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27 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
38582b8f8d mise à jour role zabbix-cli 2024-01-18 18:59:18 +01:00
gsb
1eae98a064 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 18:44:38 +01:00
39ee37f3e8 ajout entree pour s-awx 2024-01-18 17:10:33 +01:00
gsb
1f4c957726 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 16:42:19 +01:00
gsb
89515287b0 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 16:17:14 +01:00
gsb
77d1440da7 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 16:13:04 +01:00
gsb
be66b9e2f4 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/-README.md 2024-01-18 16:10:05 +01:00
gsb
91417b7f8e Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/-README.md 2024-01-18 16:03:25 +01:00
69052938f7 Merge branch 'main' of https://gitea.lyc-lecastel.fr/gsb/gsb2024 2024-01-18 15:46:08 +01:00
gsb
81af190640 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 15:44:10 +01:00
8b80414e46 maj lb-nfs-server 2024-01-18 15:44:02 +01:00
gsb
91acd3c18d Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 15:37:07 +01:00
gsb
8498d7be15 Actualiser roles/wireguard-r/README.md 2024-01-18 15:35:08 +01:00
15e57a4a40 modif docker install 2024-01-18 11:51:53 +01:00
8b59a5553f maj post-lb web2 2024-01-18 11:45:25 +01:00
5f1b04fd96 update 2024-01-18 11:34:02 +01:00
3b88857c0b modif reseau proxy 2024-01-18 11:19:52 +01:00
72c5498e64 maj role fw 2024-01-18 11:11:34 +01:00
e1cc021ee2 mise a jour role kea-master et kea-slave modif des fichiers de config 2024-01-18 10:59:19 +01:00
76528fad6f maj playbooks lb 2024-01-18 10:36:06 +01:00
bc7cdc993f maj playbooks lb 2024-01-18 10:01:18 +01:00
01e06119a5 mkvm : mode normal pour option -s 2024-01-18 00:14:03 +01:00
99672bef0d reorganisation roles kea-master et kea-slave 2024-01-17 22:25:55 +01:00
f9e801c39e MAJ doc README.md 2024-01-17 18:06:26 +01:00
85374ee503 s-fog.yml et s-fog-post.yml 2024-01-17 17:00:31 +01:00
5232d80321 syntax dans inst-depl 2024-01-17 15:08:29 +01:00
5acca816af inst-depl 2024-01-17 15:01:52 +01:00
51 changed files with 2069 additions and 147 deletions

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@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
# gsb2024
2024-01-13 ps
2024-01-17 18h04 ps
Environnement et playbooks **ansible** pour le projet **GSB 2024**
## Quickstart
Prérequis :
* une machine Linux Debian Bookworm ou Windows
* une machine **Linux Debian Bookworm** ou **Windows**
* VirtualBox
* git
* fichier machines virtuelles **ova** :
@ -38,6 +38,8 @@ Prérequis :
* **s-lb-web2** : Serveur Wordpress 2 Load Balancer
* **s-lb-db** : Serveur Mariadb pour Wordpress
* **s-nas** : Serveur NFS pour application Wordpress avec LB
* **s-kea1** : Serveur DHCP Kea HA 1
* **s-kea2** : Serveur DHCP Kea HA 2
## Les playbooks
@ -98,37 +100,40 @@ bash chname <nouveau_nom_de_machine>` , puis redémarrer
### Pour chaque machine
#### Etape 1
#### Etape 1 - Nommage machine
- créer la machine avec **mkvm -r**, les cartes réseau sont paramétrées par **mkvm** selon les spécifications
- ouvrir une session sur la machine considérée
- renommer la machine soit
* en utilisant le script de renommage comme suit :
` /root/tools/ansible/gsb2024/scripts/chname <nouveau_nom_de_machine>`
* soit avec :
* soit (ici on renomme la machine en **s-infra**) avec :
```shell
NHOST=mavm
sed -i "s/bookworm/${NHOST}/g" /etc/host{s,name}
sudo reboot # on redemarre
export HOST=s-infra
curl 192.168.99.99/gsbstore/inst1|bash
reboot # on redemarre
```
#### Etape 2
#### Etape 2 - installation outils, depot gsb2024 et lancement playbook
- utiliser le script **gsb-start** : `bash gsb-start`
- ou sinon:
```shell
mkdir -p tools/ansible ; cd tools/ansible
git clone https://gitea.lyc-lecastel.fr/gsb/gsb2024.git
cd gsb2024/pre
DEPL=192.168.99.99 bash gsbboot
cd ../.. ; bash pull-config
curl 192.168.99.99/gsbstore/inst2|bash
```
- le script recupere le dépot **gsb2024.git**
- il lance ensuite le script **pull-config** avec le script porant le nom de la machine
- on peut alors redémarrer
#### Etape 3
#### Etape 3 - Redémarrage et tests
- redémarrer
- **Remarque** : une machine doit avoir été redémarrée pour prendre en charge la nouvelle configuration
- **Remarque** : une machine doit avoir été redémarrée pour prendre en charge la nouvelle configuration, en particulier la couche réseau et l'adressage.
- selon les situations, il est possible qu'un seul playbook ne soit pas suffisant pour installer complètement une machine. Dans ce cas de figure, le second playbook s'appelle **s-machine-post.yml**.
Il est à lancer depuis ''tools/ansible/gsb2024'' :
```shell
ansible-playbook -i localhost, -c local s-machine-post.yml
```
## Les tests

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@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
## aa : 2023-01-18 15:25
## ps : 2023-02-01 15:25
## ps : 2023-12-18 15:25
## ps : 2024-01-17 15:25
set -o errexit
set -o pipefail
@ -83,7 +84,7 @@ cp goss /usr/local/bin
(cat <<'EOT' > "${STOREREP}/inst1"
#!/bin/bash
if [[ -z ${HOST+x} ]]; then
if [[ -z "${HOST+x}" ]]; then
echo "erreur : variable HOST indefinie"
echo " HOST : adresse serveur deploiement"
echo "export HOST=s-xyzt ; ./$0"
@ -93,7 +94,7 @@ fi
hostname=$(hostname)
echo "${HOST}" > /etc/hostname
hostnamectl set-hostname "${HOST}"
sed -i "s/${hostname}/${HOST}/g" /etc/host{s,name}
sed -i "s/${hostname}/${HOST}/g" /etc/hosts
echo "vous pouvez redemarrer ..."
EOT
)

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@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
192.168.99.16 s-fog.gsb.adm
192.168.99.20 s-kea1.gsb.adm
192.168.99.21 s-kea2.gsb.adm
192.168.99.22 s-awx.gsb.adm
192.168.99.50 s-lb-bd.gsb.adm
192.168.99.101 s-lb-web1.gsb.adm
192.168.99.102 s-lb-web2.gsb.adm

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@ -23,6 +23,7 @@
192.168.99.14 s-nas.gsb.adm
192.168.99.20 s-kea1.gsb.adm
192.168.99.21 s-kea2.gsb.adm
192.168.99.22 s-awx.gsb.adm
192.168.99.50 s-lb-bd.gsb.adm
192.168.99.101 s-lb-web1.gsb.adm
192.168.99.102 s-lb-web2.gsb.adm

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@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
;
$TTL 604800
@ IN SOA s-infra.gsb.lan. root.s-infra.gsb.lan. (
2024011500 ; Serial
2024011800 ; Serial
7200 ; Refresh
86400 ; Retry
8419200 ; Expire
@ -29,6 +29,7 @@ s-elk IN A 172.16.0.11
s-gestsup IN A 172.16.0.17
s-kea1 IN A 172.16.0.20
s-kea2 IN A 172.16.0.21
s-awx IN A 172.16.0.22
r-int IN A 172.16.0.254
r-int-lnk IN A 192.168.200.254
r-ext IN A 192.168.200.253

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@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
;
$TTL 604800
@ IN SOA s-infra.gsb.lan. root.s-infra.gsb.lan. (
2024011500 ; Serial
2024011800 ; Serial
7200 ; Refresh
86400 ; Retry
8419200 ; Expire
@ -23,6 +23,7 @@ $TTL 604800
9.0 IN PTR s-itil.gsb.lan.
20.0 IN PTR s-kea1.gsb.lan.
21.0 IN PTR s-kea2.gsb.lan.
22.0 IN PTR s-awx.gsb.lan.
101.1 IN PTR s-web1
101.2 IN PTR s-web2
100.10 IN PTR s-lb

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@ -1,16 +1,13 @@
---
- name: Supprime le fichier getdocker.sh si déjà présent
file:
state: absent
path: /tmp/getdocker.sh
- name: on recupere getdocker
get_url:
url: http://s-adm.gsb.adm/gsbstore/getdocker.sh
dest: /usr/local/bin
- name: Télécharge le script d'installation de docker
uri:
url: 'https://get.docker.com'
method: GET
dest: /tmp/getdocker.sh
mode: a+x
register: result
- name: on verifie si docker est installe
command: which docker
register: docker_present
- name: Execution du script getdocker
shell: bash /tmp/getdocker.sh
- name: Execution du script getdocker si docker n'est pas deja installe
shell: bash /usr/local/bin/getdocker.sh
when: docker_present.stdout.find('/usr/bin/docker') == -1

