PUPPET-APPLY(8) Puppet manual PUPPET-APPLY(8)NAMEpuppet-apply - Apply Puppet manifests locally
SYNOPSIS
Applies a standalone Puppet manifest to the local system.
USAGE
puppet apply [-h|--help] [-V|--version] [-d|--debug] [-v|--verbose]
[-e|--execute] [--detailed-exitcodes] [-L|--loadclasses] [-l|--logdest
syslog|eventlog|FILE|console] [--noop] [--catalog catalog]
[--write-catalog-summary] file
DESCRIPTION
This is the standalone puppet execution tool; use it to apply individ‐
ual manifests.
When provided with a modulepath, via command line or config file, pup‐
pet apply can effectively mimic the catalog that would be served by
puppet master with access to the same modules, although there are some
subtle differences. When combined with scheduling and an automated sys‐
tem for pushing manifests, this can be used to implement a serverless
Puppet site.
Most users should use ´puppet agent´ and ´puppet master´ for site-wide
manifests.
OPTIONS
Note that any setting that´s valid in the configuration file is also a
valid long argument. For example, ´tags´ is a valid setting, so you can
specify ´--tags class,tag´ as an argument.
See the configuration file documentation at http://docs.puppet‐
labs.com/references/stable/configuration.html for the full list of
acceptable parameters. A commented list of all configuration options
can also be generated by running puppet with ´--genconfig´.
· --debug: Enable full debugging.
· --detailed-exitcodes: Provide transaction information via exit
codes. If this is enabled, an exit code of ´2´ means there were
changes, an exit code of ´4´ means there were failures during the
transaction, and an exit code of ´6´ means there were both changes
and failures.
· --help: Print this help message
· --loadclasses: Load any stored classes. ´puppet agent´ caches con‐
figured classes (usually at /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/classes.txt),
and setting this option causes all of those classes to be set in
your puppet manifest.
· --logdest: Where to send log messages. Choose between ´syslog´ (the
POSIX syslog service), ´eventlog´ (the Windows Event Log), ´con‐
sole´, or the path to a log file. Defaults to ´console´.
A path ending with ´.json´ will receive structured output in JSON
format. The log file will not have an ending ´]´ automatically
written to it due to the appending nature of logging. It must be
appended manually to make the content valid JSON.
· --noop: Use ´noop´ mode where Puppet runs in a no-op or dry-run
mode. This is useful for seeing what changes Puppet will make with‐
out actually executing the changes.
· --execute: Execute a specific piece of Puppet code
· --test: Enable the most common options used for testing. These are
´verbose´, ´detailed-exitcodes´ and ´show_diff´.
· --verbose: Print extra information.
· --catalog: Apply a JSON catalog (such as one generated with ´puppet
master --compile´). You can either specify a JSON file or pipe in
JSON from standard input.
· --write-catalog-summary After compiling the catalog saves the
resource list and classes list to the node in the state directory
named classes.txt and resources.txt
EXAMPLE
$ puppet apply -l /tmp/manifest.log manifest.pp
$ puppet apply --modulepath=/root/dev/modules -e "include ntpd::server"
$ puppet apply --catalog catalog.json
AUTHOR
Luke Kanies
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011 Puppet Labs, LLC Licensed under the Apache 2.0
License
Puppet Labs, LLC May 2015 PUPPET-APPLY(8)