Equipment/Denning: Difference between revisions
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The dns stuff in /etc/network/interfaces appears to be bogus and resolv.conf needs to be | The dns stuff in /etc/network/interfaces appears to be bogus and resolv.conf needs to be | ||
done manually, add to ansible. | done manually, add to ansible. | ||
</nowiki> | |||
=== Bootstrapping a new machine to a static ip === | |||
<nowiki> | |||
Login to the new install and find it's ip, make sure you know the root password, or have an sshkey for the root account. | |||
Choose a hostname for your new machine. | |||
Log in to boole, and as root cd /etc/bind, and edit lan.london.hackspace.org.uk. and 24.31.172.in-addr.arpa. to add your new host, remember the new static ip you choose. | |||
There is only a few static ip's left, you may end up needing to shrink the dhcp range and change the dhcpserver config on boole as well. | |||
zkt-signer -v -r to sign and push out your changes. | |||
Check that the hostname works in fwd and reverse dns. | |||
and git commit your changes and log out of boole. | |||
on denning edit /etc/ansible/hosts, add: | |||
<ip> syslocation="something" lhs_host=<hostname> | |||
to at least [lhshosts], you probably want [ldap-clients] as well, and maybe some other sections, depending on what you want. | |||
then edit /etc/ansible/lhs/vars/defaults.yml , adding your host and the last octet of the new static ip to the hosts: section | |||
now ssh to the host to check that ssh works: | |||
ssh root@<ip> | |||
You may need to fix old cached pub keys, and/or allowing root to ssh to your new machine with a password ( PermotRootLogin yes in /etc/ssh/sshd_config on the machine you are setting up). | |||
Now you can run ansible. This example assumes you are using a password for root | |||
cd /etc/ansible | |||
ansible-playbook -l "<ip>" -k -u root lhs/site.yml | |||
and hopefully ansible should run ok and set everything up! | |||
Note that ansible will change the root password, hopefully you've got a way to get back in (either you are an admin in ansible, or in the Admins group in ldap, in either case you can login as yourself and then sudo). | |||
Now reboot the new machine, it should come back with the static ip. double check that it's right. | |||
Now edit /etc/ansible/hosts on denning again and in the entries you added earlier change <ip> to the machines new full hostname. | |||
Now run ansible again (needed to fix the snmp config), if it's an ldap client you'll have to use your ldap password - (You could always add your ssh key to your account on the new machine). | |||
git commit your changes on denning. | |||
and you are done! | |||
</nowiki> | </nowiki> |
Revision as of 19:09, 14 May 2015
Denning | |
---|---|
Model | Nexcom DNA1110 |
Sub-category | Systems |
Status | Good working order |
Training requirement | yes |
Training link | Unknown |
ACnode | no |
Owner | LHS |
Origin | donation from Tgreer |
Maintainers | Sysadmin team |
Denning
Runs the non-vital services that used to run on Boole. Might get used for other stuff as well. Same hardware as Boole
Runs the spacefed node for the space (via a freeradius server) and has an LDAP server. the LDAP db is replicated from Turing.
Runs zone minder, see below.
Also runs ansible for setting up machines in the space.
Zoneminder/cctv
Has an 8 port video capture card in it. It's currently connected to the 3 yard cameras and the rear lobby camera. The other 4 inputs are disabled until we put more cameras up.
The card is one of these (or a clone):
- http://www.zoneminder.com/wiki/index.php/File:Karta.jpg
- http://www.zoneminder.com/wiki/index.php/Kodicom_8800
The modprobe.d settings I'm using are:
options i2c-algo-bit bit_test=1
options tuner debug=1
options bttv gbuffers=16 card=102,102,102,102,102,102,102,102 radio=0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 tuner=4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4 audiodev=-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1 v4l2=1 bttv_verbose=1 chroma_agc=1 combfilter=2 full_luma_range=1 coring=1
Each input is configured with:
- fps: 10
- alarm fps: 25
- palette: BGR24
- resolution: 640 x 480
This might just about work with all 8 inputs, we may have to drop the resolution to 360 x 288
The old card.