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@ -4,7 +4,6 @@
@def $DEV_PRIVATE = enp0s8;
@def $DEV_WORLD = enp0s9;
@def $DEV_WORLD = enp0s9;
@def $DEV_VPN= wg0;
@def $NET_PRIVATE = 172.16.0.0/24;
@ -32,7 +31,7 @@ table filter {
# well-known internet hosts
saddr ($NET_PRIVATE) proto tcp dport ssh ACCEPT;
# we provide DNS and SMTP services for the internal net
# we provide DNS services for the internal net
interface $DEV_PRIVATE saddr $NET_PRIVATE {
proto (udp tcp) dport domain ACCEPT;
proto udp dport bootps ACCEPT;

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@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ table filter {
# well-known internet hosts
saddr ($NET_PRIVATE) proto tcp dport ssh ACCEPT;
# we provide DNS and SMTP services for the internal net
# we provide DNS services for the internal net
interface $DEV_PRIVATE saddr $NET_PRIVATE {
proto (udp tcp) dport domain ACCEPT;
proto udp dport bootps ACCEPT;

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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#variable kea
kea_ver: "2.4.1"
kea_dbname: ""
kaa_dbuser: ""
kea_dbpasswd: ""
kea_dhcp4_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf"
kea_ctrl_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf"

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@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
// This is an example of a configuration for Control-Agent (CA) listening
// for incoming HTTP traffic. This is necessary for handling API commands,
// in particular lease update commands needed for HA setup.
{
"Control-agent":
{
// We need to specify where the agent should listen to incoming HTTP
// queries.
"http-host": "172.16.64.20",
// This specifies the port CA will listen on.
"http-port": 8000,
"control-sockets":
{
// This is how the Agent can communicate with the DHCPv4 server.
"dhcp4":
{
"comment": "socket to DHCPv4 server",
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Location of the DHCPv6 command channel socket.
# "dhcp6":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea6-ctrl-socket"
# },
// Location of the D2 command channel socket.
# "d2":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea-ddns-ctrl-socket",
# "user-context": { "in-use": false }
# }
},
// Similar to other Kea components, CA also uses logging.
"loggers": [
{
"name": "kea-ctrl-agent",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
// Several additional parameters are possible in addition
// to the typical output. Flush determines whether logger
// flushes output to a file. Maxsize determines maximum
// filesize before the file is rotated. maxver
// specifies the maximum number of rotated files being
// kept.
"flush": true,
"maxsize": 204800,
"maxver": 4,
// We use pattern to specify custom log message layout
"pattern": "%d{%y.%m.%d %H:%M:%S.%q} %-5p [%c/%i] %m\n"
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0 // debug level only applies when severity is set to DEBUG.
}
]
}
}

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@ -0,0 +1,226 @@
// This is an example configuration of the Kea DHCPv4 server 1:
//
// - uses High Availability hook library and Lease Commands hook library
// to enable High Availability function for the DHCP server. This config
// file is for the primary (the active) server.
// - uses memfile, which stores lease data in a local CSV file
// - it assumes a single /24 addressing over a link that is directly reachable
// (no DHCP relays)
// - there is a handful of IP reservations
//
// It is expected to run with a standby (the passive) server, which has a very similar
// configuration. The only difference is that "this-server-name" must be set to "server2" on the
// other server. Also, the interface configuration depends on the network settings of the
// particular machine.
{
"Dhcp4": {
// Add names of your network interfaces to listen on.
"interfaces-config": {
// The DHCPv4 server listens on this interface. When changing this to
// the actual name of your interface, make sure to also update the
// interface parameter in the subnet definition below.
"interfaces": [ "enp0s9" ]
},
// Control socket is required for communication between the Control
// Agent and the DHCP server. High Availability requires Control Agent
// to be running because lease updates are sent over the RESTful
// API between the HA peers.
"control-socket": {
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Use Memfile lease database backend to store leases in a CSV file.
// Depending on how Kea was compiled, it may also support SQL databases
// (MySQL and/or PostgreSQL). Those database backends require more
// parameters, like name, host and possibly user and password.
// There are dedicated examples for each backend. See Section 7.2.2 "Lease
// Storage" for details.
"lease-database": {
// Memfile is the simplest and easiest backend to use. It's an in-memory
// database with data being written to a CSV file. It is very similar to
// what ISC DHCP does.
"type": "memfile"
},
// Let's configure some global parameters. The home network is not very dynamic
// and there's no shortage of addresses, so no need to recycle aggressively.
"valid-lifetime": 43200, // leases will be valid for 12h
"renew-timer": 21600, // clients should renew every 6h
"rebind-timer": 32400, // clients should start looking for other servers after 9h
// Kea will clean up its database of expired leases once per hour. However, it
// will keep the leases in expired state for 2 days. This greatly increases the
// chances for returning devices to get the same address again. To guarantee that,
// use host reservation.
// If both "flush-reclaimed-timer-wait-time" and "hold-reclaimed-time" are
// not 0, when the client sends a release message the lease is expired
// instead of being deleted from lease storage.
"expired-leases-processing": {
"reclaim-timer-wait-time": 3600,
"hold-reclaimed-time": 172800,
"max-reclaim-leases": 0,
"max-reclaim-time": 0
},
// HA requires two hook libraries to be loaded: libdhcp_lease_cmds.so and
// libdhcp_ha.so. The former handles incoming lease updates from the HA peers.
// The latter implements high availability feature for Kea. Note the library name
// should be the same, but the path is OS specific.
"hooks-libraries": [
// The lease_cmds library must be loaded because HA makes use of it to
// deliver lease updates to the server as well as synchronize the
// lease database after failure.
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
},
{
// The HA hook library should be loaded.
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_ha.so",
"parameters": {
// Each server should have the same HA configuration, except for the
// "this-server-name" parameter.
"high-availability": [ {
// This parameter points to this server instance. The respective
// HA peers must have this parameter set to their own names.
"this-server-name": "s-kea1.gsb.lan",
// The HA mode is set to hot-standby. In this mode, the active server handles
// all the traffic. The standby takes over if the primary becomes unavailable.
"mode": "hot-standby",
// Heartbeat is to be sent every 10 seconds if no other control
// commands are transmitted.
"heartbeat-delay": 10000,
// Maximum time for partner's response to a heartbeat, after which
// failure detection is started. This is specified in milliseconds.
// If we don't hear from the partner in 60 seconds, it's time to
// start worrying.
"max-response-delay": 30000,
// The following parameters control how the server detects the
// partner's failure. The ACK delay sets the threshold for the
// 'secs' field of the received discovers. This is specified in
// milliseconds.
"max-ack-delay": 5000,
// This specifies the number of clients which send messages to
// the partner but appear to not receive any response.
"max-unacked-clients": 0,
// This specifies the maximum timeout (in milliseconds) for the server
// to complete sync. If you have a large deployment (high tens or
// hundreds of thousands of clients), you may need to increase it
// further. The default value is 60000ms (60 seconds).
"sync-timeout": 60000,
"peers": [
// This is the configuration of this server instance.
{
"name": "s-kea1.gsb.lan",
// This specifies the URL of this server instance. The
// Control Agent must run along with this DHCPv4 server
// instance and the "http-host" and "http-port" must be
// set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.20:8000/",
// This server is primary. The other one must be
// secondary.
"role": "primary"
},
// This is the configuration of the secondary server.
{
"name": "s-kea2.gsb.lan",
// Specifies the URL on which the partner's control
// channel can be reached. The Control Agent is required
// to run on the partner's machine with "http-host" and
// "http-port" values set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.21:8000/",
// The other server is secondary. This one must be
// primary.
"role": "standby"
}
]
} ]
}
}
],
// This example contains a single subnet declaration.
"subnet4": [
{
// Subnet prefix.
"subnet": "172.16.64.0/24",
// There are no relays in this network, so we need to tell Kea that this subnet
// is reachable directly via the specified interface.
"interface": "enp0s9",
// Specify a dynamic address pool.
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.16.64.100-172.16.64.150"
}
],
// These are options that are subnet specific. In most cases, you need to define at
// least routers option, as without this option your clients will not be able to reach
// their default gateway and will not have Internet connectivity. If you have many
// subnets and they share the same options (e.g. DNS servers typically is the same
// everywhere), you may define options at the global scope, so you don't repeat them
// for every network.
"option-data": [
{
// For each IPv4 subnet you typically need to specify at least one router.
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.16.64.254"
},
{
// Using cloudflare or Quad9 is a reasonable option. Change this
// to your own DNS servers is you have them. Another popular
// choice is 8.8.8.8, owned by Google. Using third party DNS
// service raises some privacy concerns.
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.16.0.1"
}
],
// Some devices should get a static address. Since the .100 - .199 range is dynamic,
// let's use the lower address space for this. There are many ways how reservation
// can be defined, but using MAC address (hw-address) is by far the most popular one.
// You can use client-id, duid and even custom defined flex-id that may use whatever
// parts of the packet you want to use as identifiers. Also, there are many more things
// you can specify in addition to just an IP address: extra options, next-server, hostname,
// assign device to client classes etc. See the Kea ARM, Section 8.3 for details.
// The reservations are subnet specific.
#"reservations": [
# {
# "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.10"
# },
# {
# "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.11"
# }
#]
}
],
// fichier de logs
"loggers": [
{
// This section affects kea-dhcp4, which is the base logger for DHCPv4 component. It tells
// DHCPv4 server to write all log messages (on severity INFO or higher) to a file. The file
// will be rotated once it grows to 2MB and up to 4 files will be kept. The debuglevel
// (range 0 to 99) is used only when logging on DEBUG level.
"name": "kea-dhcp4",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
"maxsize": 2048000,
"maxver": 4
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0
}
]
}
}

