Installation Guide
Before beginning your installation, check the System Requirements for Chef Automate.
See Airgapped Installation for installing Chef Automate to a host with no inbound or outbound internet traffic.
Download the Chef Automate Command-Line Tool
Download and unzip the Chef Automate command-line tool:
curl https://packages.chef.io/files/current/latest/chef-automate-cli/chef-automate_linux_amd64.zip | gunzip - > chef-automate && chmod +x chef-automate
Create Default Configuration
Create a config.toml
file with default values for your Chef Automate installation:
sudo ./chef-automate init-config
You can customize your FQDN, login name, and other values, by changing the values in the config.toml
in your editor. Add ElasticSearch heap size setting at the end of config
as shown below. The recommended heap size is 50% of total memory but should not exceed more than 32 GB.
[elasticsearch.v1.sys.runtime]
heapsize = "...g" # ... must be replaced with a number in GB example, 4g mean (4 GB)
If you have requirements around data size and/or redundancy, see Configuring External Data Stores for information on configuring Chef Automate to use an externally-deployed PostgreSQL database cluster and/or OpenSearch cluster. If you have requirements around a highly-available deployment of Chef Automate, please reach out to a Customer Success or Professional Services representative for assistance.
See Configuring Chef Automate for more information on configuration settings.
Deploy Chef Automate
sudo ./chef-automate deploy config.toml
Deployment takes a few minutes. The first step is accepting the terms of service in the command line, after which the installer performs a series of pre-flight checks; any unsuccessful checks have information for resolving issues or skipping the check. Run the deploy command again after resolving any pre-flight issues.
At the end of the deployment process, you will see:
Deploy complete
The deployment process writes login credentials to the automate-credentials.toml
in your current working directory.
Open Chef Automate
Navigate to https://automate.example.com
in a browser and log in to Chef Automate with the credentials provided in automate-credentials.toml
. Once you log in, Chef Automate prompts you for a license. When your Chef Automate instance is equipped with internet connectivity, you can get a 60-day trial license from there.
Alternatively, a license obtained by other means can be applied.
Configure Data Collection
To send data from your Chef Infra Server or Chef Infra Clients to Chef Automate 2, the process is the same as Chef Automate 1. See “Configure Data Collection” for more information.
Upgrades
By default, Chef Automate will automatically upgrade to the latest version available. These updates can be taken safely, as we’ve committed to ensuring the stability of the upgrade process - automatic updates will never introduce breaking changes.
Release Channels
The Chef Automate upgrade process makes use of release channels to allow greater control over the automatic upgrades applied to your system. Chef Automate will always pull from the latest release within its specified release channel. We’re initially shipping with the default current
channel, but additional channels will be introduced in the future.
To change the release channel that is used for upgrades, modify the channel
setting in your config.toml
file:
channel = "current"
Disable Automatic Upgrades
You can disable automatic upgrades by modifying the upgrade_strategy
setting in your config.toml
file:
upgrade_strategy = "none"
To manually initiate an upgrade, run the following command:
chef-automate upgrade run
This command upgrades Chef Automate to the latest version available from your release channel.
Common Problems
If you cannot open Chef Automate, check that the config.toml
contains the public DNS as the FQDN.
# This is a default Chef Automate configuration file. You can run
# 'chef-automate deploy' with this config file should
# successfully create a new Chef Automate instance with default settings.
[global.v1]
# The external fully qualified domain name.
# When the application is deployed, you should be able to access 'https://<fqdn>/'
# to log in.
fqdn = "<_Public DNS_name>"
Once you correct and save the FQDN, run the following command and retry opening the Chef Automate in your browser.
sudo chef-automate config patch config.toml
Configuring External Data Stores
You can configure Chef Automate to use PostgreSQL and OpenSearch clusters that are not deployed via Chef Automate. The directions below are intended for use only during the initial deployment of Chef Automate.
