Am 28.03.2013 21:07 schrieb "Michael Glenney" <
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> We pin versions in the top level cookbooks. We also restrict versions in our environment files but it's always a =< so if an older cookbook is relying on an older version of something the environment file doesn't get in the way.
>
Does that mean you pin TLCs as well as *their dependencies* in the environment files?
> In the metadata of top level cookbooks we're strict: depends "java", "= 1.0.0"
> and we list out even cookbooks that aren't called directly by the TLC, that are dependencies of others, just to make sure everything is pinned.
>
+1 same here
> In the non-TLC's we're more relaxed: depends "java", "~> 1.0.0"
> which makes development and testing a little more bearable.
>
> MG
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> On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 11:23 AM, Torben Knerr <
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>> Am 28.03.2013 18:01 schrieb "Jesse Campbell" <
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>> >
>> >
>> > > > I do this with librarian and it "just works". the lock file that I check into the repository is *precisely* what gets deployed on the production chef server.
>> >
>> > > But be careful: this is not necessarily what gets downloaded by the node if you don't "lock" all versions in metadata.rb.
>> >
>> >
>> > What do you mean?
>> >
>> > We don't have anything version locked, so it always pulls the most recent, and since the most recent is always what shows up in the Cheffile.lock, they do get the right versions... or are you referring to conditions where the version numbers are regressing?
>> >
>>
>> Sorry, that was confusing. I meant that the chef-client run on the node does not care about Cheffile.lock. If chef-client downloads its cookbook dependencies at the beginning of the chef run, it only cares about the version pinnings in the environment and the metadata.rb of the downloaded cookbooks.
>>
>> I prefer to pin only the top-level application cookbook versions in the environment. The version of the dependent cookbooks are pinned in each application cookbook's metadata.rb.
>>
>> If you only pin the toplevel application cookbooks in the environment (and that is the right thing imho), but you don't have the dependent cookbooks' versions locked in the app cookbook's metadata.rb, then you will end up with different / latest versions of the dependent cookbooks on each run.
>>
>> The alternative would be to pin *all* cookbook versions (i.e. app cookbooks + all dependencies) in the environment, but that's wrong in two ways:
>> 1) its an implementation detail you should not have to worry on this level which pollutes your environment files and makes promotion to other environments at least uneasy
>> 2) you artificially limit yourself, because you now need a consistent set of cookbook across the environment, e.g. all app cookbooks must agree to use the same version of the apache2 cookbook. But that's artificial, it would be perfectly fine if one app cookbook depends on apache2 1.1.0 while another one depends on apache2 2.0.0, and both can live in the same environment
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>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 12:54 PM, Torben Knerr <
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> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Am 28.03.2013 16:54 schrieb "Jesse Campbell" <
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>> >>
>> >>
>> >> >
>> >> > I do this with librarian and it "just works". the lock file that I check into the repository is *precisely* what gets deployed on the production chef server.
>> >>
>> >> But be careful: this is not necessarily what gets downloaded by the node if you don't "lock" all versions in metadata.rb.
>> >>
>> >> > librarian doesn't support as many endpoints (just git, community site, and folders), but I'm much more concerned with consistency than features.
>> >> >
>> >> > this is the reason we don't use berkshelf... i thought that the lockfile issue had been resolved back in february but apparently not.
>> >>
>> >> Tend to agree here, we also use librarian because its simpler and seems to be more stable. The only feature I'm really missing from berkshelf is the 'metadata' keyword, so you don't have to repeat yourself in metadata and Cheffile...
>> >>
>> >> >
>> >> > -jesse
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> > On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 11:39 AM, Torben Knerr <
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> wrote:
>> >> >>
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Am 28.03.2013 16:26 schrieb "Torben Knerr" <
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>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > Hi Greg,
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > soun
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Hi Greg,
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> sounds like a sane workflow. We are doing it similarly, but with chef solo and thus without a chef server.