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@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
---
- name: restart isc-kea-dhcp4-server
service:
name: isc-kea-dhcp4-server.service
state: restarted
enabled: yes
- name: restart isc-kea-ctrl-agent
service:
name: isc-kea-ctrl-agent.service
state: restarted
enabled: yes
- name: restart mariadb-server
service:
name: mariadb-server
state: restarted
enabled: yes

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@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
---
- name: installation des dépendances
apt:
name:
- liblog4cplus-2.0.5
- libmariadb3
- libpq5
- mariadb-common
- mysql-common
state: present
- name: telechargemement du paquet isc-kea-common
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-dhcp4
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-ctrl-agent
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-hooks
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: Update apt
apt:
update_cache: yes
- name: Installation paquet isc-kea-common
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-dhcp4
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-ctrl-agent
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-hooks
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Copie du repertoire des hooks dans le repertoire /usr/local/bin/kea/hooks
copy:
src: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/kea/
dest: /usr/local/lib/kea/
- name: Copie du fichier de configuration kea-dhcp4.conf
copy:
src: kea-dhcp4.conf
dest: /etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf
notify:
- restart isc-kea-dhcp4-server
- name: Copie du fichier de configuration kea-ctrl-agent
copy:
src: kea-ctrl-agent.conf
dest: /etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf
notify:
- restart isc-kea-ctrl-agent

Binary file not shown.

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@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
// This is an example of a configuration for Control-Agent (CA) listening
// for incoming HTTP traffic. This is necessary for handling API commands,
// in particular lease update commands needed for HA setup.
{
"Control-agent":
{
// We need to specify where the agent should listen to incoming HTTP
// queries.
"http-host": "172.16.64.1",
// This specifies the port CA will listen on.
"http-port": 8000,
"control-sockets":
{
// This is how the Agent can communicate with the DHCPv4 server.
"dhcp4":
{
"comment": "socket to DHCPv4 server",
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tm/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Location of the DHCPv6 command channel socket.
# "dhcp6":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea6-ctrl-socket"
# },
// Location of the D2 command channel socket.
# "d2":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea-ddns-ctrl-socket",
# "user-context": { "in-use": false }
# }
},
// Similar to other Kea components, CA also uses logging.
"loggers": [
{
"name": "kea-ctrl-agent",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
// Several additional parameters are possible in addition
// to the typical output. Flush determines whether logger
// flushes output to a file. Maxsize determines maximum
// filesize before the file is rotated. maxver
// specifies the maximum number of rotated files being
// kept.
"flush": true,
"maxsize": 204800,
"maxver": 4,
// We use pattern to specify custom log message layout
"pattern": "%d{%y.%m.%d %H:%M:%S.%q} %-5p [%c/%i] %m\n"
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0 // debug level only applies when severity is set to DEBUG.
}
]
}
}

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// This is an example configuration of the Kea DHCPv4 server 1:
//
// - uses High Availability hook library and Lease Commands hook library
// to enable High Availability function for the DHCP server. This config
// file is for the primary (the active) server.
// - uses memfile, which stores lease data in a local CSV file
// - it assumes a single /24 addressing over a link that is directly reachable
// (no DHCP relays)
// - there is a handful of IP reservations
//
// It is expected to run with a standby (the passive) server, which has a very similar
// configuration. The only difference is that "this-server-name" must be set to "server2" on the
// other server. Also, the interface configuration depends on the network settings of the
// particular machine.
{
"Dhcp4": {
// Add names of your network interfaces to listen on.
"interfaces-config": {
// The DHCPv4 server listens on this interface. When changing this to
// the actual name of your interface, make sure to also update the
// interface parameter in the subnet definition below.
"interfaces": [ "enp0s8" ]
},
// Control socket is required for communication between the Control
// Agent and the DHCP server. High Availability requires Control Agent
// to be running because lease updates are sent over the RESTful
// API between the HA peers.
"control-socket": {
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Use Memfile lease database backend to store leases in a CSV file.
// Depending on how Kea was compiled, it may also support SQL databases
// (MySQL and/or PostgreSQL). Those database backends require more
// parameters, like name, host and possibly user and password.
// There are dedicated examples for each backend. See Section 7.2.2 "Lease
// Storage" for details.
"lease-database": {
// Memfile is the simplest and easiest backend to use. It's an in-memory
// database with data being written to a CSV file. It is very similar to
// what ISC DHCP does.
"type": "memfile"
},
// Let's configure some global parameters. The home network is not very dynamic
// and there's no shortage of addresses, so no need to recycle aggressively.
"valid-lifetime": 43200, // leases will be valid for 12h
"renew-timer": 21600, // clients should renew every 6h
"rebind-timer": 32400, // clients should start looking for other servers after 9h
// Kea will clean up its database of expired leases once per hour. However, it
// will keep the leases in expired state for 2 days. This greatly increases the
// chances for returning devices to get the same address again. To guarantee that,
// use host reservation.
// If both "flush-reclaimed-timer-wait-time" and "hold-reclaimed-time" are
// not 0, when the client sends a release message the lease is expired
// instead of being deleted from lease storage.
"expired-leases-processing": {
"reclaim-timer-wait-time": 3600,
"hold-reclaimed-time": 172800,
"max-reclaim-leases": 0,
"max-reclaim-time": 0
},
// HA requires two hook libraries to be loaded: libdhcp_lease_cmds.so and
// libdhcp_ha.so. The former handles incoming lease updates from the HA peers.
// The latter implements high availability feature for Kea. Note the library name
// should be the same, but the path is OS specific.
"hooks-libraries": [
// The lease_cmds library must be loaded because HA makes use of it to
// deliver lease updates to the server as well as synchronize the
// lease database after failure.
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
},
{
// The HA hook library should be loaded.
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_ha.so",
"parameters": {
// Each server should have the same HA configuration, except for the
// "this-server-name" parameter.
"high-availability": [ {
// This parameter points to this server instance. The respective
// HA peers must have this parameter set to their own names.
"this-server-name": "kea1",
// The HA mode is set to hot-standby. In this mode, the active server handles
// all the traffic. The standby takes over if the primary becomes unavailable.
"mode": "hot-standby",
// Heartbeat is to be sent every 10 seconds if no other control
// commands are transmitted.
"heartbeat-delay": 10000,
// Maximum time for partner's response to a heartbeat, after which
// failure detection is started. This is specified in milliseconds.
// If we don't hear from the partner in 60 seconds, it's time to
// start worrying.
"max-response-delay": 30000,
// The following parameters control how the server detects the
// partner's failure. The ACK delay sets the threshold for the
// 'secs' field of the received discovers. This is specified in
// milliseconds.
"max-ack-delay": 5000,
// This specifies the number of clients which send messages to
// the partner but appear to not receive any response.
"max-unacked-clients": 0,
// This specifies the maximum timeout (in milliseconds) for the server
// to complete sync. If you have a large deployment (high tens or
// hundreds of thousands of clients), you may need to increase it
// further. The default value is 60000ms (60 seconds).
"sync-timeout": 60000,
"peers": [
// This is the configuration of this server instance.
{
"name": "kea1",
// This specifies the URL of this server instance. The
// Control Agent must run along with this DHCPv4 server
// instance and the "http-host" and "http-port" must be
// set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.1:8000/",
// This server is primary. The other one must be
// secondary.
"role": "primary"
},
// This is the configuration of the secondary server.
{
"name": "kea2",
// Specifies the URL on which the partner's control
// channel can be reached. The Control Agent is required
// to run on the partner's machine with "http-host" and
// "http-port" values set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.2:8000/",
// The other server is secondary. This one must be
// primary.
"role": "standby"
}
]
} ]
}
}
],
// This example contains a single subnet declaration.
"subnet4": [
{
// Subnet prefix.
"subnet": "172.16.64.0/24",
// There are no relays in this network, so we need to tell Kea that this subnet
// is reachable directly via the specified interface.
"interface": "enp0s8",
// Specify a dynamic address pool.
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.16.64.100-172.16.64.150"
}
],
// These are options that are subnet specific. In most cases, you need to define at
// least routers option, as without this option your clients will not be able to reach
// their default gateway and will not have Internet connectivity. If you have many
// subnets and they share the same options (e.g. DNS servers typically is the same
// everywhere), you may define options at the global scope, so you don't repeat them
// for every network.
"option-data": [
{
// For each IPv4 subnet you typically need to specify at least one router.
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.16.64.1"
},
{
// Using cloudflare or Quad9 is a reasonable option. Change this
// to your own DNS servers is you have them. Another popular
// choice is 8.8.8.8, owned by Google. Using third party DNS
// service raises some privacy concerns.
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.16.64.1"
}
],
// Some devices should get a static address. Since the .100 - .199 range is dynamic,
// let's use the lower address space for this. There are many ways how reservation
// can be defined, but using MAC address (hw-address) is by far the most popular one.
// You can use client-id, duid and even custom defined flex-id that may use whatever
// parts of the packet you want to use as identifiers. Also, there are many more things
// you can specify in addition to just an IP address: extra options, next-server, hostname,
// assign device to client classes etc. See the Kea ARM, Section 8.3 for details.
// The reservations are subnet specific.
#"reservations": [
# {
# "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.10"
# },
# {
# "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.11"
# }
#]
}
],
// fichier de logs
"loggers": [
{
// This section affects kea-dhcp4, which is the base logger for DHCPv4 component. It tells
// DHCPv4 server to write all log messages (on severity INFO or higher) to a file. The file
// will be rotated once it grows to 2MB and up to 4 files will be kept. The debuglevel
// (range 0 to 99) is used only when logging on DEBUG level.
"name": "kea-dhcp4",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
"maxsize": 2048000,
"maxver": 4
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0
}
]
}
}

