Manage sudo configuration via Puppet
This module will purge your current sudo config
If this is not what you're expecting, set purge
and/or config_file_replace
to false
class { 'sudo': }
class { 'sudo':
config_file_replace => false,
}
class { 'sudo':
purge => false,
config_file_replace => false,
}
class { 'sudo': }
sudo::conf { 'web':
source => 'puppet:///files/etc/sudoers.d/web',
}
sudo::conf { 'admins':
priority => 10,
content => "%admins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL",
}
sudo::conf { 'joe':
priority => 60,
source => 'puppet:///files/etc/sudoers.d/users/joe',
}
A hiera hash may be used to assemble the sudoers configuration. Hash merging is also enabled, which supports layering the configuration settings.
Examples using:
- YAML backend
- an environment called production
- a /etc/puppet/hiera.yaml hierarchy configuration:
:hierarchy:
- "%{environment}"
- "defaults"
Load the module via Puppet Code or your ENC.
include sudo
After Installing Hiera:
- Load the
sudo
andsudo::configs
modules via Puppet Code or your ENC.
include sudo
include sudo::configs
These defaults will apply to all systems.
sudo::configs:
'web':
'source' : 'puppet:///files/etc/sudoers.d/web'
'admins':
'content' : "%admins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL"
'priority' : 10
'joe':
'priority' : 60
'source' : 'puppet:///files/etc/sudoers.d/users/joe'
This will only apply to the production environment. In this example we are:
- inheriting/preserving the web configuration
- overriding the admins configuration
- removing the joe configuration
sudo::configs:
'admins':
'content' : "%prodadmins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL"
'priority' : 10
'joe':
'ensure' : 'absent'
'source' : 'puppet:///files/etc/sudoers.d/users/joe'
If you have Hiera version >= 1.2.0 and enable Hiera Deeper Merging you may conditionally override any setting.
In this example we are:
- inheriting/preserving the web configuration
- overriding the admins:content setting
- inheriting/preserving the admins:priority setting
- inheriting/preserving the joe:source and joe:priority settings
- removing the joe configuration
sudo::configs:
'admins':
'content' : "%prodadmins ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL"
'joe':
'ensure' : 'absent'
In some edge cases, the automatically generated sudoers file name is insufficient. For example, when an application generates a sudoers file with a fixed file name, using this class with the purge option enabled will always delete the custom file and adding it manually will generate a file with the right content, but the wrong name. To solve this, you can use the sudo_file_name
option to manually set the desired file name.
sudo::conf { "foreman-proxy":
ensure => "present",
source => "puppet:///modules/sudo/foreman-proxy",
sudo_file_name => "foreman-proxy",
}
- You can pass template() through content parameter.
- One of content or source must be set.
Parameter | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
enable | boolean | true | Set this to remove or purge all sudoers configs |
package | string | OS specific | Set package name (for unsupported platforms) |
package_ensure | string | present | latest, absent, or a specific package version |
package_source | string | OS specific | Set package source (for unsupported platforms) |
purge | boolean | true | Purge unmanaged files from config_dir |
purge_ignore | string | undef | Files excluded from purging in config_dir |
config_file | string | OS specific | Set config_file (for unsupported platforms) |
config_file_replace | boolean | true | Replace config file with module config file |
config_dir | string | OS specific | Set config_dir (for unsupported platforms) |
source | string | OS specific | Set source (for unsupported platforms) |
Parameter | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
ensure | string | present | present or absent |
priority | number | 10 | file name prefix |
content | string | undef | content of configuration snippet |
source | string | undef | source of configuration snippet |
sudo_config_dir | string | OS Specific | configuration snippet directory (for unsupported platforms) |
sudo_file_name | string | undef | custom file name for sudo file in sudoers directory |