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AFCEA: Cyberspace at the Cross Roads
Starting December 2, 2009, the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association (AFCEA) will be putting on a two-day cyberspace conference. Titled “Cyberspace at the Cross Roads: The Intersection of Cyber,…
“Cloud” Shows Promise during Navy Trident Warrior
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Government Cloud Computing Value Survey
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“Hyper-Standardized” Cloud Computing Environment a Plus for DISA
Henry Sienkiewcz, DISA Computer Services Technical Director, credits the cloud computing “hyper-standardized” environment for the improvement they have been able to deliver through their cloud computing initiative. During remarks at…
Army Deputy CIO Cites Army/DISA Cloud Computing Partnership
This week’s Federal Executive Forum taping highlighted collaboration between DISA and the Army on the service’s transition to cloud computing. Army Deputy Chief Information Officer Mike Krieger called it a…
Navy CIO Discusses Cloud Computing
During this week’s Federal Executive Forum taping, Navy CIO Robert Carey discussed his views on cloud computing. Stating that the NGEN and CANES (Navy Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services)…
DoD, DHS and FBI Highlight Identity Management Interoperability
During this week’s Federal Executive Forum, key decision makers from DoD, DHS and FBI highlighted identity management interoperability as their key priority for 2010. Panelist included: Robert Mocny, Acting Director,…
EuroCloud Launches !!
Congratulations to Pierre-Jose Billotte for the successful launch of EuroCloud !! Established as a pan European network, EuroCloud are communities that represent a knowledgeable network of companies engaged local and…
Government Cloud Economics
In the The Economics of Cloud Computing, Gwen Morton and Ted Alford have published an EXCELLENT economic evaluation of the federal government’s push to cloud computing. Anyone interested in this…
Deputy CIA CIO Newest Ulitzer Author
Jill Tummler Singer, Deputy Chief Information Officer at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), is now a Ulitzer author. Appointed in November 2006, Ms Singer is responsible for ensuring CIA has…
Puppet 5 is released and comes with several exciting enhancements and features that promise to make configuration management much more streamlined. This article will take a comprehensive look at these new features and enhancements.
Puppet 5 was released in 2017, and according to Eric Sorensen, director of product management at Puppet, the goal was to standardize Puppet as a one-stop destination for all configuration management requirements. Here are the four primary goals of this release:
- To standardize the version numbering of all the major Puppet components (Puppet Agent, PuppetDB, and Puppet Server) to 5, and deliver them as part of a unified platform
- To include Hiera 5 with eyaml as a built-in capability
- To provide clean UTF-8 support
- To move network communications to fast, interoperable JSON
Customer feedback
Customer and community feedback played a major role in setting the goals for Puppet 5’s release, having helped the developers with identifying and defining certain patterns, such as:
- Different version numbers across components were a huge source of confusion
- There was a lot of chaos when it came to combining components to get a working installation as well as where each component would fit
- Since both Facter 3 and PuppetDB 3 seamlessly rolled into PC1, guaranteeing a new Puppet Collection for every major release didn’t make much sense
However, the makers ensured that one critical aspect didn’t get affected: Modules that worked on Puppet 4 will work unchanged under Puppet 5.
New features
Puppet 5 comes with some power-packed new features; have a look:
- The call function: The call (name, args,…) function has been added, which allows you to directly call a function by its name
- The unique function: Earlier, you had to include the stdlib module to include the unique function. None of those hassles anymore! The unique function is now directly available in Puppet 5. What’s more, the function is also capable of handling Hash and Iterable data types. In addition, you can now also give a code block that determines whether the uniqueness has been computed.
- Puppet Server request metrics: Puppet Server 5 now comes with am http-client metric puppetlabs..http-client.experimental.with-metric-id.puppet.report.http.full-response to enable the tracking of how long Puppet Server requests to a configured HTTP report processor take.
Enhancements
Time to take a look at some exciting new enhancements that come with Puppet 5:
- Switched from PSON to JSON as default: Agents now download node information, catalogs, and file metadata, by default, in JSON instead of PSON in Puppet 5. The move to JSON ensures enhanced interoperability with other languages and tools, while also enabling better performance, especially when the master is parsing JSON facts and reports from agents. Plus, JSON-encoded facts can also be easily accepted in Puppet 5.
- Ruby 2.4: Puppet now uses Ruby 2.4, which ships in the puppet-agent package. All you have ensure is to reinstall user-installed Puppet agent gems after upgrading to Puppet agent 5.0. This is necessary because of the differences in Ruby API in Ruby 2.1 and 2.4. Further, some gems may also need to be upgraded to versions compatible with Ruby 2.4.
- HOCON gem is a dependency now: The HOCON gem, which was previously shipped in puppet-agent package is also now a dependency of the Puppet gem.
- Silence warnings with metadata.json: You can now turn off warnings from faulty metadata.json by setting –strict=off.
- Updated Puppet Module Tool dependencies: The gem dependencies of Puppet Module Tool are updated to use puppetlabs_spec_helper 1.2.0 or later, which runs metadata-json-lint as part of the validate rake task.
- Hiera 5 default file: Default Hiera 5-compliant files go into confdir and env-directory. Puppet creates appropriate v5 hiera.yaml in $confdir and $environment Moreover, if Puppet detects a hiera.yaml in either $confdir or $environment, it won’t install a new file in either location or remove $hieradata.
Performance boosts
All these enhancements and new features have contributed to ushering performance boosts in a lot of aspects. The runtimes of Puppet 5 agent have decreased by 30% at equivalent loads (that is, from an average of 8 seconds to 5.5 seconds). In addition CPU utilization of Puppet 5 server has reduced by at least 20% as compared to Puppet 4 in all scenarios, while the CPU utilization for Puppet 5 PuppetDB and PostgreSQL have also significantly reduced in all scenarios.
Catalog compile times of Puppet 5 reported by Puppet Server have reduced by 7% to 10% compared to Puppet 4. Puppet 5 can now scale to 40 percent more agents with no deterioration in runtime performance, whereas Puppet 4 agent runtimes were disastrously long when scaled to the same number of agents.
If you liked this article and want to learn more about Puppet 5, you can explore Puppet 5 Cookbook – Fourth Edition. This book takes you from a basic knowledge of Puppet to a complete and expert understanding of Puppet’s latest and most advanced features. Puppet 5 Cookbook – Fourth Edition is for anyone who builds and administers servers, especially in a web operations context.
( This sponsored post is part of a series designed to highlight recently published Packt books about leading technologies and software applications. The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent the views of GovCloud Network, GovCloud Network Partners.)
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