  },
  config_cluster => {
    'mode'          => 'dynamic',
    'self-group-id' => 666,
  },
}

Which would result in the following hiera configuration:

---
aerospike::config_service:
  paxos-single-replica-limit: 1
  pidfile: /var/run/aerospike/asd.pid
  service-threads: 4
  transaction-queues: 4
  transaction-threads-per-queue: 4
  proto-fd-max: 15000
  paxos-protocol: v4
  paxos-recovery-policy: auto-reset-master
aerospike::config_net_hb:
  mode: mesh
  address: any
  port: 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.100': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.101': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 192.168.1.102': 3002
  interval: 150
  timeout: 20
aerospike::config_cluster:
  mode: dynamic
  self-group-id: 666

Defining credentials for XDR

To define credentials of remote cluster(s) for XDR in a separate secured file '/etc/aerospike/security-credentials_$DC_name.txt', use:

class { 'aerospike':
  config_xdr_credentials => {"DC1"=>{"username"=>"xdr_user_DC1", "password"=>"xdr_password_DC1"}},
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera:

---
aerospike::config_xdr_credentials:
  DC1:
    username: 'xdr_user_DC1'
    password: 'xdr_password_DC1'

Full real-life multi-datacenter replication example for XDR with security enabled

Note that this example requires you to run at least aerospike 3.8.1.

To define a XDR replication over a namespace to multiple datacenters, you can work based on the following example (note that it is based on a real-life prod example. Of course, IP and other security-sensitive informations here are fake or removed):

class { 'aerospike':
  version        => '3.8.4',
  config_service => {
    'paxos-single-replica-limit'    => 1,
    'pidfile'                       => '/var/run/aerospike/asd.pid',
    'service-threads'               => 4,
    'transaction-queues'            => 4,
    'transaction-threads-per-queue' => 4,
    'proto-fd-max'                  => 15000,
    'paxos-protocol'                => 'v4',
    'paxos-recovery-policy'         => 'auto-reset-master',
    'migrate-threads'               => 2,
  },
  config_logging => {
    '/var/logs/aerospike.log' => [ 'any info' ],
  },
  config_net_hb => {
    'mode'                              => 'mesh',
    'address'                           => 'any',
    'port'                              => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.101' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.102' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.103' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.104' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.105' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.106' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.107' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.108' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.109' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.110' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.111' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.112' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.113' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.114' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.115' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.116' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.117' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.118' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.119' => 3002,
    'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.120' => 3002,
    'interval'                          => 150,
    'timeout'                           => 20,
  },
  config_cluster => {
    'mode'          => 'dynamic',
    'self-group-id' => 666,
  },
  config_ns => {
    'replicatedns'          => {
    'enable-xdr'            => 'true',
    'xdr-remote-datacenter' => [ 'DC1', 'DC2' ],
    'replication-factor'    => 2,
    'memory-size'           => '100G',
    'default-ttl'           => '30D',
    'high-water-disk-pct'   => 55,
    'high-water-memory-pct' => 65,
    'storage-engine device' => [
      'device /dev/xvdb /dev/xvdf',
      'device /dev/xvdc /dev/xvdg',
      'data-in-memory false',
      'write-block-size 1024K',
      'scheduler-mode noop',
      'defrag-lwm-pct 55',
      ],
    },
  },
  config_sec => {
    'enable-security' => 'true',
  },
  config_xdr => {
    'enable-xdr' => 'true',
    'xdr-digestlog-path' => '/mnt/aerospike-digestlog 100G',
    'xdr-ship-bins' => 'true',
    'datacenter DC1' => [
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.100 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.101 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.102 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.103 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.104 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.105 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.106 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.107 3000',
      'dc-use-alternate-services true',
      'dc-security-config-file /etc/aerospike/security-credentials_DC1.txt'
    ],
    'datacenter DC2' => [
      'dc-node-address-port 193.168.2.100 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.102 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.103 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.104 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.105 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.106 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.107 3000',
      'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.108 3000',
      'dc-use-alternate-services true',
      'dc-security-config-file /etc/aerospike/security-credentials_DC2.txt'
    ],
  },
  config_xdr_credentials => {
    'DC1' => {
      'username' => 'svc_xdr_dc1',
      'password' => 'password_encrypted_with_eyaml_goes_there',
    },
    'DC2' => {
      'username' => 'svc_xdr_dc2',
      'password' => 'password_encrypted_with_eyaml_goes_there',
    },
  }
}

Or, using hiera, you just include 'aerospike' in your puppet profile and in hiera:

