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haproxy

Configures HAProxy servers and manages the configuration of backend member servers.

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Version information

  • 1.5.1 (latest)
  • 1.5.0
released Oct 28th 2016
This version is compatible with:
  • Puppet Enterprise >= 3.0.0 < 2015.4.0
  • Puppet >= 3.5.0 < 5.0.0
  • , , , , ,

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Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'stxjk-haproxy', '1.5.1'
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bolt module add stxjk-haproxy
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install stxjk-haproxy --version 1.5.1

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Documentation

stxjk/haproxy — version 1.5.1 Oct 28th 2016

#haproxy

####Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful
  3. Setup - The basics of getting started with haproxy
  4. Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
  5. Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
  6. Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
  7. Development - Guide for contributing to the module

##Overview

The haproxy module lets you use Puppet to install, configure, and manage HAProxy.

##Module Description

HAProxy is a daemon for load-balancing and proxying TCP- and HTTP-based services. This module lets you use Puppet to configure HAProxy servers and backend member servers.

##Setup

###Beginning with haproxy

The simplest HAProxy configuration consists of a server that listens on a port and balances against some other nodes:

node 'haproxy-server' {
  include ::haproxy
  haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
    collect_exported => false,
    ipaddress        => $::ipaddress,
    ports            => '8140',
  }
  haproxy::balancermember { 'master00':
    listening_service => 'puppet00',
    server_names      => 'master00.example.com',
    ipaddresses       => '10.0.0.10',
    ports             => '8140',
    options           => 'check',
  }
  haproxy::balancermember { 'master01':
    listening_service => 'puppet00',
    server_names      => 'master01.example.com',
    ipaddresses       => '10.0.0.11',
    ports             => '8140',
    options           => 'check',
  }
}

##Usage

###Configure HAProxy options

The main haproxy class has many options for configuring your HAProxy server:

class { 'haproxy':
  global_options   => {
    'log'     => "${::ipaddress} local0",
    'chroot'  => '/var/lib/haproxy',
    'pidfile' => '/var/run/haproxy.pid',
    'maxconn' => '4000',
    'user'    => 'haproxy',
    'group'   => 'haproxy',
    'daemon'  => '',
    'stats'   => 'socket /var/lib/haproxy/stats',
  },
  defaults_options => {
    'log'     => 'global',
    'stats'   => 'enable',
    'option'  => [
      'redispatch',
    ],
    'retries' => '3',
    'timeout' => [
      'http-request 10s',
      'queue 1m',
      'connect 10s',
      'client 1m',
      'server 1m',
      'check 10s',
    ],
    'maxconn' => '8000',
  },
}

The above shown values are the module's defaults for platforms like Debian and RedHat (see haproxy::params for details). If you wish to override or add to any of these defaults set merge_options => true (see below) and set global_options and/or defaults_options to a hash containing just the option => value pairs you need changed or added. In case of duplicates your supplied values will "win" over the default values (this is especially noteworthy for arrays -- they cannot be merged easily). If you want to completely remove a parameter set it to the special value undef:

class { 'haproxy':
  global_options   => {
    'maxconn' => undef,
    'user'    => 'root',
    'group'   => 'root',
    'stats'   => [
      'socket /var/lib/haproxy/stats',
      'timeout 30s'
    ]
  },
  defaults_options => {
    'retries' => '5',
    'option'  => [
      'redispatch',
      'http-server-close',
      'logasap',
    ],
    'timeout' => [
      'http-request 7s',
      'connect 3s',
      'check 9s',
    ],
    'maxconn' => '15000',
  },
}

###Configure HAProxy daemon listener

To export the resource for a balancermember and collect it on a single HAProxy load balancer server:

haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
  ipaddress => $::ipaddress,
  ports     => '18140',
  mode      => 'tcp',
  options   => {
    'option'  => [
      'tcplog',
    ],
    'balance' => 'roundrobin',
  },
}

###Configure multi-network daemon listener

If you need a more complex configuration for the listen block, use the $bind parameter:

haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
  mode    => 'tcp',
  options => {
    'option'  => [
      'tcplog',
    ],
    'balance' => 'roundrobin',
  },
  bind    => {
    '10.0.0.1:443'             => ['ssl', 'crt', 'puppetlabs.com'],
    '168.12.12.12:80'          => [],
    '192.168.122.42:8000-8100' => ['ssl', 'crt', 'puppetlabs.com'],
    ':8443,:8444'              => ['ssl', 'crt', 'internal.puppetlabs.com']
  },
}

Note: $ports and $ipaddress cannot be used in combination with $bind.