14
roles/kea-slave/README.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
# Rôle Kea
***
Rôle du Kea pour la haute disponibilité dhcp
## Tables des matières
1. [Que fait le rôle Kea ?]
## Que fait le rôle Kea ?
Il permet de configurer les serveur kea en mode haute disponibilité.
### Installation et configuration de kea
Le rôle kea va installer les packets kea dhcp4, hook, admin une fois les packets installer. Nous allons configurer les 2 serveurs kea pour qu'il distribut les ip de n-user et soit en haute disponibilité.

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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#variable kea
kea_ver: "2.4.1"
kea_dbname: ""
kaa_dbuser: ""
kea_dbpasswd: ""
kea_dhcp4_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf"
kea_ctrl_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf"

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// This is an example of a configuration for Control-Agent (CA) listening
// for incoming HTTP traffic. This is necessary for handling API commands,
// in particular lease update commands needed for HA setup.
{
"Control-agent":
{
// We need to specify where the agent should listen to incoming HTTP
// queries.
"http-host": "172.16.64.21",
// This specifies the port CA will listen on.
"http-port": 8000,
"control-sockets":
{
// This is how the Agent can communicate with the DHCPv4 server.
"dhcp4":
{
"comment": "socket to DHCPv4 server",
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Location of the DHCPv6 command channel socket.
# "dhcp6":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea6-ctrl-socket"
# },
// Location of the D2 command channel socket.
# "d2":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea-ddns-ctrl-socket",
# "user-context": { "in-use": false }
# }
},
// Similar to other Kea components, CA also uses logging.
"loggers": [
{
"name": "kea-ctrl-agent",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
// Several additional parameters are possible in addition
// to the typical output. Flush determines whether logger
// flushes output to a file. Maxsize determines maximum
// filesize before the file is rotated. maxver
// specifies the maximum number of rotated files being
// kept.
"flush": true,
"maxsize": 204800,
"maxver": 4,
// We use pattern to specify custom log message layout
"pattern": "%d{%y.%m.%d %H:%M:%S.%q} %-5p [%c/%i] %m\n"
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0 // debug level only applies when severity is set to DEBUG.
}
]
}
}

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@ -0,0 +1,226 @@
// This is an example configuration of the Kea DHCPv4 server 1:
//
// - uses High Availability hook library and Lease Commands hook library
// to enable High Availability function for the DHCP server. This config
// file is for the primary (the active) server.
// - uses memfile, which stores lease data in a local CSV file
// - it assumes a single /24 addressing over a link that is directly reachable
// (no DHCP relays)
// - there is a handful of IP reservations
//
// It is expected to run with a standby (the passive) server, which has a very similar
// configuration. The only difference is that "this-server-name" must be set to "server2" on the
// other server. Also, the interface configuration depends on the network settings of the
// particular machine.
{
"Dhcp4": {
// Add names of your network interfaces to listen on.
"interfaces-config": {
// The DHCPv4 server listens on this interface. When changing this to
// the actual name of your interface, make sure to also update the
// interface parameter in the subnet definition below.
"interfaces": [ "enp0s9" ]
},
// Control socket is required for communication between the Control
// Agent and the DHCP server. High Availability requires Control Agent
// to be running because lease updates are sent over the RESTful
// API between the HA peers.
"control-socket": {
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Use Memfile lease database backend to store leases in a CSV file.
// Depending on how Kea was compiled, it may also support SQL databases
// (MySQL and/or PostgreSQL). Those database backends require more
// parameters, like name, host and possibly user and password.
// There are dedicated examples for each backend. See Section 7.2.2 "Lease
// Storage" for details.
"lease-database": {
// Memfile is the simplest and easiest backend to use. It's an in-memory
// database with data being written to a CSV file. It is very similar to
// what ISC DHCP does.
"type": "memfile"
},
// Let's configure some global parameters. The home network is not very dynamic
// and there's no shortage of addresses, so no need to recycle aggressively.
"valid-lifetime": 43200, // leases will be valid for 12h
"renew-timer": 21600, // clients should renew every 6h
"rebind-timer": 32400, // clients should start looking for other servers after 9h
// Kea will clean up its database of expired leases once per hour. However, it
// will keep the leases in expired state for 2 days. This greatly increases the
// chances for returning devices to get the same address again. To guarantee that,
// use host reservation.
// If both "flush-reclaimed-timer-wait-time" and "hold-reclaimed-time" are
// not 0, when the client sends a release message the lease is expired
// instead of being deleted from lease storage.
"expired-leases-processing": {
"reclaim-timer-wait-time": 3600,
"hold-reclaimed-time": 172800,
"max-reclaim-leases": 0,
"max-reclaim-time": 0
},
// HA requires two hook libraries to be loaded: libdhcp_lease_cmds.so and
// libdhcp_ha.so. The former handles incoming lease updates from the HA peers.
// The latter implements high availability feature for Kea. Note the library name
// should be the same, but the path is OS specific.
"hooks-libraries": [
// The lease_cmds library must be loaded because HA makes use of it to
// deliver lease updates to the server as well as synchronize the
// lease database after failure.
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
},
{
// The HA hook library should be loaded.
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_ha.so",
"parameters": {
// Each server should have the same HA configuration, except for the
// "this-server-name" parameter.
"high-availability": [ {
// This parameter points to this server instance. The respective
// HA peers must have this parameter set to their own names.
"this-server-name": "s-kea2.gsb.lan",
// The HA mode is set to hot-standby. In this mode, the active server handles
// all the traffic. The standby takes over if the primary becomes unavailable.
"mode": "hot-standby",
// Heartbeat is to be sent every 10 seconds if no other control
// commands are transmitted.
"heartbeat-delay": 10000,
// Maximum time for partner's response to a heartbeat, after which
// failure detection is started. This is specified in milliseconds.
// If we don't hear from the partner in 60 seconds, it's time to
// start worrying.
"max-response-delay": 30000,
// The following parameters control how the server detects the
// partner's failure. The ACK delay sets the threshold for the
// 'secs' field of the received discovers. This is specified in
// milliseconds.
"max-ack-delay": 5000,
// This specifies the number of clients which send messages to
// the partner but appear to not receive any response.
"max-unacked-clients": 0,
// This specifies the maximum timeout (in milliseconds) for the server
// to complete sync. If you have a large deployment (high tens or
// hundreds of thousands of clients), you may need to increase it
// further. The default value is 60000ms (60 seconds).
"sync-timeout": 60000,
"peers": [
// This is the configuration of this server instance.
{
"name": "s-kea1.gsb.lan",
// This specifies the URL of this server instance. The
// Control Agent must run along with this DHCPv4 server
// instance and the "http-host" and "http-port" must be
// set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.20:8000/",
// This server is primary. The other one must be
// secondary.
"role": "primary"
},
// This is the configuration of the secondary server.
{
"name": "s-kea2.gsb.lan",
// Specifies the URL on which the partner's control
// channel can be reached. The Control Agent is required
// to run on the partner's machine with "http-host" and
// "http-port" values set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.21:8000/",
// The other server is secondary. This one must be
// primary.
"role": "standby"
}
]
} ]
}
}
],
// This example contains a single subnet declaration.
"subnet4": [
{
// Subnet prefix.
"subnet": "172.16.64.0/24",
// There are no relays in this network, so we need to tell Kea that this subnet
// is reachable directly via the specified interface.
"interface": "enp0s9",
// Specify a dynamic address pool.
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.16.64.100-172.16.64.150"
}
],
// These are options that are subnet specific. In most cases, you need to define at
// least routers option, as without this option your clients will not be able to reach
// their default gateway and will not have Internet connectivity. If you have many
// subnets and they share the same options (e.g. DNS servers typically is the same
// everywhere), you may define options at the global scope, so you don't repeat them
// for every network.
"option-data": [
{
// For each IPv4 subnet you typically need to specify at least one router.
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.16.64.254"
},
{
// Using cloudflare or Quad9 is a reasonable option. Change this
// to your own DNS servers is you have them. Another popular
// choice is 8.8.8.8, owned by Google. Using third party DNS
// service raises some privacy concerns.
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.16.0.1"
}
],
// Some devices should get a static address. Since the .100 - .199 range is dynamic,
// let's use the lower address space for this. There are many ways how reservation
// can be defined, but using MAC address (hw-address) is by far the most popular one.
// You can use client-id, duid and even custom defined flex-id that may use whatever
// parts of the packet you want to use as identifiers. Also, there are many more things
// you can specify in addition to just an IP address: extra options, next-server, hostname,
// assign device to client classes etc. See the Kea ARM, Section 8.3 for details.
// The reservations are subnet specific.
#"reservations": [
# {
# "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.10"
# },
# {
# "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.11"
# }
#]
}
],
// fichier de logs
"loggers": [
{
// This section affects kea-dhcp4, which is the base logger for DHCPv4 component. It tells
// DHCPv4 server to write all log messages (on severity INFO or higher) to a file. The file
// will be rotated once it grows to 2MB and up to 4 files will be kept. The debuglevel
// (range 0 to 99) is used only when logging on DEBUG level.
"name": "kea-dhcp4",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
"maxsize": 2048000,
"maxver": 4
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0
}
]
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
---
- name: restart isc-kea-dhcp4-server
service:
name: isc-kea-dhcp4-server.service
state: restarted
enabled: yes
- name: restart isc-kea-ctrl-agent
service:
name: isc-kea-ctrl-agent.service
state: restarted
enabled: yes
- name: restart mariadb-server
service:
name: mariadb-server
state: restarted
enabled: yes

