This module handles installing system RVM (also known as multi-user installation as root) and using it to install rubies and gems. Support for installing and configuring passenger is also included.
We are actively using this module. It works well, but does have some issues you
should be aware of. Due to the way puppet works, certain resources
(rvm_sytem_ruby, rvm_gem and rvm_gemset) may generate errors until RVM is
installed. You may want to use run stages to install RVM before the rest
of your configuration runs. However, if you run puppet using the --noop
parameter, you may see Could not find a default provider errors. See the
Troubleshooting section for more information.
Please read the troubleshooting section below before opening an issue.
Puppet 3.0.0 or higher.
Version 1.5 no longer includes a dependency on puppetlabs/apache, you must install it yourself if you want to use the passenger module.
Before you begin, you must add the RVM module to your Puppet installation. This can be done with:
$ puppet module install maestrodev/rvm
You may now continue configuring RVM resources.
Install RVM with:
include rvm
or
class { 'rvm': version => '1.20.12' }
This will install RVM into /usr/local/rvm
.
To use RVM without sudo, users need to be added to the rvm
group. This can be easily done with:
rvm::system_user { bturner: ; jdoe: ; jsmith: ; }
You can tell RVM to install one or more Ruby versions with:
rvm_system_ruby {
'ruby-1.9':
ensure => 'present',
default_use => true,
build_opts => ['--binary'];
'ruby-2.0':
ensure => 'present',
default_use => false;
}
You should use the full version number. While the shorthand version may work (e.g. '1.9.2'), the provider will be unable to detect if the correct version is installed.
If rvm fails to install binary rubies you can increase curl's timeout with the rvm_max_time_flag
in ~/.rvmrc
with a fully qualified path to the home directory.
# ensure rvm doesn't timeout finding binary rubies
# the umask line is the default content when installing rvm if file does not exist
file { '/home/user/rvmrc':
content => 'umask u=rwx,g=rwx,o=rx
export rvm_max_time_flag=20',
mode => '0664',
before => Class['rvm'],
}
Or, to configure /etc/rvmrc
you can use use Class['rvm::rvmrc]
class{ 'rvm::rvmrc':
max_time_flag => 20,
before => Class['rvm'],
}
JRuby has some extra requirements, java, maven and ant that you can install using puppetlabs/java, maestrodev/ant and maestrodev/maven modules.
class { 'java': } ->
class { 'ant': } ->
class { 'maven::maven': } ->
rvm_system_ruby { 'jruby-1.7.6':
ensure => 'present',
default_use => false;
}
Create a gemset with:
rvm_gemset {
'ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject':
ensure => present,
require => Rvm_system_ruby['ruby-1.9.3-p448'];
}
Install a gem with:
rvm_gem {
'ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject/bundler':
ensure => '1.0.21',
require => Rvm_gemset['ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject'];
}
The name of the gem should be <ruby-version>[@<gemset>]/<gemname>
. For example, you can install bundler for ruby-1.9.2 using ruby-1.9.3-p448/bundler
. You could install rails in your project's gemset with: ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject/rails
.
Alternatively, you can use this more verbose syntax:
rvm_gem {
'bundler':
name => 'bundler',
ruby_version => 'ruby-1.9.3-p448',
ensure => latest,
require => Rvm_system_ruby['ruby-1.9.3-p448'];
}
To create an RVM alias, you can use:
rvm_alias {
'myproject':
target_ruby => 'ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject',
ensure => present,
require => Rvm_gemset['ruby-1.9.3-p448@myproject'];
}
To create an RVM wrapper, you can use:
rvm_wrapper {
'god':
target_ruby => 'ruby-1.9.3-p448',
prefix => 'bootup',
ensure => present,
require => Rvm_system_ruby['ruby-1.9.3-p448'];
}
NOTE: You must install the puppetlabs/apache module by yourself. It is not included as a dependency to this module to avoid installing it when is not needed most times.
Install passenger using the puppetlabs/apache module, and using:
class { 'apache': }
class { 'rvm::passenger::apache':
version => '3.0.11',
ruby_version => 'ruby-1.9.3-p448',
mininstances => '3',
maxinstancesperapp => '0',
maxpoolsize => '30',
spawnmethod => 'smart-lv2',
}
You can configure the ruby versions to be installed and the system users from hiera
rvm::system_rubies:
'1.9':
default_use: true
'2.0': {}
'jruby-1.7': {}
rvm::system_users:
- john
- doe
Testing is done with rspec, Beaker-rspec, Beaker)
To test and build the module
bundle install
# run specs
rake
# run Beaker system tests with vagrant vms
rake beaker
# to use other vm from the list spec/acceptance/nodesets and not destroy the vm after the tests
BEAKER_destroy=no BEAKER_set=centos-64-x64 bundle exec rake beaker
# Release the Puppet module to the Forge, doing a clean, build, tag, push, bump_commit and git push
rake module:release
An error "Could not find a default provider for rvm_system_ruby" is displayed when running Puppet with --noop
This means that puppet cannot find the /usr/local/rvm/bin/rvm
command
(probably because RVM isn't installed yet). Currently, Puppet does not support
making a provider suitable using another resource (late-binding). You may want
to use run stages to install RVM before the rest of the
configuration runs. When running in noop mode, RVM is not actually installed
causing rvm_system_ruby, rvm_gem and rvm_gemset resources to generate this
error. You can avoid this error by surrounding your rvm configuration in an if
block:
if $rvm_installed == "true" {
rvm_system_ruby ...
}
Do not surround include rvm
in the if block, as this is used to install RVM.
NOTE: $rvm_installed is evaluated at the beginning of each puppet run. If you use this in your manifests, you will need to run puppet twice to fully configure RVM.
The RVM module requires Puppet version 2.6.7 or higher.
There is a bug in Puppet versions 2.7.4 through 2.7.9 that also causes this error. The error can be safely ignored in these versions. For best results, upgrade to Puppet 2.7.10.
Some packages/libraries I don't want or need are installed (e.g. build-essential, libc6-dev, libxml2-dev).
RVM works by compiling Ruby from source. This means you must have all the libraries and binaries required to compile Ruby installed on your system, which is handled by rvm autolibs in newer versions of RVM.
Check the rspec-system tests as described above to test in a specific OS If that doesn't work feel free to send a pull request ;)
The puppet package type seems like an obvious place for the RVM provider. It would be nice if the syntax for installing Ruby with RVM looked like:
# NOTE: This does not work
package {'ruby':
provider => 'rvm',
ensure => '1.9.2-p290';
}
While this may be possible, it becomes harder to manage multiple Ruby versions and nearly impossible to install gems for a specific Ruby version. For this reason, I decided it was best to create a completely new set of types for RVM.