###Configure HAProxy load-balanced member nodes

First export the resource for a balancermember:

@@haproxy::balancermember { 'haproxy':
  listening_service => 'puppet00',
  ports             => '8140',
  server_names      => $::hostname,
  ipaddresses       => $::ipaddress,
  options           => 'check',
}

Then collect the resource on a load balancer:

Haproxy::Balancermember <<| listening_service == 'puppet00' |>>

Then create the resource for multiple balancermembers at once:

haproxy::balancermember { 'haproxy':
  listening_service => 'puppet00',
  ports             => '8140',
  server_names      => ['server01', 'server02'],
  ipaddresses       => ['192.168.56.200', '192.168.56.201'],
  options           => 'check',
}

This example assumes a single-pass installation of HAProxy where you know the members in advance. Otherwise, you'd need a first pass to export the resources.

###Configure a load balancer with exported resources

Install and configure an HAProxy service listening on port 8140 and balanced against all collected nodes:

node 'haproxy-server' {
  include ::haproxy
  haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
    ipaddress => $::ipaddress,
    ports     => '8140',
  }
}

node /^master\d+/ {
  @@haproxy::balancermember { $::fqdn:
    listening_service => 'puppet00',
    server_names      => $::hostname,
    ipaddresses       => $::ipaddress,
    ports             => '8140',
    options           => 'check',
  }
}

The resulting HAProxy service uses storeconfigs to collect and realize balancermember servers, and automatically collects configurations from backend servers. The backend nodes export their HAProxy configurations to the Puppet master, which then distributes them to the HAProxy server.

###Set up a frontend service

This example routes traffic from port 8140 to all balancermembers added to a backend with the title 'puppet_backend00':

haproxy::frontend { 'puppet00':
  ipaddress     => $::ipaddress,
  ports         => '18140',
  mode          => 'tcp',
  bind_options  => 'accept-proxy',
  options       => {
    'default_backend' => 'puppet_backend00',
    'timeout client'  => '30s',
    'option'          => [
      'tcplog',
      'accept-invalid-http-request',
    ],
  },
}

If option order is important, pass an array of hashes to the options parameter:

haproxy::frontend { 'puppet00':
  ipaddress     => $::ipaddress,
  ports         => '18140',
  mode          => 'tcp',
  bind_options  => 'accept-proxy',
  options       => [
    { 'default_backend' => 'puppet_backend00' },
    { 'timeout client'  => '30s' },
    { 'option'          => [
        'tcplog',
        'accept-invalid-http-request',
      ],
    }
  ],
}

This adds the frontend options to the configuration block in the same order as they appear within your array.

###Set up a backend service

haproxy::backend { 'puppet00':
  options => {
    'option'  => [
      'tcplog',
    ],
    'balance' => 'roundrobin',
  },
}

If option order is important, pass an array of hashes to the options parameter:

haproxy::backend { 'puppet00':
  options => [
    { 'option'  => [
        'tcplog',
      ]
    },
    { 'balance' => 'roundrobin' },
    { 'cookie'  => 'C00 insert' },
  ],
}

###Set up stick-tables for a frontend (or a backend)

haproxy::backend { 'backend01':
  options => [
    { 'stick-table' => 'type ip size 1 nopurge peers LB' },
    { 'stick'       => 'on dst' },
  ],
}

This adds the backend options to the configuration block in the same order as they appear within the array.

###Configure multiple haproxy instances on one machine

This is an advanced feature typically only used at large sites.