View File

@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
---
- name: installation des dépendances
apt:
name:
- liblog4cplus-2.0.5
- libmariadb3
- libpq5
- mariadb-common
- mysql-common
state: present
- name: telechargemement du paquet isc-kea-common
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-dhcp4
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-ctrl-agent
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-hooks
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: Update apt
apt:
update_cache: yes
- name: Installation paquet isc-kea-common
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-dhcp4
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-ctrl-agent
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-hooks
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Copie du repertoire des hooks dans le repertoire /usr/local/bin/kea/hooks
copy:
src: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/kea/
dest: /usr/local/lib/kea/
- name: Copie du fichier de configuration kea-dhcp4.conf
copy:
src: kea-dhcp4.conf
dest: /etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf
notify:
- restart isc-kea-dhcp4-server
- name: Copie du fichier de configuration kea-ctrl-agent
copy:
src: kea-ctrl-agent.conf
dest: /etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf
notify:
- restart isc-kea-ctrl-agent

Binary file not shown.

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@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
// This is an example of a configuration for Control-Agent (CA) listening
// for incoming HTTP traffic. This is necessary for handling API commands,
// in particular lease update commands needed for HA setup.
{
"Control-agent":
{
// We need to specify where the agent should listen to incoming HTTP
// queries.
"http-host": "172.16.64.1",
// This specifies the port CA will listen on.
"http-port": 8000,
"control-sockets":
{
// This is how the Agent can communicate with the DHCPv4 server.
"dhcp4":
{
"comment": "socket to DHCPv4 server",
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tm/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Location of the DHCPv6 command channel socket.
# "dhcp6":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea6-ctrl-socket"
# },
// Location of the D2 command channel socket.
# "d2":
# {
# "socket-type": "unix",
# "socket-name": "/tmp/kea-ddns-ctrl-socket",
# "user-context": { "in-use": false }
# }
},
// Similar to other Kea components, CA also uses logging.
"loggers": [
{
"name": "kea-ctrl-agent",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
// Several additional parameters are possible in addition
// to the typical output. Flush determines whether logger
// flushes output to a file. Maxsize determines maximum
// filesize before the file is rotated. maxver
// specifies the maximum number of rotated files being
// kept.
"flush": true,
"maxsize": 204800,
"maxver": 4,
// We use pattern to specify custom log message layout
"pattern": "%d{%y.%m.%d %H:%M:%S.%q} %-5p [%c/%i] %m\n"
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0 // debug level only applies when severity is set to DEBUG.
}
]
}
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,226 @@
// This is an example configuration of the Kea DHCPv4 server 1:
//
// - uses High Availability hook library and Lease Commands hook library
// to enable High Availability function for the DHCP server. This config
// file is for the primary (the active) server.
// - uses memfile, which stores lease data in a local CSV file
// - it assumes a single /24 addressing over a link that is directly reachable
// (no DHCP relays)
// - there is a handful of IP reservations
//
// It is expected to run with a standby (the passive) server, which has a very similar
// configuration. The only difference is that "this-server-name" must be set to "server2" on the
// other server. Also, the interface configuration depends on the network settings of the
// particular machine.
{
"Dhcp4": {
// Add names of your network interfaces to listen on.
"interfaces-config": {
// The DHCPv4 server listens on this interface. When changing this to
// the actual name of your interface, make sure to also update the
// interface parameter in the subnet definition below.
"interfaces": [ "enp0s8" ]
},
// Control socket is required for communication between the Control
// Agent and the DHCP server. High Availability requires Control Agent
// to be running because lease updates are sent over the RESTful
// API between the HA peers.
"control-socket": {
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
// Use Memfile lease database backend to store leases in a CSV file.
// Depending on how Kea was compiled, it may also support SQL databases
// (MySQL and/or PostgreSQL). Those database backends require more
// parameters, like name, host and possibly user and password.
// There are dedicated examples for each backend. See Section 7.2.2 "Lease
// Storage" for details.
"lease-database": {
// Memfile is the simplest and easiest backend to use. It's an in-memory
// database with data being written to a CSV file. It is very similar to
// what ISC DHCP does.
"type": "memfile"
},
// Let's configure some global parameters. The home network is not very dynamic
// and there's no shortage of addresses, so no need to recycle aggressively.
"valid-lifetime": 43200, // leases will be valid for 12h
"renew-timer": 21600, // clients should renew every 6h
"rebind-timer": 32400, // clients should start looking for other servers after 9h
// Kea will clean up its database of expired leases once per hour. However, it
// will keep the leases in expired state for 2 days. This greatly increases the
// chances for returning devices to get the same address again. To guarantee that,
// use host reservation.
// If both "flush-reclaimed-timer-wait-time" and "hold-reclaimed-time" are
// not 0, when the client sends a release message the lease is expired
// instead of being deleted from lease storage.
"expired-leases-processing": {
"reclaim-timer-wait-time": 3600,
"hold-reclaimed-time": 172800,
"max-reclaim-leases": 0,
"max-reclaim-time": 0
},
// HA requires two hook libraries to be loaded: libdhcp_lease_cmds.so and
// libdhcp_ha.so. The former handles incoming lease updates from the HA peers.
// The latter implements high availability feature for Kea. Note the library name
// should be the same, but the path is OS specific.
"hooks-libraries": [
// The lease_cmds library must be loaded because HA makes use of it to
// deliver lease updates to the server as well as synchronize the
// lease database after failure.
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
},
{
// The HA hook library should be loaded.
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_ha.so",
"parameters": {
// Each server should have the same HA configuration, except for the
// "this-server-name" parameter.
"high-availability": [ {
// This parameter points to this server instance. The respective
// HA peers must have this parameter set to their own names.
"this-server-name": "kea1",
// The HA mode is set to hot-standby. In this mode, the active server handles
// all the traffic. The standby takes over if the primary becomes unavailable.
"mode": "hot-standby",
// Heartbeat is to be sent every 10 seconds if no other control
// commands are transmitted.
"heartbeat-delay": 10000,
// Maximum time for partner's response to a heartbeat, after which
// failure detection is started. This is specified in milliseconds.
// If we don't hear from the partner in 60 seconds, it's time to
// start worrying.
"max-response-delay": 30000,
// The following parameters control how the server detects the
// partner's failure. The ACK delay sets the threshold for the
// 'secs' field of the received discovers. This is specified in
// milliseconds.
"max-ack-delay": 5000,
// This specifies the number of clients which send messages to
// the partner but appear to not receive any response.
"max-unacked-clients": 0,
// This specifies the maximum timeout (in milliseconds) for the server
// to complete sync. If you have a large deployment (high tens or
// hundreds of thousands of clients), you may need to increase it
// further. The default value is 60000ms (60 seconds).
"sync-timeout": 60000,
"peers": [
// This is the configuration of this server instance.
{
"name": "kea1",
// This specifies the URL of this server instance. The
// Control Agent must run along with this DHCPv4 server
// instance and the "http-host" and "http-port" must be
// set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.1:8000/",
// This server is primary. The other one must be
// secondary.
"role": "primary"
},
// This is the configuration of the secondary server.
{
"name": "kea2",
// Specifies the URL on which the partner's control
// channel can be reached. The Control Agent is required
// to run on the partner's machine with "http-host" and
// "http-port" values set to the corresponding values.
"url": "http://172.16.64.2:8000/",
// The other server is secondary. This one must be
// primary.
"role": "standby"
}
]
} ]
}
}
],
// This example contains a single subnet declaration.
"subnet4": [
{
// Subnet prefix.
"subnet": "172.16.64.0/24",
// There are no relays in this network, so we need to tell Kea that this subnet
// is reachable directly via the specified interface.
"interface": "enp0s8",
// Specify a dynamic address pool.
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.16.64.100-172.16.64.150"
}
],
// These are options that are subnet specific. In most cases, you need to define at
// least routers option, as without this option your clients will not be able to reach
// their default gateway and will not have Internet connectivity. If you have many
// subnets and they share the same options (e.g. DNS servers typically is the same
// everywhere), you may define options at the global scope, so you don't repeat them
// for every network.
"option-data": [
{
// For each IPv4 subnet you typically need to specify at least one router.
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.16.64.1"
},
{
// Using cloudflare or Quad9 is a reasonable option. Change this
// to your own DNS servers is you have them. Another popular
// choice is 8.8.8.8, owned by Google. Using third party DNS
// service raises some privacy concerns.
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.16.64.1"
}
],
// Some devices should get a static address. Since the .100 - .199 range is dynamic,
// let's use the lower address space for this. There are many ways how reservation
// can be defined, but using MAC address (hw-address) is by far the most popular one.
// You can use client-id, duid and even custom defined flex-id that may use whatever
// parts of the packet you want to use as identifiers. Also, there are many more things
// you can specify in addition to just an IP address: extra options, next-server, hostname,
// assign device to client classes etc. See the Kea ARM, Section 8.3 for details.
// The reservations are subnet specific.
#"reservations": [
# {
# "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.10"
# },
# {
# "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
# "ip-address": "192.168.1.11"
# }
#]
}
],
// fichier de logs
"loggers": [
{
// This section affects kea-dhcp4, which is the base logger for DHCPv4 component. It tells
// DHCPv4 server to write all log messages (on severity INFO or higher) to a file. The file
// will be rotated once it grows to 2MB and up to 4 files will be kept. The debuglevel
// (range 0 to 99) is used only when logging on DEBUG level.
"name": "kea-dhcp4",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "stdout",
"maxsize": 2048000,
"maxver": 4
}
],
"severity": "INFO",
"debuglevel": 0
}
]
}
}