---
aerospike::version: 3.8.4
aerospike::config_service:
  paxos-single-replica-limit: 1
  pidfile: /var/run/aerospike/asd.pid
  service-threads: 4
  transaction-queues: 4
  transaction-threads-per-queue: 4
  proto-fd-max: 15000
  paxos-protocol: v4
  paxos-recovery-policy: auto-reset-master
  migrate-threads: 2
aerospike::config_logging:
  '/var/logs/aerospike.log': [ 'any info' ]
aerospike::config_net_hb:
  mode: mesh
  address: any
  port: 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.101': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.102': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.103': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.104': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.105': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.106': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.107': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.108': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.109': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.110': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.111': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.112': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.113': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.114': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.115': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.116': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.117': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.118': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.119': 3002
  'mesh-seed-address-port 10.0.0.120': 3002
  interval: 150
  timeout: 20
aerospike::config_cluster:
  mode: dynamic
  self-group-id: 666
aerospike::config_ns:
  replicatedns:
    enable-xdr: true
    xdr-remote-datacenter:
      - DC1
      - DC2
    replication-factor: 2
    memory-size: 100G
    default-ttl: 30D
    high-water-disk-pct: 55
    high-water-memory-pct: 65
    storage-engine device:
      - 'device /dev/xvdb /dev/xvdf'
      - 'device /dev/xvdc /dev/xvdg'
      - 'data-in-memory false'
      - 'write-block-size 1024K'
      - 'scheduler-mode noop'
      - 'defrag-lwm-pct 55'
aerospike::config_sec:
  enable-security: true
aerospike::config_xdr:
  enable-xdr: true
  xdr-digestlog-path: '/mnt/aerospike-digestlog 100G'
  xdr-ship-bins: true
  'datacenter DC1':
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.100 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.101 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.102 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.103 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.104 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.105 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.106 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.1.107 3000'
    - 'dc-use-alternate-services true'
    - 'dc-security-config-file /etc/aerospike/security-credentials_DC1.txt'
  'datacenter DC2':
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.100 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.102 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.103 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.104 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.105 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.106 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.107 3000'
    - 'dc-node-address-port 192.168.2.108 3000'
    - 'dc-use-alternate-services true'
    - 'dc-security-config-file /etc/aerospike/security-credentials_DC2.txt'
aerospike::config_xdr_credentials:
  DC1:
    username: svc_xdr_dc1
    password: password_encrypted_with_eyaml_goes_there
  DC2:
    username: svc_xdr_dc2
    password: password_encrypted_with_eyaml_goes_there

Note that if you are only doing xdr to 1 datacenter, you can use a string instead of an array for the xdr-remote-datacenter parameter:

    xdr-remote-datacenter: DC1

Not restarting the service

There are 2 solutions for that. The most common usage for that would be the 1st solution proposed.

Not restarting when a config is changed

To still having puppet start or stop the service as you defined but not restart the service when a configuration is changed, set the restart_on_config_change parameter to false.

This is the method you will want to choose if you are changing dynamic parameters with the asinfo or asadm command-line tools and that you change the config file just to avoid problems on next restart.

Note that this won't restart the service when credentials are modified either.

class { 'aerospike':
  restart_on_config_change => false,
}

Or via hiera:

aerospike:
  restart_on_config_change: false

Not managing the service with puppet at all

To do that you define the manage_service parameter to false but keep in mind that if there's a problem and the service goes down, puppet won't restart it.

Puppet won't restart the service if there's a config change either.

class { 'aerospike':
  manage_service => false,
}

Or via hiera:

aerospike:
  manage_service: false

Reference

Public classes

  • aerospike: Installs and configures Aerospike server and the management console.

Private classes and defines

  • aerospike::install: Installs Aerospike server and the management console.
  • aerospike::config: Configures Aerospike server and the management console.
  • aerospike::service: Manages the Aerospike server and the management console services.
  • aerospike::xdr_credentials_file: manages the credential files for xdr.

Parameters

Class aerospike

asinstall

If set to false, this won't download and install the aerospike server package. Useful if need install only AMC.

Default: true

version

Version of the aerospike database engine to install.

Default: 3.8.4

download_dir

Directory where to download the archive before unpacking it.

Default: /usr/local/src

download_url

URL from where to download the tarball. Only populate it if you want the package to be downloaded from somewhere else than the aerospike website.

Note: It is mandatory to keep the name of the target file set to the following pattern when using this custom url: aerospike-server-${aerospike::edition}-${aerospike::version}-${aerospike::target_os_tag}.tgz

Default: http://www.aerospike.com/artifacts/aerospike-server-${aerospike::edition}/${aerospike::version}/aerospike-server-${aerospike::edition}-${aerospike::version}-${aerospike::target_os_tag}.tgz

remove_archive

Whether to remove the tarball once extracted for the aerospike server part. Is also used for the amc when downloading a tarball (not for the deb package).

Default: false

edition

The edition to use (enterprise or community).

Default: community

target_os_tag

Tag used in the target file name to identify the distribution package to use.