It is possible to run multiple haproxy processes ("instances") on the same machine. This has the benefit that each is a distinct failure domain, each can be restarted independently, and each can run a different binary.

In this use case, instead of using Class['haproxy'], each process is started using haproxy::instance{'inst'} where inst is the name of the instance. It assumes there is a matching Service['inst'] that will be used to manage service. Different sites may have different requirements for how the Service[] is constructed. However, haproxy::instance_service exists as an example of one way to do this, and may be sufficient for most sites.

In this example, two instances are created. The first uses the standard class and uses haproxy::instance to add an additional instance called beta.

   include ::haproxy
   haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
     instance         => 'haproxy',
     collect_exported => false,
     ipaddress        => $::ipaddress,
     ports            => '8800',
   }

   haproxy::instance { 'beta': }
   ->
   haproxy::instance_service { 'beta':
     haproxy_package     => 'custom_haproxy',
     haproxy_init_source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/haproxy-beta.init",
   }
   ->
   haproxy::listen { 'puppet00':
     instance         => 'beta',
     collect_exported => false,
     ipaddress        => $::ipaddress,
     ports            => '9900',
   }

In this example, two instances are created called group1 and group2. The second uses a custom package.

   haproxy::instance { 'group1': }
   ->
   haproxy::instance_service { 'group1':
     haproxy_init_source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/haproxy-group1.init",
   }
   ->
   haproxy::listen { 'group1-puppet00':
     section_name     => 'puppet00',
     instance         => 'group1',
     collect_exported => false,
     ipaddress        => $::ipaddress,
     ports            => '8800',
   }
   haproxy::instance { 'group2': }
   ->
   haproxy::instance_service { 'group2':
     haproxy_package     => 'custom_haproxy',
     haproxy_init_source => "puppet:///modules/${module_name}/haproxy-group2.init",
   }
   ->
   haproxy::listen { 'group2-puppet00':
     section_name     => 'puppet00',
     instance         => 'group2',
     collect_exported => false,
     ipaddress        => $::ipaddress,
     ports            => '9900',
   }

Manage a map file

haproxy::mapfile { 'domains-to-backends':
  ensure   => 'present',
  mappings => [
    { 'app01.example.com' => 'bk_app01' },
    { 'app02.example.com' => 'bk_app02' },
    { 'app03.example.com' => 'bk_app03' },
    { 'app04.example.com' => 'bk_app04' },
    'app05.example.com bk_app05',
    'app06.example.com bk_app06',
  ],
}

This creates a file /etc/haproxy/domains-to-backends.map containing the mappings specified in the mappings array.

The map file can then be used in a frontend to map Host: values to backends, implementing name-based virtual hosting:

frontend ft_allapps
  [...]
  use_backend %[req.hdr(host),lower,map(/etc/haproxy/domains-to-backends.map,bk_default)]

Or expressed using haproxy::frontend:

haproxy::frontend { 'ft_allapps':
  ipaddress => '0.0.0.0',
  ports     => '80',
  mode      => 'http',
  options   => {
    'use_backend' => '%[req.hdr(host),lower,map(/etc/haproxy/domains-to-backends.map,bk_default)]'
  }
}

##Reference

###Classes

####Public classes

####Private classes

  • haproxy::params: Sets parameter defaults per operating system.
  • haproxy::install: Installs packages.
  • haproxy::config: Configures haproxy.cfg.
  • haproxy::service: Manages the haproxy service.

###Defines

####Public defines

####Private defines

  • haproxy::balancermember::collect_exported: Collects exported balancermembers.
  • haproxy::peer::collect_exported: Collects exported peers.
  • haproxy::mailer::collect_exported: Collects exported mailers.

Class: haproxy

Main class, includes all other classes.

Parameters (all optional)
  • custom_fragment: Inserts an arbitrary string into the configuration file. Useful for configurations not available through other parameters. Valid options: a string (e.g., output from the template() function). Default: undef.