Configuring External OpenSearch
Note
Automate supports OpenSearch connection over HTTPS or HTTP
Add the following to your config.toml
for HTTPS connection:
Warning
The following characters aren’t allowed in passwords:
‘
`
"
'
\
;
$
[global.v1.external.opensearch]
enable = true
nodes = ["https://opensearch1.example:9200", "https://opensearch2.example:9200", "..." ]
# Uncomment and fill out if using external opensearch with SSL and/or basic auth
[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth]
scheme = "basic_auth"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth.basic_auth]
## Create this opensearch user before starting the Chef Automate deployment;
## Chef Automate assumes it exists.
username = "<admin username>"
password = "<admin password>"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.ssl]
# Specify either a root_cert or a root_cert_file
root_cert = """$(cat </path/to/cert_file.crt>)"""
# server_name = "<opensearch server name>"
# Uncomment and fill out if using external OpenSearch that uses hostname-based routing/load balancing
# [esgateway.v1.sys.ngx.http]
# proxy_set_header_host = "<your external es hostname>:1234"
# Uncomment and add to change the ssl_verify_depth for the root cert bundle
# ssl_verify_depth = "2"
Add the following to your config.toml
for HTTP connection:
Warning
The following characters aren’t allowed in passwords:
‘
`
"
'
\
;
$
[global.v1.external.opensearch]
enable = true
nodes = ["http://opensearch1.example:9200", "http://opensearch2.example:9200", "..." ]
# Uncomment and fill out if using external opensearch with SSL and/or basic auth
[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth]
scheme = "basic_auth"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth.basic_auth]
## Create this opensearch user before starting the Chef Automate deployment;
## Chef Automate assumes it exists.
username = "<admin username>"
password = "<admin password>"
Because externally-deployed OpenSearch nodes will not have access to Chef Automate’s built-in backup storage services, you must configure OpenSearch backup settings separately from Chef Automate’s primary backup settings. You can configure backups to use either the local filesystem or S3.
Adding Resolvers for OpenSearch
In case you want to resolve the OpenSearch node IPs dynamically using DNS servers, you can add resolvers/nameservers to the configuration.
Name Servers can be added in two ways:
Add nameserver IPs: Add the nameservers to your
config.toml
file to resolve the OpenSearch nodes.[esgateway.v1.sys.ngx.main.resolvers] # Multiple resolvers can be specified by adding the resolvers in the list. nameservers = ["192.0.2.0:24", "198.51.100.0:24"]
Set system DNS entries: To use existing system nameserver entries from
/etc/resolv.conf
, add the following setting toconfig.toml
:[esgateway.v1.sys.ngx.main.resolvers] enable_system_nameservers = true
If both options are set, nameserver IPs takes precedence over the system nameserver entries.
Apply the changes:
sudo chef-automate config patch config.toml
If you wish to reset to the default configuration or to modify the configuration:
- Run
chef-automate config show config.toml
. - Open
config.toml
and remove theesgateway.v1.sys.ngx.main.resolvers
configuration or change the values. - Run
chef-automate config set config.toml
to apply your changes.
Backup Externally-Deployed OpenSearch to Local Filesystem
To configure local filesystem backups of Chef Automate data stored in an externally-deployed OpenSearch cluster:
- Ensure that the filesystems you intend to use for backups are mounted to the same path on all OpenSearch master and data nodes.
- Configure the OpenSearch
path.repo
setting on each node as described in the OpenSearch documentation. - Add the following to your
config.toml
:
[global.v1.external.opensearch.backup]
enable = true
location = "fs"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.backup.fs]
# The `path.repo` setting you've configured on your OpenSearch nodes must be
# a parent directory of the setting you configure here:
path = "/var/opt/chef-automate/backups"
Backup Externally-Deployed OpenSearch to AWS S3
To configure AWS S3 backups of Chef Automate data stored in an externally-deployed OpenSearch cluster:
Install the
repository-s3
plugin on all nodes in your OpenSearch cluster.If you wish to use IAM authentication to provide your OpenSearch nodes access to the S3 bucket, you must apply the appropriate IAM policy to each host system in the cluster.
Configure each OpenSearch node with a S3 client configuration containing the proper S3 endpoint, credentials, and other settings as described in the OpenSearch documentation.
