Project Description
Make possible to notify a about node draining and rebooting (using kured reboot sentinel).
Goal for this Hackweek
Get familiar with spacewalk api and notification-related code. Try to implement a feature to trigger a custom notification from spacewalk api.
Resources
https://github.com/weaveworks/kured
https://github.com/containrrr/shoutrrr
https://github.com/SUSE/spacewalk
Looking for hackers with the skills:
kubernetes notification suma susemanager rke2 kured spacewalk
This project is part of:
Hack Week 20
Activity
Comments
-
almost 4 years ago by pagarcia | Reply
It would be cool to e. g. receive on MS Teams the notifications Uyuni currently sends via e-mail or the notification "inbox". Even cooler if you could react to that: Uyuni: "hey @atighineanu , 23 clients are impacted by CVE-1234-5678" atighineanu: "patch now" Uyuni: "10 SLES 12 SP4, 7 SLES 15 SP2, 3 CentOS 7, 2 Ubuntu 18.04 and 1 CentOS 8 have been scheduled to be patched"
Uyuni: "client X, Y and Z running SLES 12 SP4 have been successfully patched. 20 clients in progres" ...
-
almost 4 years ago by pagarcia | Reply
It would be cool to e. g. receive on MS Teams the notifications Uyuni currently sends via e-mail or the notification "inbox".
Even cooler if you could react to that:
Uyuni: "hey @atighineanu , 23 clients are impacted by CVE-1234-5678"
atighineanu: "patch now"
Uyuni: "10 SLES 12 SP4, 7 SLES 15 SP2, 3 CentOS 7, 2 Ubuntu 18.04 and 1 CentOS 8 have been scheduled to be patched"
Uyuni: "client X, Y and Z running SLES 12 SP4 have been successfully patched. 20 clients in progres" ...
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Saline (state deployment control and monitoring tool for SUSE Manager/Uyuni) by vizhestkov
Project Description
Saline is an addition for salt used in SUSE Manager/Uyuni aimed to provide better control and visibility for states deploymend in the large scale environments.
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Testing and adding GNU/Linux distributions on Uyuni by juliogonzalezgil
Join the Gitter channel! https://gitter.im/uyuni-project/hackweek
Uyuni is a configuration and infrastructure management tool that saves you time and headaches when you have to manage and update tens, hundreds or even thousands of machines. It also manages configuration, can run audits, build image containers, monitor and much more!
Currently there are a few distributions that are completely untested on Uyuni or SUSE Manager (AFAIK) or just not tested since a long time, and could be interesting knowing how hard would be working with them and, if possible, fix whatever is broken.
For newcomers, the easiest distributions are those based on DEB or RPM packages. Distributions with other package formats are doable, but will require adapting the Python and Java code to be able to sync and analyze such packages (and if salt does not support those packages, it will need changes as well). So if you want a distribution with other packages, make sure you are comfortable handling such changes.
No developer experience? No worries! We had non-developers contributors in the past, and we are ready to help as long as you are willing to learn. If you don't want to code at all, you can also help us preparing the documentation after someone else has the initial code ready, or you could also help with testing :-)
The idea is testing Salt and Salt-ssh clients, but NOT traditional clients, which are deprecated.
To consider that a distribution has basic support, we should cover at least (points 3-6 are to be tested for both salt minions and salt ssh minions):
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- Onboarding (salt minion from UI, salt minion from bootstrap scritp, and salt-ssh minion) (this will probably require adding OS to the bootstrap repository creator)
- Package management (install, remove, update...)
- Patching
- Applying any basic salt state (including a formula)
- Salt remote commands
- Bonus point: Java part for product identification, and monitoring enablement
- Bonus point: sumaform enablement (https://github.com/uyuni-project/sumaform)
- Bonus point: Documentation (https://github.com/uyuni-project/uyuni-docs)
- Bonus point: testsuite enablement (https://github.com/uyuni-project/uyuni/tree/master/testsuite)
If something is breaking: we can try to fix it, but the main idea is research how supported it is right now. Beyond that it's up to each project member how much to hack :-)
- If you don't have knowledge about some of the steps: ask the team
- If you still don't know what to do: switch to another distribution and keep testing.
This card is for EVERYONE, not just developers. Seriously! We had people from other teams helping that were not developers, and added support for Debian and new SUSE Linux Enterprise and openSUSE Leap versions :-)
Pending
FUSS
FUSS is a complete GNU/Linux solution (server, client and desktop/standalone) based on Debian for managing an educational network.
https://fuss.bz.it/
Seems to be a Debian 12 derivative, so adding it could be quite easy.
[W]
Reposync (this will require using spacewalk-common-channels and adding channels to the .ini file)[W]
Onboarding (salt minion from UI, salt minion from bootstrap script, and salt-ssh minion) (this will probably require adding OS to the bootstrap repository creator) --> Working for all 3 options (salt minion UI, salt minion bootstrap script and salt-ssh minion from the UI).[W]
Package management (install, remove, update...) --> Installing a new package works, needs to test the rest.[I]
Patching (if patch information is available, could require writing some code to parse it, but IIRC we have support for Ubuntu already). No patches detected. Do we support patches for Debian at all?[W]
Applying any basic salt state (including a formula)[W]
Salt remote commands[ ]
Bonus point: Java part for product identification, and monitoring enablement
Improve Development Environment on Uyuni by mbussolotto
Description
Currently create a dev environment on Uyuni might be complicated. The steps are:
- add the correct repo
- download packages
- configure your IDE (checkstyle, format rules, sonarlint....)
- setup debug environment
- ...
The current doc can be improved: some information are hard to be find out, some others are completely missing.
Dev Container might solve this situation.
Goals
Uyuni development in no time:
- using VSCode:
- setting.json should contains all settings (for all languages in Uyuni, with all checkstyle rules etc...)
- dev container should contains all dependencies
- setup debug environment
- implement a GitHub Workspace solution
- re-write documentation
Lots of pieces are already implemented: we need to connect them in a consistent solution.
Resources
- https://github.com/uyuni-project/uyuni/wiki