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> In addition to what you described:
>> >> >>> - we use application (a.k.a role or toplevel) cookbooks not roles
>> >> >>> - for library cookbooks we use no version constraints or if necessary optimistic version constraints (e.g. ~> 1.1) in metadata.rb
>> >> >>> - for application cookbooks we use strict versioning (e.g. = 1.1.0) for all dependencies in the graph (i.e. including the transitive ones) in metadata.rb. We do this because we want stable application cookbooks and chef server does not care about Cheffile/Berksfile.lock, thus we lock the transitive deps as well in metadata.rb
>> >> >>> - with such an approach your environment version constraints would be very simple => you only need lock the app cookbook's version there
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Finally, we treat dependency resolution for app cookbooks a bit differently:
>> >> >>> - rather than a toplevel Cheffile/Berksfile in the chef repository we have a custom yml file which contains the app cookbooks + version + git location/ref
>> >> >>> - for each app cookbook in the yml file, we:
>> >> >>> 1. Clone the cookbook ref to /tmp/<cb>
>> >> >>> 2. Cd /tmp/<cb> && berks install --path <chefrepo>/cookbooks/<cb>-<version>
>> >> >>> - this isolates the dependencies per application cookbook, i.e. you can have different versions of library cookbook x for app cookbooks a and b, even though both live in the same chef repo
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> This works quite good for us so far.
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> HTH, Torben
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Am 27.03.2013 23:03 schrieb "Greg Symons" <
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>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> So, I've been struggling with getting Berkshelf to do exactly what I want it to do, to the extent that I'm starting to wonder if what I'm trying to do is the Wrong Thing(tm). It seems to work great for cookbook development, but where I'm running into trouble is when I try to assemble all of our disparate cookbooks sources (community, github, internal git repos) into a chef repo and upload to the server. I'm currently using Berkshelf 1.2.1.
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> The workflow I'd like to have is this:
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> 1. cookbooks have their separate release cycles and work independently, tagging released versions as they progress. Their dependencies are resolved first from a central chef server, then from the community api. The cookbooks (hopefully) properly list their dependencies in metadata, and use pessimistic constraints where necessary.
>> >> >>>> 2. For each platform (here defined nebulously as a set of applications and services that form a coherent whole), there is a chef repository that contains (mostly) only roles, data bags, and environments, and a Berksfile.
>> >> >>>> 3. When the time comes to make a platform release, we update cookbooks to the latest versions as determined by Berkshelf. The platform Berksfile contains mostly top-level cookbooks (i.e. cookbooks that are directly mentioned in role runlists; ideally application and role cookbooks, but we're not there yet), sourced from the community site where possible, and from git with specific refs where it's not. Internally developed cookbooks are always given a version constraint in the Berksfile, external cookbooks only when necessary.
>> >> >>>> 4. After resolving the dependencies, we generate a set of environment cookbook constraints that constrain the test environment to the resolved versions. We upload the cookbooks and then upload the new environment to allow the test platform to converge to the new configuration. The new configurations are given a "thorough" acceptance test. When the acceptance test passes, we approve the new configuration for deployment.
>> >> >>>> 5. When the configuration is approved, we modify the production environment to have the same constraints as test, the production nodes happily converge to their new configurations, and celebrations are had by all.
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> The problem I'm running into is between steps 3 and 4. I'm having trouble getting repeatable results out of the cookbook resolution. I'm OK if things change between executions of `berks update`. The problem is that if I do a `berks update` on my machine, commit both the Berksfile and the Berksfile.lock, and then do a `berks install` on another machine, I don't necessarily get the same cookbooks on the second machine as I did on the first machine... if the cookbooks were unconstrained in the Berksfile, they may be updated. I see the same problem if I do a `berks upload` even on the same machine, since it resolves the dependencies before doing the upload. I've even tried specifying Berksfile.lock as the Berksfile (i.e. `berks upload --berksfile Berksfile.lock`) and I see the same result.
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> Does Berksfile.lock simply not work? Is the only way to get consistency to do a `berks install --path PATH` and commit the results? Is my idea for workflow completely wrong?
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> Thanks, anyone who can help,
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> Greg
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >
>> >
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