  • defaults_options: Configures all the default HAProxy options at once. Valid options: a hash of option => value pairs. To set an option multiple times (e.g. multiple 'timeout' or 'stats' values) pass its value as an array. Each element in your array results in a separate instance of the option, on a separate line in haproxy.cfg. Default:

    {
      'log'     => 'global',
      'stats'   => 'enable',
      'option'  => [
        'redispatch',
      ],
      'retries' => '3',
      'timeout' => [
        'http-request 10s',
        'queue 1m',
        'connect 10s',
        'client 1m',
        'server 1m',
        'check 10s',
      ],
      'maxconn' => '8000'
    }
    

    To override or add to any of these default values you don't have to recreate and supply the whole hash, just set merge_options => true (see below) and set defaults_options to a hash of the option => value pairs you'd like to override or add. But note that array values cannot be easily merged with the default values without potentially creating duplicates so you always have to supply the whole array yourself. And if you want a parameter to not appear at all in the resulting configuration set its value to undef. Example:

    {
      'retries' => '5',
      'timeout' => [
        'http-request 7s',
        'http-keep-alive 10s,
        'queue 1m',
        'connect 5s',
        'client 1m',
        'server 1m',
        'check 10s',
      ],
      'maxconn' => undef,
    }
    
  • global_options: Configures all the global HAProxy options at once. Valid options: a hash of option => value pairs. To set an option multiple times (e.g. multiple 'timeout' or 'stats' values) pass its value as an array. Each element in your array results in a separate instance of the option, on a separate line in haproxy.cfg. Default:

    {
      'log'     => "${::ipaddress} local0",
      'chroot'  => '/var/lib/haproxy',
      'pidfile' => '/var/run/haproxy.pid',
      'maxconn' => '4000',
      'user'    => 'haproxy',
      'group'   => 'haproxy',
      'daemon'  => '',
      'stats'   => 'socket /var/lib/haproxy/stats'
    }
    

    To override or add to any of these default values you don't have to recreate and supply the whole hash, just set merge_options => true (see below) and set global_options to a hash of the option => value pairs you'd like to override or add. But note that array values cannot be easily merged with the default values without potentially creating duplicates so you always have to supply the whole array yourself. And if you want a parameter to not appear at all in the resulting configuration set its value to undef. Example:

    {
      'log'   => undef,
      'user'  => 'root',
      'group' => 'root',
      'stats' => [
        'socket /var/lib/haproxy/admin.sock mode 660 level admin',
        'timeout 30s',
      ],
    }
    
  • merge_options: Whether to merge the user-supplied global_options/defaults_options hashes with their default values set in params.pp. Merging allows to change or add options without having to recreate the entire hash. Defaults to false, but will default to true in future releases.

  • package_ensure: Specifies whether the HAProxy package should exist. Defaults to 'present'. Valid options: 'present' and 'absent'. Default: 'present'.

  • package_name: Specifies the name of the HAProxy package. Valid options: a string. Default: 'haproxy'.

  • restart_command: Specifies a command that Puppet can use to restart the service after configuration changes. Passed directly as the restart parameter to Puppet's native service resource. Valid options: a string. Default: undef (if not specified, Puppet uses the service default).

  • service_ensure: Specifies whether the HAProxy service should be enabled at boot and running, or disabled at boot and stopped. Valid options: 'running' and 'stopped'. Default: 'running'.

  • service_manage: Specifies whether the state of the HAProxy service should be managed by Puppet. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. Default: 'true'.

  • service_options: Contents for the /etc/defaults/haproxy file on Debian. Defaults to "ENABLED=1\n" on Debian, and is ignored on other systems.

  • sysconfig_options: Contents for the /etc/sysconfig/haproxy file on RedHat(-based) systems. Defaults to OPTIONS="" on RedHat(-based) systems and is ignored on others

  • config_dir: Path to the directory in which the main configuration file haproxy.cfg resides. Will also be used for storing any managed map files (see haproxy::mapfile. Default depends on platform.

Class: haproxy::globals

For global configuration options used by all haproxy instances.

Parameters (all optional)
  • sort_options_alphabetic: Sort options either alphabetic or custom like haproxy internal sorts them. Defaults to true.

Define: haproxy::balancermember

Configures a service inside a listening or backend service configuration block in haproxy.cfg.