Issues
Has only a single mechanical harddrive so vulnerable to data loss.
Ansible procedures
using Ansible with a Rasbperry Pi
dd raspbian image (use the 02-09 one to avoid usb issues) boot pi watch dhcp logs on boole ssh pi@ip passwd: raspberry sudo raspi-config update it expand filesystem change password boot to console advanced options -> hostname cd /etc/network edit interfaces to get a static ip reboot on boole: add hostname to fwd and rev. dns, don't forget to commit your changes. log into denning with ssh keys forwarded add hostname to /etc/ansible/hosts in both the [lhshosts] and [rpis] sections, and [doorbot] if it's a doorbot, make the syslocation="something sensible" then: if it's a replacement for an old machine then: ssh-keygen -R hostname ssh-keygen -R hostname.lan.london.hackspace.org.uk ssh-keygen -R ipv4 address (?) ssh-keygen -R ipv6 address (?) then: cd /etc/ansible install python-apt which ansible needs: ansible -vvv -u pi -k -s -m command -a "apt-get -y install python-apt" "hostname" Then run it ansible-playbook -u pi -s -k -l "hostname" lhs/site.yml The 2nd one will add our users, ssh keys, packages, etc etc. notes: not sure how resolv.conf gets setup, I thought having: iface eth0 inet static [...] dns-nameservers 172.31.24.2 dns-search lan.london.hackspace.org.uk Would sort it, but maybe that dosn't and we got lucky from dhcp? The dns stuff in /etc/network/interfaces appears to be bogus and resolv.conf needs to be done manually, add to ansible.
Bootstrapping a new machine to a static ip
Login to the new install and find it's ip, make sure you know the root password, or have an sshkey for the root account. Choose a hostname for your new machine. Log in to boole, and as root cd /etc/bind, and edit lan.london.hackspace.org.uk. and 24.31.172.in-addr.arpa. to add your new host, remember the new static ip you choose. There is only a few static ip's left, you may end up needing to shrink the dhcp range and change the dhcpserver config on boole as well. zkt-signer -v -r to sign and push out your changes. Check that the hostname works in fwd and reverse dns. and git commit your changes and log out of boole. on denning edit /etc/ansible/hosts, add: <ip> syslocation="something" lhs_host=<hostname> to at least [lhshosts], you probably want [ldap-clients] as well, and maybe some other sections, depending on what you want. then edit /etc/ansible/lhs/vars/defaults.yml , adding your host and the last octet of the new static ip to the hosts: section now ssh to the host to check that ssh works: ssh root@<ip> You may need to fix old cached pub keys, and/or allowing root to ssh to your new machine with a password ( PermotRootLogin yes in /etc/ssh/sshd_config on the machine you are setting up). Now you can run ansible. This example assumes you are using a password for root cd /etc/ansible ansible-playbook -l "<ip>" -k -u root lhs/site.yml and hopefully ansible should run ok and set everything up! Note that ansible will change the root password, hopefully you've got a way to get back in (either you are an admin in ansible, or in the Admins group in ldap, in either case you can login as yourself and then sudo). Now reboot the new machine, it should come back with the static ip. double check that it's right. Now edit /etc/ansible/hosts on denning again and in the entries you added earlier change <ip> to the machines new full hostname. Now run ansible again (needed to fix the snmp config), if it's an ldap client you'll have to use your ldap password - (You could always add your ssh key to your account on the new machine). git commit your changes on denning. and you are done!
Removing an admin
edit /etc/ansible/lhs/vars/defaults.yml
, remove them from users, add them to disable_users, then re-run ansible.
Ansible Troubleshooting
- problem, ansible dies in the snmp config cos it can't find a default ipv4 address.
- fix: make sure the machine has an ipv4 default route
- problem, the sshfp stuff just has hostname. rather than hostname.lan.london.hackspace.org.uk.
- fix: edit /etc/hosts on the effected machine so that both the long and short versions of the hostname are in there.