Default: ubuntu18.04

download_user

Username to use to download the enterprise version of the package. This is used for both the download of the aerospike server package and the amc. This parameter is not necessary when downloading the community version from the aerospike repositories but you can use it if you download from a password-protected custom url.

Default: undef

download_pass

Password to use to download the enterprise version of the package to use. It is used for both the download of the aerospike server package and the amc.

Default: undef

system_user

OS user that the service will use in the service configuration. This user will only be defined if not already defined somewhere else in your Puppet catalog.

Default: root

system_uid

UID of the OS user to be used by the service.

Default: undef (number is assigned by the OS)

system_group

OS group that the service will use in the service configuration. This group will only be defined if not already defined somewhere else in your Puppet catalog.

Default: root

system_gid

GID of the OS user to be used by the service.

Default: undef (number is assigned by the OS)

manage_service

Boolean indicating whether you want to manage the service status or not. If set to false, the service_status parameter will be ignored but the service will still be configured.

Default: true

service_provider

String defining mechanism for managing service. See Puppet docs for supported values.

Default: undef (Puppet will determine appropriate value)

restart_on_config_change

Boolean indicating whether or not you want to restart the aerospike service whenever there's a change in the configuration files or credential files.

Note that it is different from manage_service because the service will still be managed by puppet if you set it to false (as long as manage_service is set to true), so if the service goes down, puppet will still take care of restarting it.

Default: true

config_service

Configuration parameters to define in the service context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

Note: The user and group are already defined by the system_user and system_group parameters. No need to specify them again.

The default value is:

{
  'paxos-single-replica-limit'    => 1,
  'pidfile'                       => '/var/run/aerospike/asd.pid',
  'service-threads'               => 4,
  'transaction-queues'            => 4,
  'transaction-threads-per-queue' => 4,
  'proto-fd-max'                  => 15000,
}

Which generates the following configuration for the service context:

service {
  user root
  group root
  paxos-single-replica-limit 1
  pidfile /var/run/aerospike/asd.pid
  proto-fd-max 15000
  service-threads 4
  transaction-queues 4
  transaction-threads-per-queue 4
}

For more information, check the properties declared as in the "service" context in http://www.aerospike.com/docs/reference/configuration/

config_logging

Configuration parameters to define in the logging context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

* the log file path as key (Reminder: Log file must be an absolute path.)
* an array with the definition of all the contexts definitions as value

The default value is:

aerospike::config_logging:
  '/var/log/aerospike/aerospike.log':
    - any detail

Which generates the following configuration for the logging context:

logging {
  file /var/log/aerospike/aerospike.log {
    context any info
  }
}

For systemd based system, the logs by default are configured to go to the console:

aerospike::config_logging:
  console:
    - any detail

Which generates following configuration:

logging {
    console {
        context any info
    }
}

For more information about logging management in aerospike, check the documentation.

config_mod_lua

Configuration parameters for mod-lua context.

This parameter is a hash which is empty by default.

{
  'config_mod_lua' => {
    'user-path' => '/opt/aerospike/usr/udf/lua'
  },
}

Which generates the following configuration for the mod-lua context:

mod-lua {
    user-path /opt/aerospike/usr/udf/lua
}
config_net_svc

Configuration parameters to define in the service sub-stanza in the network context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

Default:

{
  'address' => 'any',
  'port'    => 3000,
}

For more information about this sub-stanza: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/network/general/

config_net_fab

Configuration parameters to define in the fabric sub-stanza in the network context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

Default:

{
  'address' => 'any',
  'port'    => 3001,
}

For more information about this sub-stanza: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/network/general/

config_net_inf

Configuration parameters to define in the info sub-stanza in the network context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

Default:

{
  'address' => 'any',
  'port'    => 3003,
}

For more information about this sub-stanza: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/network/general/

config_net_hb

Configuration parameters to define in the heartbeat sub-stanza in the network context of the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

IMPORTANT: for declaring mesh-seed-address-port, you will need to use the 'mesh-seed-address-port <IP Address>' as a key if you want it to work. See Configuring a rack-aware cluster for an example using this.

Default:

{
  'mode'     => 'multicast',
  'address'  => 'any',
  'port'     => 9918,
  'interval' => 150,
  'timeout'  => 10,
}

For more information about the heartbeat sub-stanza: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/network/heartbeat/

config_ns

Configuration parameters to define the namespaces contexts in the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the namespace name as key
  • the value is another hash table composed by:
    • the name of the property as key
    • the value of the property as value.

When defining a sub-stanza in it for a property as you do for a storage-engine device, you have to concatenante the property and the value as the key (for example: "storage-engine device") and set the value as an array, each item of the array being a line of configuration that you want to have defined as-is in your sub-stanza. Check the example section of this file for a more concrete example.