Parameters
  • define_cookies: Optional. Specifies whether to add 'cookie SERVERID' stickiness options. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. Default: 'false'.

  • ensure: Specifies whether the balancermember should be listed in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: 'present' and 'absent'. Default: 'present'.

  • ipaddresses: Optional. Specifies the IP address used to contact the balancermember service. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to the server_names parameter. For each pair of entries in the ipaddresses and server_names arrays, Puppet creates server entries in haproxy.cfg targeting each port specified in the ports parameter. Default: the value of the $::ipaddress fact.

  • listening_service: Required. Associates the balancermember with an haproxy::listen resource. Valid options: a string matching the title of a declared haproxy::listen resource.

  • options: Optional. Adds one or more options to the listening service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg, following the server declaration. Valid options: a string or an array. Default: ''.

  • ports: Optional. Specifies one or more ports on which the load balancer sends connections to balancermembers. Valid options: an array. Default: undef. If no port is specified, the load balancer forwards traffic on the same port as received on the frontend.

  • server_names: Required unless collect_exported is set to true. Sets the name of the balancermember service in the listening service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to the ipaddresses parameter. For each pair of entries in the ipaddresses and server_names arrays, Puppet creates server entries in haproxy.cfg targeting each port specified in the ports parameter. Default: the value of the $::hostname fact.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

  • defaults: Optional. Name of the defaults section the backend or listener use. Defaults to undef.

Define: haproxy::backend

Sets up a backend service configuration block inside haproxy.cfg. Each backend service needs one or more balancermember services (declared with the haproxy::balancermember define).

Parameters
  • collect_exported: Optional. Specifies whether to collect resources exported by other nodes. This serves as a form of autodiscovery. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. If set to 'false', Puppet only manages balancermembers that you specify through the haproxy::balancermembers define. Default: 'true'.

  • name: Optional. Supplies a name for the backend service. This value appears right after the 'backend' statement in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • options: Optional. Adds one or more options to the backend service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a hash or an array. To control the ordering of these options within the configuration block, supply an array of hashes where each hash contains one 'option => value' pair. Default:

    {
      'option'  => [
        'tcplog',
        'ssl-hello-chk'
      ],
      'balance' => 'roundrobin'
    }
    
  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

  • sort_options_alphabetic: Sort options either alphabetic or custom like haproxy internal sorts them. Defaults to haproxy::globals::sort_options_alphabetic.

  • defaults: Optional Name of the defaults section this backend will use. Defaults to undef which means the global defaults section will be used.

Define: haproxy::frontend

Sets up a frontend service configuration block inside haproxy.cfg. Each frontend service needs one or more balancermember services (declared with the haproxy::balancermember define).

Parameters
  • bind: Required unless ports and ipaddress are specified. Adds one or more bind lines to the frontend service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a hash of 'address:port' => [parameters] pairs, where the key is a comma-delimited list of one or more listening addresses and ports passed as a string, and the value is an array of bind options. For example:

    bind => {
      '168.12.12.12:80'                     => [],
      '192.168.1.10:8080,192.168.1.10:8081' => [],
      '10.0.0.1:443-453'                    => ['ssl', 'crt', 'puppetlabs.com'],
      ':8443,:8444'                         => ['ssl', 'crt', 'internal.puppetlabs.com'],
      '/var/run/haproxy-frontend.sock'      => [ 'user root', 'mode 600', 'accept-proxy' ],
    }
    

For more information, see the HAProxy Configuration Manual.

  • bind_options: Deprecated. This setting has never functioned in any version of the haproxy module. Use bind instead.

  • ipaddress: Required unless bind is specified. Specifies an IP address for the proxy to bind to. Valid options: a string. If left unassigned or set to '*' or '0.0.0.0', the proxy listens to all valid addresses on the system.

  • mode: Optional. Sets the mode of operation for the frontend service. Valid options: 'tcp', 'http', and 'health'. Default: undef.

