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nginx-formula

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Formula to set up and configure NGINX.

WARNING: BREAKING CHANGES SINCE v1.0.0

Prior to v1.0.0, this formula provided two methods for managing NGINX; the old method under nginx and the new method under nginx.ng. The old method has now been removed and nginx.ng has been promoted to be nginx in its place.

If you are not in a position to migrate, please pin your repo to the final release tag before v1.0.0, i.e. v0.56.1.

To migrate from nginx.ng, simply modify your pillar to promote the entire section under nginx:ng so that it is under nginx instead. So with the editor of your choice, highlight the entire section and then unindent one level. Finish by removing the ng: line.

To migrate from the old nginx, first convert to nginx.ng under v0.56.1 and then follow the steps laid out in the paragraph directly above.

See the full SaltStack Formulas installation and usage instructions.

If you are interested in writing or contributing to formulas, please pay attention to the Writing Formula Section.

If you want to use this formula, please pay attention to the FORMULA file and/or git tag, which contains the currently released version. This formula is versioned according to Semantic Versioning.

See Formula Versioning Section for more details.

Commit message formatting is significant!!

Please see How to contribute for more details.

Meta-state for inclusion of all states.

Note: nginx requires the merge parameter of salt.modules.pillar.get(), first available in the Helium release.

Installs nginx from package, from the distribution repositories, the official nginx repo or the ppa from Launchpad.

Builds and installs nginx from source.

Manages the deployment of nginx certificates.

Manages the nginx main server configuration file.

Manages the startup and running state of the nginx service.

Manages virtual host files. This state only manages the content of the files and does not bind them to service calls.

Manages nginx virtual hosts files and binds them to service calls.

Installs and configures Phusion Passenger module for nginx. You need to enable the upstream phusion passenger repository with install_from_phusionpassenger: true. Nginx will also be installed from that repository, as it needs to be modified to allow the passenger module to work.

Linux testing is done with kitchen-salt.

  • Ruby
  • Docker
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
$ bin/kitchen test [platform]

Where [platform] is the platform name defined in kitchen.yml, e.g. debian-9-2019-2-py3.

Creates the docker instance and runs the nginx main state, ready for testing.

Runs the inspec tests on the actual instance.

Removes the docker instance.

Runs all of the stages above in one go: i.e. destroy + converge + verify + destroy.

Gives you SSH access to the instance for manual testing.

Windows/FreeBSD/OpenBSD testing is done with kitchen-salt.

  • Ruby
  • Virtualbox
  • Vagrant
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install --with=vagrant
$ bin/kitchen test [platform]

Where [platform] is the platform name defined in kitchen.vagrant.yml, e.g. windows-81-latest-py3.

When testing using Vagrant you must set the environment variable KITCHEN_LOCAL_YAML to kitchen.vagrant.yml. For example:

$ KITCHEN_LOCAL_YAML=kitchen.vagrant.yml bin/kitchen test      # Alternatively,
$ export KITCHEN_LOCAL_YAML=kitchen.vagrant.yml
$ bin/kitchen test

Then run the following commands as needed.

Creates the Vagrant instance and runs the nginx main state, ready for testing.

Runs the inspec tests on the actual instance.

Removes the Vagrant instance.

Runs all of the stages above in one go: i.e. destroy + converge + verify + destroy.

Gives you RDP/SSH access to the instance for manual testing.

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