View File

@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
#variable kea
kea_ver: "2.4.1"
kea_dbname: ""
kea_dbuser: ""
kea_dbpasswd: ""
kea_dhcp4_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf"
kea_ctrl_dir: "/etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf"

View File

@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
- name: restart zabbix agent
service:
name: zabbix-agent
state: restarted
enabled: yes

View File

@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
- name: installation des dépendances
apt:
name:
- liblog4cplus-2.0.5
- libmariadb3
- libpq5
- mariadb-common
- mysql-common
state: present
- name: telechargemement du paquet isc-kea-common
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-dhcp4
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-ctrl-agent
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: telechargement du paquet isc-kea-hooks
get_url:
url: "https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/isc/kea-2-4/deb/debian/pool/bookworm/main/i/is/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533/isc-kea-hooks_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
dest: "/tmp"
- name: Update apt
apt:
update_cache: yes
- name: Installation paquet isc-kea-common
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-common_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-dhcp4
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-dhcp4_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-ctrl-agent
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-ctrl-agent
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-hooks
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present
- name: Installation isc-kea-hooks
apt:
deb: "/tmp/isc-kea-ctrl-agent_2.4.1-isc20231123184533_amd64.deb"
state: present

View File

@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
- name: 20 - decompresse wordpress
unarchive:
src: https://fr.wordpress.org/latest-fr_FR.tar.gz
src: http://s-adm.gsb.adm/gsbstore/wordpress-6.4.2-fr_FR.tar.gz
dest: /home/
remote_src: yes

View File

@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
depl_url: "http://s-adm.gsb.adm/gsbstore/"
depl_wordpress: "wordpress-6.1.1-fr_FR.tar.gz"
depl_wordpress: "wordpress-6.4.2-fr_FR.tar.gz"

View File

@ -69,8 +69,13 @@
args:
chdir: /root/nxc
- name: Creation reseau docker proxy
- name: vérification si le réseau proxy existe
command: docker network ls --filter name=proxy
register: net_proxy
- name: création du réseau proxy
command: docker network create proxy
when: net_proxy.stdout.find('proxy') == -1
#- name: Démarrage du docker-compose...
#command: /bin/bash docker-compose up -d

View File

@ -7,15 +7,15 @@ iface lo inet loopback
# carte n-adm
allow-hotplug enp0s3
iface enp0s3 inet static
address 192.168.99.101/24
address 192.168.99.102/24
# Réseau n-dmz-lb
allow-hotplug enp0s8
iface enp0s8 inet static
address 192.168.101.1/24
address 192.168.101.2/24
# réseau n-dmz-db
allow-hotplug enp0s9
iface enp0s9 inet static
address 192.168.102.1/24
address 192.168.102.2/24
post-up mount -o rw 192.168.102.253:/home/wordpress /var/www/html

View File

@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
# This file describes the network interfaces available on your system
# and how to activate them. For more information, see interfaces(5).
#source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
# The loopback network interface
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
# cote n-adm
allow-hotplug enp0s3
iface enp0s3 inet static
address 192.168.99.22/24
gateway 192.168.99.99
# Cote n-infra
allow-hotplug enp0s8
iface enp0s8 inet static
address 172.16.0.22/24
up ip route add 172.16.64.0/24 via 172.16.0.254
up ip route add 172.16.128.0/24 via 172.16.0.254
up ip route add 192.168.0.0/16 via 172.16.0.254
up ip route add 192.168.200.0/24 via 172.16.0.254

View File

@ -1,13 +1,21 @@
## **Explication de l'installation du VPN :**
Le processus d'installation s'articule en trois phases distinctes. Tout d'abord, l'installation commence par le playbook **r-vp1**. Ensuite, dans une seconde étape, le playbook r-vp2 est déployé. Enfin, la dernière phase concerne la mise en place de notre filtrage à l'aide de **ferm**.
## **Explication des dossiers pour Wireguard :**
Le dossier wireguard-r = r-vp1
wireguard-l = r-vp2
# <p align="center">Procédure d'installation </p>
de **r-vp1** et de copie du fichier wg0-b.conf.
***
## Sur **r-vp1**:
Attendre la fin de l'installation. Ensuite lancer un serveur http avec python3 pour récuperer le fichier wg0-b.conf sur **r-vp2** .
### 🛠️ Lancer le script
Lancer le playbook : *ansible-playbook -i localhost, -c local* r-vp1.yml sur **r-vp1**
Attendre la fin de l'installation. Ensuite lancer le scipt r-vp1-post.sh
### 🛠️ Lancer le script r-vp1-post.sh
```bash
cd /tools/ansible/gsb2023/Scripts
```

View File

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
SERVER: "127.0.0.1"
SERVERACTIVE: "172.16.0.8"

View File

@ -17,20 +17,14 @@
name: zabbix-agent
state: present
- name: Mise en place du fichier conf zabbix agent (active)
template:
src: zabbix_agentd.conf.j2
dest: /etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.conf
- name: Enable Zabbix agent service
service:
name: zabbix-agent
state: restarted
enabled: yes
- name: Replace Zabbix agent config
replace:
path: /etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.conf
regexp: '{{ item.regexp }}'
replace: '{{ item.replace }}'
backup: true
loop:
- { regexp: '^(Server\s*=\s*).*$', replace: 'Server = 127.0.0.1' }
- { regexp: '^(ServerActive\s*=\s*).*$', replace: 'ServerActive = 192.168.99.8' }
- { regexp: '^(Hostname\s*=\s*).*$', replace: 'Hostname = {{ ansible_hostname }}' }
- { regexp: '^(Include\s*=\s*).*$', replace: 'Include = /etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.d/*.conf' }