  • name: Optional. Supplies a name for the frontend service. This value appears right after the 'frontend' statement in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • options: Optional. Adds one or more options to the frontend service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a hash or an array. To control the ordering of these options within the configuration block, supply an array of hashes where each hash contains one 'option => value' pair.

    {
      'option'  => [
        'tcplog',
      ],
    }
    
  • ports: Required unless bind is specified. Specifies which ports to listen on for the address specified in ipaddress. Valid options: an array of port numbers and/or port ranges or a string containing a comma-delimited list of port numbers/ranges.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

  • sort_options_alphabetic: Sort options either alphabetic or custom like haproxy internal sorts them. Defaults to haproxy::globals::sort_options_alphabetic.

  • defaults: Optional Name of the defaults section this frontend will use. Defaults to undef which means the global defaults section will be used.

  • defaults_use_backend: If defaults are used and a default backend is configured use the backend name for ordering. This means that the frontend is placed in the configuration file before the backend configuration. Defaults to true.

Define: haproxy::listen

Sets up a listening service configuration block inside haproxy.cfg. Each listening service configuration needs one or more balancermember services (declared with the haproxy::balancermember define).

Parameters
  • bind: Required unless ports and ipaddress are specified. Adds one or more bind options to the listening service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a hash of 'address:port' => [parameters] pairs, where the key is a comma-delimited list of one or more listening addresses and ports passed as a string, and the value is an array of bind options. For example:

    bind => {
      '168.12.12.12:80'                     => [],
      '192.168.1.10:8080,192.168.1.10:8081' => [],
      '10.0.0.1:443-453'                    => ['ssl', 'crt', 'puppetlabs.com'],
      ':8443,:8444'                         => ['ssl', 'crt', 'internal.puppetlabs.com'],
      '/var/run/haproxy-frontend.sock'      => [ 'user root', 'mode 600', 'accept-proxy' ],
    }
    

For more information, see the HAProxy Configuration Manual.

  • bind_options: Deprecated. This setting has never functioned in any version of the haproxy module. Use bind instead.

  • collect_exported: Optional. Specifies whether to collect resources exported by other nodes. This serves as a form of autodiscovery. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. If set to 'false', Puppet only manages balancermembers that you specify through the haproxy::balancermembers define. Default: 'true'.

  • ipaddress: Required unless bind is specified. Specifies an IP address for the proxy to bind to. Valid options: a string. If left unassigned or set to '*' or '0.0.0.0', the proxy listens to all valid addresses on the system.

  • mode: Optional. Sets the mode of operation for the listening service. Valid options: 'tcp', 'http', and 'health'. Default: undef.

  • name: Optional. Supplies a name for the listening service. This value appears right after the 'listen' statement in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • options: Optional. Adds one or more options to the listening service's configuration block in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a hash or an array. To control the ordering of these options within the configuration block, supply an array of hashes where each hash contains one 'option => value' pair.

  • ports: Required unless bind is specified. Specifies which ports to listen on for the address specified in ipaddress. Valid options: a single comma-delimited string or an array of strings. Each string can contain a port number or a hyphenated range of port numbers (e.g., 8443-8450).

  • sort_options_alphabetic: Sort options either alphabetic or custom like haproxy internal sorts them. Defaults to haproxy::globals::sort_options_alphabetic.

  • defaults: Optional Name of the defaults section this listen section will use. Defaults to undef which means the global defaults section will be used.

Define: haproxy::userlist

Sets up a userlist configuration block inside haproxy.cfg.

Parameters
  • groups: Required unless users is specified. Adds groups to the userlist. For more information, see the HAProxy Configuration Manual. Valid options: an array of groupnames. Default: undef.

  • name: Optional. Supplies a name for the userlist. This value appears right after the 'userlist' statement in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • users: Required unless groups is specified. Adds users to the userlist. For more information, see the HAProxy Configuration Manual. Valid options: an array of usernames. Default: undef.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Define: haproxy::peers

Sets up a peers entry in haproxy.cfg on the load balancer. This entry is required to share the current state of HAProxy with other HAProxy instances in high-availability configurations.

