--- # cobbler settings file # restart cobblerd and run "cobbler sync" after making changes # This config file is in YAML 1.0 format # see http://yaml.org # ========================================================== # if 1, cobbler will allow insertions of system records that duplicate # the hostname information of other system records. In general, # this is undesirable. allow_duplicate_hostnames: 0 # if 1, cobbler will allow insertions of system records that duplicate # the ip address information of other system records. In general, # this is undesirable. allow_duplicate_ips: 0 # if 1, cobbler will allow insertions of system records that duplicate # the mac address information of other system records. In general, # this is undesirable. allow_duplicate_macs: 0 # the path to BIND's executable for this distribution. bind_bin: /usr/sbin/named # Cheetah-language kickstart templates can import Python modules. # while this is a useful feature, it is not safe to allow them to # import anything they want. This whitelists which modules can be # imported through Cheetah. Users can expand this as needed but # should never allow modules such as subprocess or those that # allow access to the filesystem as Cheetah templates are evaluated # by cobblerd as code. cheetah_import_whitelist: - "random" - "re" - "time" # if no kickstart is specified, use this template (FIXME) default_kickstart: /etc/cobbler/default.ks # cobbler has various sample kickstart templates stored # in /var/lib/cobbler/kickstarts/. This controls # what install (root) password is set up for those # systems that reference this variable. The factory # default is "cobbler" and cobbler check will warn if # this is not changed. default_password_crypted: "$1$mF86/UHC$WvcIcX2t6crBz2onWxyac." # configure all installed systems to use these nameservers by default # unless defined differently in the profile. For DHCP configurations # you probably do /not/ want to supply this. default_name_servers: [] # for libvirt based installs in koan, if no virt bridge # is specified, which bridge do we try? For EL 4/5 hosts # this should be xenbr0, for all versions of Fedora, try # "virbr0". This can be overriden on a per-profile # basis or at the koan command line though this saves # typing to just set it here to the most common option. default_virt_bridge: xenbr0 # if koan is invoked without --virt-type and no virt-type # is set on the profile/system, what virtualization type # should be assumed? Values: xenpv, xenfv, qemu, vmware # (NOTE: this does not change what virt_type is chosen by import) default_virt_type: xenpv # use this as the default disk size for virt guests (GB) default_virt_file_size: 5 # use this as the default memory size for virt guests (MB) default_virt_ram: 512 # if using the authz_ownership module (see the Wiki), objects # created without specifying an owner are assigned to this # owner and/or group. Can be a comma seperated list. default_ownership: - "admin" # controls whether cobbler will add each new profile entry to the default # PXE boot menu. This can be over-ridden on a per-profile # basis when adding/editing profiles with --enable-menu=0/1. Users # should ordinarily leave this setting enabled unless they are concerned # with accidental reinstalls from users who select an entry at the PXE # boot menu. Adding a password to the boot menus templates # may also be a good solution to prevent unwanted reinstallations enable_menu: 1 # location for some important binaries and config files # that can vary based on the distribution. dhcpd_bin: /usr/sbin/dhcpd dhcpd_conf: /etc/dhcpd.conf dnsmasq_bin: /usr/sbin/dnsmasq dnsmasq_conf: /etc/dnsmasq.conf # enable Func-integration? This makes sure each installed machine is set up # to use func out of the box, which is a powerful way to script and control # remote machines. # Func lives at http://fedorahosted.org/func # read more at https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/FuncIntegration # you will need to mirror Fedora/EPEL packages for this feature, so see # https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/ManageYumRepos if you want cobbler # to help you with this func_auto_setup: 0 func_master: overlord.example.org # more important file locations... httpd_bin: /usr/sbin/httpd # change this port if Apache is not running plaintext on port # 80. Most people can leave this alone. http_port: 80 # kernel options that should be present in every cobbler installation. # kernel options can also be applied at the distro/profile/system # level. kernel_options: ksdevice: eth0 lang: ' ' text: ~ # configuration options if using the authn_ldap module. See the # the Wiki for details. This can be ignored if you are not using # LDAP for WebUI/XMLRPC authentication. ldap_server: "ldap.example.com" ldap_base_dn: "DC=example,DC=com" ldap_port: 389 ldap_tls: 1 ldap_anonymous_bind: 1 ldap_search_bind_dn: '' ldap_search_passwd: '' ldap_search_prefix: 'uid=' # set to 1 to enable Cobbler's DHCP management features. # the choice of DHCP management engine is in /etc/cobbler/modules.conf manage_dhcp: 0 # set to 1 to enable Cobbler's DNS management features. # the choice of DNS mangement engine is in /etc/cobbler/modules.conf manage_dns: 0 # if using BIND (named) for DNS management in /etc/cobbler/modules.conf # and manage_dns is enabled (above), this lists which zones are managed # See the Wiki (https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/ManageDns) for more info manage_forward_zones: [] manage_reverse_zones: [] # cobbler has a feature that allows for integration with config management # systems such as Puppet. The following parameters work in conjunction with # --mgmt-classes and are described in furhter detail at: # https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/UsingCobblerWithConfigManagementSystem mgmt_classes: [] mgmt_parameters: from_cobbler: 1 # location where cobbler will write its named.conf when BIND dns management is # enabled named_conf: /etc/named.conf # if using cobbler with manage_dhcp, put the IP address # of the cobbler server here so that PXE booting guests can find it # if you do not set this correctly, this will be manifested in TFTP open timeouts. next_server: andromeda.ekt.gr # if using cobbler with manage_dhcp and ISC, omapi allows realtime DHCP # updates without restarting ISC dhcpd. However, it may cause # problems with removing leases and make things less reliable. OMAPI # usage is experimental and not recommended at this time. omapi_enabled: 0 omapi_port: 647 omshell_bin: /usr/bin/omshell # settings for power management features. optional. # see https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/PowerManagement to learn more # choices: # bullpap # wti # apc_snmp # ether-wake # ipmilan # drac # ipmitool # ilo # rsa # lpar # bladecenter # virsh power_management_default_type: 'ipmitool' # the commands used by the power management module are sourced # from what directory? power_template_dir: "/etc/cobbler/power" # if this setting is set to 1, cobbler systems that pxe boot # will request at the end of their installation to toggle the # --netboot-enabled record in the cobbler system record. This eliminates # the potential for a PXE boot loop if the system is set to PXE # first in it's BIOS order. Enable this if PXE is first in your BIOS # boot order, otherwise leave this disabled. See the manpage # for --netboot-enabled. pxe_just_once: 0 # the templates used for PXE config generation are sourced # from what directory? pxe_template_dir: "/etc/cobbler/pxe" # Are you using a Red Hat management platform in addition to Cobbler? # Cobbler can help you register to it. Choose one of the following: # "off" : I'm not using Red Hat Network, Satellite, or Spacewalk # "hosted" : I'm using Red Hat Network # "site" : I'm using Red Hat Satellite Server or Spacewalk # You will also want to read: https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/wiki/TipsForRhn redhat_management_type: "site" # if redhat_management_type is enabled, choose your server # "management.example.org" : For Satellite or Spacewalk # "xmlrpc.rhn.redhat.com" : For Red Hat Network # This setting is also used by the code that supports using Spacewalk/Satellite users/passwords # within Cobbler Web and Cobbler XMLRPC. Using RHN Hosted for this is not supported. # This feature can be used even if redhat_management_type is off, you just have # to have authn_spacewalk selected in modules.conf redhat_management_server: "andromeda.ekt.gr" # specify the default Red Hat authorization key to use to register # system. If left blank, no registration will be attempted. Similarly # you can set the --redhat-management-key to blank on any system to # keep it from trying to register. redhat_management_key: "" # if using authn_spacewalk in modules.conf to let cobbler authenticate # against Satellite/Spacewalk's auth system, by default it will not allow per user # access into Cobbler Web and Cobbler XMLRPC. # in order to permit this, the following setting must be enabled HOWEVER # doing so will permit all Spacewalk/Satellite users of certain types to edit all # of cobbler's configuration. # these roles are: config_admin and org_admin # users should turn this on only if they want this behavior and # do not have a cross-multi-org seperation concern. If you have # a single org in your satellite, it's probably safe to turn this # on and then you can use CobblerWeb alongside a Satellite install. redhat_management_permissive: 0 # when DHCP and DNS management are enabled, cobbler sync can