View File

@ -0,0 +1,554 @@
# This is a configuration file for Zabbix agent daemon (Unix)
# To get more information about Zabbix, visit http://www.zabbix.com
############ GENERAL PARAMETERS #################
### Option: PidFile
# Name of PID file.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# PidFile=/tmp/zabbix_agentd.pid
PidFile=/run/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.pid
### Option: LogType
# Specifies where log messages are written to:
# system - syslog
# file - file specified with LogFile parameter
# console - standard output
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# LogType=file
### Option: LogFile
# Log file name for LogType 'file' parameter.
#
# Mandatory: yes, if LogType is set to file, otherwise no
# Default:
# LogFile=
LogFile=/var/log/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.log
### Option: LogFileSize
# Maximum size of log file in MB.
# 0 - disable automatic log rotation.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-1024
# Default:
# LogFileSize=1
LogFileSize=0
### Option: DebugLevel
# Specifies debug level:
# 0 - basic information about starting and stopping of Zabbix processes
# 1 - critical information
# 2 - error information
# 3 - warnings
# 4 - for debugging (produces lots of information)
# 5 - extended debugging (produces even more information)
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-5
# Default:
# DebugLevel=3
### Option: SourceIP
# Source IP address for outgoing connections.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# SourceIP=
### Option: AllowKey
# Allow execution of item keys matching pattern.
# Multiple keys matching rules may be defined in combination with DenyKey.
# Key pattern is wildcard expression, which support "*" character to match any number of any characters in certain position. It might be used in both key name and key arguments.
# Parameters are processed one by one according their appearance order.
# If no AllowKey or DenyKey rules defined, all keys are allowed.
#
# Mandatory: no
### Option: DenyKey
# Deny execution of items keys matching pattern.
# Multiple keys matching rules may be defined in combination with AllowKey.
# Key pattern is wildcard expression, which support "*" character to match any number of any characters in certain position. It might be used in both key name and key arguments.
# Parameters are processed one by one according their appearance order.
# If no AllowKey or DenyKey rules defined, all keys are allowed.
# Unless another system.run[*] rule is specified DenyKey=system.run[*] is added by default.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# DenyKey=system.run[*]
### Option: EnableRemoteCommands - Deprecated, use AllowKey=system.run[*] or DenyKey=system.run[*] instead
# Internal alias for AllowKey/DenyKey parameters depending on value:
# 0 - DenyKey=system.run[*]
# 1 - AllowKey=system.run[*]
#
# Mandatory: no
### Option: LogRemoteCommands
# Enable logging of executed shell commands as warnings.
# 0 - disabled
# 1 - enabled
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# LogRemoteCommands=0
##### Passive checks related
### Option: Server
# List of comma delimited IP addresses, optionally in CIDR notation, or DNS names of Zabbix servers and Zabbix proxies.
# Incoming connections will be accepted only from the hosts listed here.
# If IPv6 support is enabled then '127.0.0.1', '::127.0.0.1', '::ffff:127.0.0.1' are treated equally
# and '::/0' will allow any IPv4 or IPv6 address.
# '0.0.0.0/0' can be used to allow any IPv4 address.
# Example: Server=127.0.0.1,192.168.1.0/24,::1,2001:db8::/32,zabbix.example.com
#
# Mandatory: yes, if StartAgents is not explicitly set to 0
# Default:
# Server=
Server = {{ SERVER }}
### Option: ListenPort
# Agent will listen on this port for connections from the server.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 1024-32767
# Default:
# ListenPort=10050
### Option: ListenIP
# List of comma delimited IP addresses that the agent should listen on.
# First IP address is sent to Zabbix server if connecting to it to retrieve list of active checks.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# ListenIP=0.0.0.0
### Option: StartAgents
# Number of pre-forked instances of zabbix_agentd that process passive checks.
# If set to 0, disables passive checks and the agent will not listen on any TCP port.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-100
# Default:
# StartAgents=3
##### Active checks related
### Option: ServerActive
# Zabbix server/proxy address or cluster configuration to get active checks from.
# Server/proxy address is IP address or DNS name and optional port separated by colon.
# Cluster configuration is one or more server addresses separated by semicolon.
# Multiple Zabbix servers/clusters and Zabbix proxies can be specified, separated by comma.
# More than one Zabbix proxy should not be specified from each Zabbix server/cluster.
# If Zabbix proxy is specified then Zabbix server/cluster for that proxy should not be specified.
# Multiple comma-delimited addresses can be provided to use several independent Zabbix servers in parallel. Spaces are allowed.
# If port is not specified, default port is used.
# IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in square brackets if port for that host is specified.
# If port is not specified, square brackets for IPv6 addresses are optional.
# If this parameter is not specified, active checks are disabled.
# Example for Zabbix proxy:
# ServerActive=127.0.0.1:10051
# Example for multiple servers:
# ServerActive=127.0.0.1:20051,zabbix.domain,[::1]:30051,::1,[12fc::1]
# Example for high availability:
# ServerActive=zabbix.cluster.node1;zabbix.cluster.node2:20051;zabbix.cluster.node3
# Example for high availability with two clusters and one server:
# ServerActive=zabbix.cluster.node1;zabbix.cluster.node2:20051,zabbix.cluster2.node1;zabbix.cluster2.node2,zabbix.domain
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# ServerActive=
ServerActive = {{ SERVERACTIVE }}
### Option: Hostname
# List of comma delimited unique, case sensitive hostnames.
# Required for active checks and must match hostnames as configured on the server.
# Value is acquired from HostnameItem if undefined.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# Hostname=
Hostname = {{ ansible_hostname }}
### Option: HostnameItem
# Item used for generating Hostname if it is undefined. Ignored if Hostname is defined.
# Does not support UserParameters or aliases.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# HostnameItem=system.hostname
### Option: HostMetadata
# Optional parameter that defines host metadata.
# Host metadata is used at host auto-registration process.
# An agent will issue an error and not start if the value is over limit of 2034 bytes.
# If not defined, value will be acquired from HostMetadataItem.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-2034 bytes
# Default:
# HostMetadata=
### Option: HostMetadataItem
# Optional parameter that defines an item used for getting host metadata.
# Host metadata is used at host auto-registration process.
# During an auto-registration request an agent will log a warning message if
# the value returned by specified item is over limit of 65535 characters.
# This option is only used when HostMetadata is not defined.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# HostMetadataItem=
### Option: HostInterface
# Optional parameter that defines host interface.
# Host interface is used at host auto-registration process.
# An agent will issue an error and not start if the value is over limit of 255 characters.
# If not defined, value will be acquired from HostInterfaceItem.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-255 characters
# Default:
# HostInterface=
### Option: HostInterfaceItem
# Optional parameter that defines an item used for getting host interface.
# Host interface is used at host auto-registration process.
# During an auto-registration request an agent will log a warning message if
# the value returned by specified item is over limit of 255 characters.
# This option is only used when HostInterface is not defined.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# HostInterfaceItem=
### Option: RefreshActiveChecks
# How often list of active checks is refreshed, in seconds.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 1-86400
# Default:
# RefreshActiveChecks=5
### Option: BufferSend
# Do not keep data longer than N seconds in buffer.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 1-3600
# Default:
# BufferSend=5
### Option: BufferSize
# Maximum number of values in a memory buffer. The agent will send
# all collected data to Zabbix Server or Proxy if the buffer is full.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 2-65535
# Default:
# BufferSize=100
### Option: MaxLinesPerSecond
# Maximum number of new lines the agent will send per second to Zabbix Server
# or Proxy processing 'log' and 'logrt' active checks.
# The provided value will be overridden by the parameter 'maxlines',
# provided in 'log' or 'logrt' item keys.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 1-1000
# Default:
# MaxLinesPerSecond=20
### Option: HeartbeatFrequency
# Frequency of heartbeat messages in seconds.
# Used for monitoring availability of active checks.
# 0 - heartbeat messages disabled.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-3600
# Default: 60
# HeartbeatFrequency=
############ ADVANCED PARAMETERS #################
### Option: Alias
# Sets an alias for an item key. It can be used to substitute long and complex item key with a smaller and simpler one.
# Multiple Alias parameters may be present. Multiple parameters with the same Alias key are not allowed.
# Different Alias keys may reference the same item key.
# For example, to retrieve the ID of user 'zabbix':
# Alias=zabbix.userid:vfs.file.regexp[/etc/passwd,^zabbix:.:([0-9]+),,,,\1]
# Now shorthand key zabbix.userid may be used to retrieve data.
# Aliases can be used in HostMetadataItem but not in HostnameItem parameters.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range:
# Default:
### Option: Timeout
# Spend no more than Timeout seconds on processing
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 1-30
# Default:
# Timeout=3
### Option: AllowRoot
# Allow the agent to run as 'root'. If disabled and the agent is started by 'root', the agent
# will try to switch to the user specified by the User configuration option instead.
# Has no effect if started under a regular user.
# 0 - do not allow
# 1 - allow
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# AllowRoot=0
### Option: User
# Drop privileges to a specific, existing user on the system.
# Only has effect if run as 'root' and AllowRoot is disabled.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# User=zabbix
# NOTE: This option is overriden by settings in systemd service file!
### Option: Include
# You may include individual files or all files in a directory in the configuration file.
# Installing Zabbix will create include directory in /usr/local/etc, unless modified during the compile time.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# Include=
Include = /etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.d/*.conf
# Include=/usr/local/etc/zabbix_agentd.userparams.conf
# Include=/usr/local/etc/zabbix_agentd.conf.d/
# Include=/usr/local/etc/zabbix_agentd.conf.d/*.conf
####### USER-DEFINED MONITORED PARAMETERS #######
### Option: UnsafeUserParameters
# Allow all characters to be passed in arguments to user-defined parameters.
# The following characters are not allowed:
# \ ' " ` * ? [ ] { } ~ $ ! & ; ( ) < > | # @
# Additionally, newline characters are not allowed.
# 0 - do not allow
# 1 - allow
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0-1
# Default:
# UnsafeUserParameters=0
### Option: UserParameter
# User-defined parameter to monitor. There can be several user-defined parameters.
# Format: UserParameter=<key>,<shell command>
# See 'zabbix_agentd' directory for examples.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# UserParameter=
### Option: UserParameterDir
# Directory to execute UserParameter commands from. Only one entry is allowed.
# When executing UserParameter commands the agent will change the working directory to the one
# specified in the UserParameterDir option.
# This way UserParameter commands can be specified using the relative ./ prefix.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# UserParameterDir=
####### LOADABLE MODULES #######
### Option: LoadModulePath
# Full path to location of agent modules.
# Default depends on compilation options.
# To see the default path run command "zabbix_agentd --help".
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# LoadModulePath=${libdir}/modules
### Option: LoadModule
# Module to load at agent startup. Modules are used to extend functionality of the agent.
# Formats:
# LoadModule=<module.so>
# LoadModule=<path/module.so>
# LoadModule=</abs_path/module.so>
# Either the module must be located in directory specified by LoadModulePath or the path must precede the module name.
# If the preceding path is absolute (starts with '/') then LoadModulePath is ignored.
# It is allowed to include multiple LoadModule parameters.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# LoadModule=
####### TLS-RELATED PARAMETERS #######
### Option: TLSConnect
# How the agent should connect to server or proxy. Used for active checks.
# Only one value can be specified:
# unencrypted - connect without encryption
# psk - connect using TLS and a pre-shared key
# cert - connect using TLS and a certificate
#
# Mandatory: yes, if TLS certificate or PSK parameters are defined (even for 'unencrypted' connection)
# Default:
# TLSConnect=unencrypted
### Option: TLSAccept
# What incoming connections to accept.
# Multiple values can be specified, separated by comma:
# unencrypted - accept connections without encryption
# psk - accept connections secured with TLS and a pre-shared key
# cert - accept connections secured with TLS and a certificate
#
# Mandatory: yes, if TLS certificate or PSK parameters are defined (even for 'unencrypted' connection)
# Default:
# TLSAccept=unencrypted
### Option: TLSCAFile
# Full pathname of a file containing the top-level CA(s) certificates for
# peer certificate verification.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCAFile=
### Option: TLSCRLFile
# Full pathname of a file containing revoked certificates.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCRLFile=
### Option: TLSServerCertIssuer
# Allowed server certificate issuer.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSServerCertIssuer=
### Option: TLSServerCertSubject
# Allowed server certificate subject.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSServerCertSubject=
### Option: TLSCertFile
# Full pathname of a file containing the agent certificate or certificate chain.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCertFile=
### Option: TLSKeyFile
# Full pathname of a file containing the agent private key.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSKeyFile=
### Option: TLSPSKIdentity
# Unique, case sensitive string used to identify the pre-shared key.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSPSKIdentity=
### Option: TLSPSKFile
# Full pathname of a file containing the pre-shared key.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSPSKFile=
####### For advanced users - TLS ciphersuite selection criteria #######
### Option: TLSCipherCert13
# Cipher string for OpenSSL 1.1.1 or newer in TLS 1.3.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for certificate-based encryption.
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherCert13=
### Option: TLSCipherCert
# GnuTLS priority string or OpenSSL (TLS 1.2) cipher string.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for certificate-based encryption.
# Example for GnuTLS:
# NONE:+VERS-TLS1.2:+ECDHE-RSA:+RSA:+AES-128-GCM:+AES-128-CBC:+AEAD:+SHA256:+SHA1:+CURVE-ALL:+COMP-NULL:+SIGN-ALL:+CTYPE-X.509
# Example for OpenSSL:
# EECDH+aRSA+AES128:RSA+aRSA+AES128
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherCert=
### Option: TLSCipherPSK13
# Cipher string for OpenSSL 1.1.1 or newer in TLS 1.3.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for PSK-based encryption.
# Example:
# TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256:TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherPSK13=
### Option: TLSCipherPSK
# GnuTLS priority string or OpenSSL (TLS 1.2) cipher string.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for PSK-based encryption.
# Example for GnuTLS:
# NONE:+VERS-TLS1.2:+ECDHE-PSK:+PSK:+AES-128-GCM:+AES-128-CBC:+AEAD:+SHA256:+SHA1:+CURVE-ALL:+COMP-NULL:+SIGN-ALL
# Example for OpenSSL:
# kECDHEPSK+AES128:kPSK+AES128
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherPSK=
### Option: TLSCipherAll13
# Cipher string for OpenSSL 1.1.1 or newer in TLS 1.3.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for certificate- and PSK-based encryption.
# Example:
# TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256:TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherAll13=
### Option: TLSCipherAll
# GnuTLS priority string or OpenSSL (TLS 1.2) cipher string.
# Override the default ciphersuite selection criteria for certificate- and PSK-based encryption.
# Example for GnuTLS:
# NONE:+VERS-TLS1.2:+ECDHE-RSA:+RSA:+ECDHE-PSK:+PSK:+AES-128-GCM:+AES-128-CBC:+AEAD:+SHA256:+SHA1:+CURVE-ALL:+COMP-NULL:+SIGN-ALL:+CTYPE-X.509
# Example for OpenSSL:
# EECDH+aRSA+AES128:RSA+aRSA+AES128:kECDHEPSK+AES128:kPSK+AES128
#
# Mandatory: no
# Default:
# TLSCipherAll=
####### For advanced users - TCP-related fine-tuning parameters #######
## Option: ListenBacklog
# The maximum number of pending connections in the queue. This parameter is passed to
# listen() function as argument 'backlog' (see "man listen").
#
# Mandatory: no
# Range: 0 - INT_MAX (depends on system, too large values may be silently truncated to implementation-specified maximum)
# Default: SOMAXCONN (hard-coded constant, depends on system)
# ListenBacklog=