Parameters
  • collect_exported: Optional. Specifies whether to collect resources exported by other nodes. This serves as a form of autodiscovery. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. Default: 'true'.

  • name: Optional. Appends a name to the peers entry in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Define: haproxy::peer

Sets up a peer entry inside the peers configuration block in haproxy.cfg.

Parameters
  • ipaddresses: Required unless the collect_exported parameter of your haproxy::peers resource is set to true. Specifies the IP address used to contact the peer member server. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to the server_names parameter. Puppet pairs up the elements from both arrays and creates a peer for each pair of values. Default: the value of the $::ipaddress fact.

  • peers_name: Required. Specifies the peer in which to add the load balancer. Valid options: a string containing the name of an HAProxy peer.

  • port: Required. Specifies the port on which the load balancer sends connections to peers. Valid options: a string containing a port number.

  • server_names: Required unless the collect_exported parameter of your haproxy::peers resource is set to true. Sets the name of the peer server as listed in the peers configuration block. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to ipaddresses. Puppet pairs up the elements from both arrays and creates a peer for each pair of values. Default: the value of the $::hostname fact.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Define: haproxy::mailers

Sets up a mailers entry in haproxy.cfg on the load balancer to send email to each mailer that is configured in a mailers section alerts when the state of servers changes.

Parameters
  • collect_exported: Optional. Specifies whether to collect resources exported by other nodes. This serves as a form of autodiscovery. Valid options: 'true' and 'false'. Default: 'true'.

  • name: Optional. Appends a name to the mailers entry in haproxy.cfg. Valid options: a string. Default: the title of your declared resource.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Define: haproxy::mailer

Sets up a mailer entry inside the mailers configuration block in haproxy.cfg.

Parameters
  • ipaddresses: Required unless the collect_exported parameter of your haproxy::mailers resource is set to true. Specifies the IP address used to contact the mailer email server. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to the server_names parameter. Puppet pairs up the elements from both arrays and creates a mailer for each pair of values. Default: the value of the $::ipaddress fact.

  • mailers_name: Required. Specifies the name of a valid haproxy::mailers resource. Valid options: a string containing the name of an HAProxy mailer.

  • port: Required. Specifies the port to which the load balancer makes its smtp connection. Valid options: a string containing a port number.

  • server_names: Required unless the collect_exported parameter of your haproxy::mailers resource is set to true. Sets the name of the email server as listed in the mailers configuration block. Valid options: a string or an array. If you pass an array, it must contain the same number of elements as the array you pass to ipaddresses. Puppet pairs up the elements from both arrays and creates a mailer for each pair of values. Default: the value of the $::hostname fact.

  • instance: Optional. When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Define: haproxy::instance

Runs multiple instances of haproxy on the same machine. Normally users use the Class['haproxy'], which runs a single haproxy daemon on a machine.

Parameters
  • package_ensure: Chooses whether the haproxy package should be installed or uninstalled. Defaults to 'present'

  • package_name: The package name of haproxy. Defaults to undef, and no package is installed. NOTE: Class['haproxy'] has a different default.

  • service_ensure: Chooses whether the haproxy service should be running & enabled at boot, or stopped and disabled at boot. Defaults to 'running'

  • service_manage: Chooses whether the haproxy service state should be managed by puppet at all. Defaults to true

  • global_options: A hash of all the haproxy global options. If you want to specify more than one option (i.e. multiple timeout or stats options), pass those options as an array and you will get a line for each of them in the resultant haproxy.cfg file.

  • defaults_options: A hash of all the haproxy defaults options. If you want to specify more than one option (i.e. multiple timeout or stats options), pass those options as an array and you will get a line for each of them in the resultant haproxy.cfg file.

  • restart_command: Command to use when restarting the on config changes. Passed directly as the 'restart' parameter to the service resource. Defaults to undef i.e. whatever the service default is.