Default:

{
  'foo'                     => {
    'replication-factor'    => 2,
    'memory-size'           => '1G',
    'storage-engine device' => [
      'file /data/aerospike/data1.dat',
      'file /data/aerospike/data2.dat',
      'filesize 10G',
      'data-in-memory false',
     ]
  },
}

Note: This module won't create the path to your data files. This path must exist. If not, aerospike won't start. In this example, you have to ensure of the existence of your /data/aerospike directory in your profile.

For more details on the properties you can define on the namespace context, check: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/reference/configuration/

config_cluster

Configuration parameters to define the cluster context in the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the property value as value

Default: {}

For more information on how to define a rack-aware cluster, see: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/network/rack-aware/

config_sec

Configuration parameters to define the security context in the aerospike configuration file.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the value of the property as value.

Note: When defining a subcontext in it for a property as you do for the syslog or log subcontexts, set the subcontext name as the key and the value will be an array with each item of the array being a full line of configuration.

Default: {}

config_xdr

Configuration parameters to define the xdr context in the aerospike configuration file (for cross-datacenter replication).

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the value of the property as value.

Note: When defining a subcontext in it for a property as you do for the datacenter subcontext, set the subcontext name as the key and the value will be an array with each item of the array being a full line of configuration.

Default: {}

For more informations about configuring xdr, check: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/cross-datacenter/

config_xdr_credentials

Configuration parameters to define the xdr credentials (user/password) for the remote cluster in the separate secured file when security enabled.

This parameter is a hash table with:

  • the property name as key
  • the value of the property as value.

Note: When defining a subcontext in it for a property as you do for the defining the name of datacenter subcontext, set the subcontext name as the key and the value will be a hash table with the property name (username/password) as key and the value of the property as value.

Default: {}

For more informations about configuring xdr when security enabled, check: http://www.aerospike.com/docs/operations/configure/cross-datacenter/

service_status

Controls the status of the service ("ensure" attribute in the puppet service declaration).

Default: running

amc_install

If set to true, this will download and install the amc console package.

Default: false

amc_version

Sets which version of the amc package to install.

Default: 4.0.19

amc_download_dir

Directory used to download the amc package.

Default: /usr/local/src

amc_download_url

URL from which to download the amc package. Only populate it if you want the package to be downloaded from somewhere else than the aerospike website.

Note: It is mandatory to keep the name of the target file set to the same pattern as the original name when using this custom url aka: aerospike-amc-${aerospike::edition}-${amc_version}${amc_pkg_extension}

The default url is:

http://www.aerospike.com/artifacts/aerospike-amc-${aerospike::edition}/${amc_version}/aerospike-amc-${aerospike::edition}-${amc_version}${amc_pkg_extension}
amc_manage_service

Boolean that defines if you want to control the amc service via puppet or not.

Default: false

amc_service_status

Controls the status of the management console service ("ensure" attribute in the puppet service declaration).

Default: running

amc_service_enable

Boolean indicating whether you want to manage the service status or not.

Default: true

tools_version

Sets which version of the "tools" package to install. If not specified, "tools" will be installed from Aerospike Server package.

Default: undef

tools_download_url

URL from which to download the "tools" package. Only populate it if you want the package to be downloaded from somewhere else than the aerospike website.

Note: It is mandatory to keep the name of the target file set to the same pattern as the original name when using this custom url aka: aerospike-tools-${aerospike::tools_version}-${aerospike::target_os_tag}

The default url is:

https://www.aerospike.com/artifacts/aerospike-tools/${aerospike::tools_version}/aerospike-tools-${aerospike::tools_version}-${aerospike::target_os_tag}.tgz
tools_download_dir

Directory used to download the "tools" package.

Default: /usr/local/src

Configuration file generated by default

The default parameters generates the following aerospike configuration file:

# Aerospike database configuration file.

# service context definition
service {
  user root
  group root
  paxos-single-replica-limit 1
  pidfile /var/run/aerospike/asd.pid
  proto-fd-max 15000
  service-threads 4
  transaction-queues 4
  transaction-threads-per-queue 4
}

# logging context definition
logging {
  file /var/log/aerospike/aerospike.log {
    context any info
  }
}

# network context definition
network {
  service {
    address any
    port 3000
  }

  fabric {
    address any
    port 3001
  }

  info {
    address any
    port 3003
  }

  heartbeat {
    address any
    interval 150
    mode multicast
    port 9918
    timeout 10
  }
}

namespace foo {
  memory-size 1G
  replication-factor 2
  storage-engine device {
    data-in-memory false
    file /data/aerospike/data1.dat
    file /data/aerospike/data2.dat
    filesize 10G
  }
}

Limitations

This module has only been tested against Ubuntu 14.04 - 18.04, but it should work with the Debian and the Red Hat family.

Development

See the CONTRIBUTING.md file.