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
- dnsmasq
- squid
# - local-store
# #- zabbix-cli
- zabbix-cli
## - syslog-cli
- post
# - goss

View File

@ -7,8 +7,6 @@
- goss
#- dhcp-fog
# - ssh-cli
# - snmp-agent
# - syslog-cli
- fog
#- fog
#- - journald-snd
- post

13
s-kea1.yml Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
---
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
roles:
- base
#- goss
#- ssh-cli
- kea-master
#- zabbix-cli
#- journald-snd
#- snmp-agent
- post

13
s-kea2.yml Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
---
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
roles:
- base
# - goss
# - ssh-cli
- kea-slave
# - zabbix-cli
# - journald-snd
# - snmp-agent
- post

View File

@ -9,5 +9,5 @@
- goss
- lb-bd
- post
- snmp-agent
#- zabbix-cli
- ssh-cli

View File

@ -6,6 +6,6 @@
- base
- post-lb
- lb-web
- snmp-agent
# - zabbix-cli
- ssh-cli

View File

@ -6,6 +6,6 @@
- base
- post-lb
- lb-web
- snmp-agent
# - zabbix-cli
- ssh-cli

View File

@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
- base
- goss
- lb-front
- snmp-agent
#- zabbix-cli
- ssh-cli
- post

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
roles:
- base
- snmp-agent
#- zabbix-cli
- lb-nfs-server
- ssh-cli
# - syslog-cli

View File

@ -137,5 +137,5 @@ else
exit 2
fi
if [[ $startmode == 1 ]] ; then
vboxmanage startvm "${vm}" --type headless
vboxmanage startvm "${vm}"
fi

View File

@ -18,4 +18,4 @@ echo ping r-vp2 interface interface interne
ping -c3 172.16.128.254
echo ping s-agence
ping -c3 172.16.128.11
ping -c3 172.16.128.10