Enable S3 backups by adding the following settings to your
config.toml
:[global.v1.external.opensearch.backup] enable = true location = "s3" [global.v1.external.opensearch.backup.s3] # bucket (required): The name of the bucket bucket = "<bucket name>" # base_path (optional): The path within the bucket where backups should be stored # If base_path is not set, backups will be stored at the root of the bucket. base_path = "<base path>" # name of an s3 client configuration you create in your opensearch.yml # for full documentation on how to configure client settings on your # OpenSearch nodes client = "<client name>" [global.v1.external.opensearch.backup.s3.settings] ## The meaning of these settings is documented in the S3 Repository Plugin ## documentation. ## Backup repo settings # compress = false # server_side_encryption = false # buffer_size = "100mb" # canned_acl = "private" # storage_class = "standard" ## Snapshot settings # max_snapshot_bytes_per_sec = "40mb" # max_restore_bytes_per_sec = "40mb" # chunk_size = "null" ## S3 client settings # read_timeout = "50s" # max_retries = 3 # use_throttle_retries = true # protocol = "https"
Backup Externally-Deployed OpenSearch to GCS
To configure Google Cloud Storage Bucket (GCS) backups of Chef Automate data stored in an externally-deployed OpenSearch cluster:
- Install the
repository-gcs
plugin on all nodes in your OpenSearch cluster. - Create a storage bucket and configure a service account to access it per the steps described in the OpenSearch documentation.
- Configure each OpenSearch node with a GCS client configuration that contains the proper GCS settings as described in the OpenSearch documentation.
- Enable GCS backups by adding the following settings to your
config.toml
:
Warning
The following characters aren’t allowed in passwords:
‘
`
"
'
\
;
$
```toml
[global.v1.external.opensearch]
enable = true
nodes = ["https://my-es.cluster"]
## If multiple
# nodes = ["https://my-es.node-1", "https://my-es.node-2", "etc..."]
## The following settings are required if you have OpenSearch setup with basic auth
#[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth]
# scheme = "basic_auth"
#
#[global.v1.external.opensearch.auth.basic_auth]
# username = "everyuser"
# password = "pass123"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.backup]
enable = true
location = "gcs"
[global.v1.external.opensearch.backup.gcs]
bucket = "<bucket name>"
# Client name is normally default, but can be set here if you have generated service
# account credentials with a different client name
client = "default"
## GCS Bucket Settings:
# type = nearline
# access control = uniform
```
Configuring an External PostgreSQL Database
Add the following settings to your config.toml
:
Warning
The following characters aren’t allowed in passwords:
‘
`
"
'
\
;
$
[global.v1.external.postgresql]
enable = true
nodes = ["<pghostname1>:<port1>", "<pghostname2>:<port2>", "..."]
# To use postgres with SSL, Set enable = true then, uncomment root_cert and fill out the certificate value.
[global.v1.external.postgresql.ssl]
enable = false
# root_cert = """$(cat </path/to/root/cert.pem>)"""
[global.v1.external.postgresql.auth]
scheme = "password"
# Create these postgres users before starting the Automate deployment;
# Automate assumes they already exist.
[global.v1.external.postgresql.auth.password.superuser]
username = "<admin username>"
password = "<admin password>"
[global.v1.external.postgresql.auth.password.dbuser]
username = "<dbuser username>"
password = "<dbuser password>"
[global.v1.external.postgresql.backup]
enable = true
Adding Resolvers for PostgreSQL Database
In case you want to resolve the PostgreSQL cluster node IPs dynamically using DNS servers, you can add resolvers/nameservers to the configuration.
Name Servers can be added in two ways:
Add nameserver IPs: If you are aware of the nameservers which should resolve the PostgreSQL nodes, the nameservers can be added to your
config.toml
file.[pg_gateway.v1.sys.resolvers] # Multiple resolvers can be specified by adding the resolvers in the list. nameservers = ["127.0.0.53:53"]
Set system DNS entries: To use existing system nameserver entries from
/etc/resolv.conf
, add the following setting toconfig.toml
:[pg_gateway.v1.sys.resolvers] enable_system_nameservers = true
If both options are set, nameserver IPs takes precedence over the system nameserver entries.
Apply the changes:
sudo chef-automate config patch config.toml
If you wish to reset to the default configuration or to modify the configuration:
- Run
chef-automate config show config.toml
. - Edit
config.toml
to replace/edit thepg_gateway.v1.sys.resolvers
section with the configuration values. - Run
chef-automate config set config.toml
to apply your changes.