  • custom_fragment: Allows arbitrary HAProxy configuration to be passed through to support additional configuration not available via parameters, or to short-circuit the defined resources such as haproxy::listen when an operater would rather just write plain configuration. Accepts a string (ie, output from the template() function). Defaults to undef

  • config_file: Allows arbitrary config filename to be specified. If this is used, it is assumed that the directory path to the file exists and has owner/group/permissions as desired. If set to undef, the name will be generated as follows: If $title is 'haproxy', the operating system default will be used. Otherwise, /etc/haproxy-$title/haproxy-$title.conf (Linux), or /usr/local/etc/haproxy-$title/haproxy-$title.conf (FreeBSD) The parent directory will be created automatically. Defaults to undef.

Define: haproxy::instance_service

Example manifest that shows one way to create the Service[] environment needed by haproxy::instance.

Parameters
  • haproxy_package: The name of the package to be installed. This is useful if you package your own custom version of haproxy. Defaults to 'haproxy'

  • bindir: Where to put symlinks to the binary used for each instance. Defaults to '/opt/haproxy/bin'

  • haproxy_init_source: Path to the template init.d script that will start/restart/reload this instance.

  • haproxy_unit_template: Path to the template systemd service unit definition that will start/restart/reload this instance.

Define: haproxy::mapfile

Manages an HAProxy map file. A map allows to map data in input to other data on output. This is especially useful for efficiently mapping domain names to backends, thus effectively implementing name-based virtual hosting. A map file contains one key + value per line. These key-value pairs are specified in the mappings array.

This article on the HAProxy blog gives a nice overview of the use case: http://blog.haproxy.com/2015/01/26/web-application-name-to-backend-mapping-in-haproxy/

Parameters
  • namevar: The namevar of the defined resource type is the filename of the map file (without any extension), relative to the haproxy::config_dir directory. A '.map' extension is added automatically.

  • mappings: An array of mappings for this map file. Array elements may be Hashes with a single key-value pair each (preferably) or simple Strings. Default: []. Example:

    mappings => [
      { 'app01.example.com' => 'bk_app01' },
      { 'app02.example.com' => 'bk_app02' },
      { 'app03.example.com' => 'bk_app03' },
      { 'app04.example.com' => 'bk_app04' },
      'app05.example.com bk_app05',
      'app06.example.com bk_app06',
    ]
    
  • ensure: The state of the underlying file resource, either 'present' or 'absent'. Default: 'present'

  • owner: The owner of the underlying file resource. Defaut: 'root'

  • group: The group of the underlying file resource. Defaut: 'root'

  • mode: The mode of the underlying file resource. Defaut: '0644'

  • instances: Array of names of managed HAproxy instances to notify (restart/reload) when the map file is updated. This is so that the same map file can be used with multiple HAproxy instances (if multiple instances are used). Default: [ 'haproxy' ]

Define: haproxy::defaults

This type will setup a additional defaults configuration block inside the haproxy.cfg file on an haproxy load balancer. A new default configuration block resets all defaults of prior defaults configuration blocks. Further documentation of what options are allowed in defaults sections. Listener, Backends, Frontends and Balancermember can be configured behind a default configuration block by setting the defaults parameter to the corresponding defaults name.

Parameters (all optional)
  • options: A hash or array of hashes of options that are inserted into the defaults configuration block.

  • sort_options_alphabetic: Sort options either alphabetic or custom like haproxy internal sorts them. Defaults to true.

  • instance: When using haproxy::instance to run multiple instances of Haproxy on the same machine, this indicates which instance. Defaults to "haproxy".

Limitations

This module is tested and officially supported on the following platforms:

  • RHEL versions 5, 6, and 7
  • Ubuntu versions 10.04, 12.04, and 14.04
  • Debian versions 6 and 7
  • Scientific Linux versions 5, 6, and 7
  • CentOS versions 5, 6, and 7
  • Oracle Linux versions 5, 6, and 7

Testing on other platforms has been light and cannot be guaranteed.

Development

Puppet Labs modules on the Puppet Forge are open projects, and community contributions are essential for keeping them great. We can't access the huge number of platforms and myriad hardware, software, and deployment configurations that Puppet is intended to serve. We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes so that our modules work in your environment. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things.

For more information, see our module contribution guide.

To see who's already involved, see the list of contributors.