automatically # restart those services to apply changes. The exception for this is # if using ISC for DHCP, then omapi eliminates the need for a restart. # omapi, however, is experimental and not recommended for most configurations. # If DHCP and DNS are going to be managed, but hosted on a box that # is not on this server, disable restarts here and write some other # script to ensure that the config files get copied/rsynced to the destination # box. This can be done by modifying the restart services trigger. # Note that if manage_dhcp and manage_dns are disabled, the respective # parameter will have no effect. Most users should not need to change # this. restart_dns: 1 restart_dhcp: 1 # if set to 1, new systems doing profile based installations will # contact cobbler to have system records created for them containing # the mac address information that they have requested for install. # this effectively allows for registration of new hardware via PXE # without having to manually enter in all of the mac addresses for # every machine on your network register_new_installs: 0 # install triggers are scripts in /var/lib/cobbler/triggers/install # that are triggered in kickstart pre and post sections. Any # executable script in those directories is run. They can be used # to send email or perform other actions. They are currently # run as root so if you do not need this functionality you can # disable it, though this will also disable "cobbler status" which # uses a logging trigger to audit install progress. run_install_triggers: 1 # this is the address of the cobbler server -- as it is used # by systems during the install process, it must be the address # or hostname of the system as those systems can see the server. # if you have a server that appears differently to different subnets # (dual homed, etc), you need to read the --server-override section # of the manpage for how that works. server: andromeda.ekt.gr # this is a directory of files that cobbler uses to make # templating easier. See the Wiki for more information. Changing # this directory should not be required. snippetsdir: /var/lib/cobbler/snippets # by default, installs are set to send syslog traffic on this port # and cobblerd will listen on this port. syslog data (for installs # that support it... RHEL 5 and later, etc) is logged in /var/log/cobbler # and can be used to help debug problematic installations. Syslog # is UDP and may not be available depending on network/firewall configuration. syslog_port: 25150 # by default, installs are *not* set to send installation logs to the cobbler # server. With 'anamon_enabled', kickstart templates may use the pre_anamon # snippet to allow remote live monitoring of their installations from the # cobbler server. Installation logs will be stored under # /var/log/cobbler/anamon/. NOTE: This does allow an xmlrpc call to send logs # to this directory, without authentication, so enable only if you are # ok with this limitation. anamon_enabled: 0 # locations of the TFTP binary and config file tftpd_bin: /usr/sbin/in.tftpd tftpd_conf: /etc/xinetd.d/tftp # cobbler's web directory. Don't change this setting -- see the # Wiki on "relocating your cobbler install" if your /var partition # is not large enough. webdir: /var/www/cobbler # cobbler's public XMLRPC listens on this port. Change this only # if absolutely needed, as you'll have to start supplying a new # port option to koan if it is not the default. xmlrpc_port: 25151 # cobbler's read write XMLRPC is the version of XMLRPC # used by the WebUI and some features like system registration. # XMLRPC connections here require login information to access. # this feature can be disabled to gain increased security but # will disable the WebUI, registration, and potentially other # cobbler features. Most users should leave XMLRPC RW # enabled. The port can be relocated if needed. xmlrpc_rw_enabled: 1 xmlrpc_rw_port: 25152 # "cobbler repo add" commands set cobbler up with repository # information that can be used during kickstart and is automatically # set up in the cobbler kickstart templates. By default, these # are only available at install time. To make these repositories # usable on installed systems (since cobbler makes a very convient) # mirror, set this to 1. Most users can safely set this to 1. Users # who have a dual homed cobbler server, or are installing laptops that # will not always have access to the cobbler server may wish to leave # this as 0. In that case, the cobbler mirrored yum repos are still # accessable at http://cobbler.example.org/cblr/repo_mirror and yum # configuration can still be done manually. This is just a shortcut. yum_post_install_mirror: 1 # additional flags to yum commands yumreposync_flags: "-l" yumdownloader_flags: "--resolve"