Shipping packages from a local repo v23
If you create a local repository within your cluster directory, TPA will make any packages in the repository available to cluster instances. This is an easy way to ship extra packages to your cluster.
Optionally, you can also instruct TPA to configure the instances to use only this repository, i.e., disable all others. In this case, you must provide all packages required during the deployment, starting from basic dependencies like rsync, Python, and so on.
Quickstart
To configure a cluster with a local repo enabled, run:
This will generate your cluster configuration and create a local-repo
directory and OS-specific subdirectories. See below for details of the
recommended layout.
Disconnected environments
See instructions for managing clusters in an air-gapped environment.
Local repo layout
By default, TPA will create a local-repo
directory and OS-specific
subdirectories within it (e.g., local-repo/Debian/10
), based on the OS
you select for the cluster. We recommend using separate subdirectories
because it makes it easier to accommodate instances running different
distributions.
For example, a cluster running RedHat 8 might have the following layout:
For each instance, TPA will look for the following subdirectories of
local-repo
in order and use the first one it finds:
<distribution>/<version>
, e.g.,RedHat/8.5
<distribution>/<major version>
, e.g.,RedHat/8
<distribution>/<release name>
, e.g.,Ubuntu/focal
<distribution>
, e.g.,Debian
- The
local-repo
directory itself.
If none of these directories exists, of course, TPA will not try to set up any local repo on target instances.
This way, you can put RedHat-specific packages under RedHat/8
and
Ubuntu-specific packages under Ubuntu/focal
, and instances will use
the right packages automatically. If you don't have instances running
different distributions, they'll all use the same subdirectory.
Populating the repository
Run tpaexec download-packages
to
download all the packages required by a cluster into the local-repo.
You must copy packages into the appropriate repository directory and
generate repository metadata before running tpaexec deploy
.
After copying the necessary packages into the repository directory, you must use an OS-specific tool to generate the repository metadata.
You must generate the metadata on the control node, i.e., the machine where you run tpaexec. TPA will copy the metadata and packages to target instances.
You must generate the metadata in the subdirectory that the instance
will use, i.e., if you copy packages into local-repo/Debian/10
, you
must create the metadata in that directory, not in local-repo/Debian
.
Debian/Ubuntu repository metadata
For Debian-based distributions, install the dpkg-dev
package:
Now you can use dpkg-scanpackages
to generate the metadata:
RedHat repository metadata
First, install the createrepo
package:
Now you can use createrepo
to generate the metadata:
Copying the repository
TPA will use rsync to copy the contents of the repository directory, including the generated metadata, to a directory on target instances.
If rsync is not already available on an instance, TPA can install it
(i.e., apt-get install rsync
or yum install rsync
). However, if you
have set use_local_repo_only
, the rsync package must be included in
the local repo. If required, TPA will copy just the rsync package
using scp and install it before copying the rest.
Repository configuration
After copying the contents of the local repo to target instances, TPA will configure the destination directory as a local (i.e., path-based, rather than URL-based) repository.
The idea is that if you provide, say, example.deb
in the repository
directory, running apt-get install example
will suffice to install it,
just like any package in any other repository.
Package installation
TPA configures a repository with the contents that you provide, but if the same package is available from different repositories, it is up to the package manager to decide which one to install (usually the latest, unless you specify a particular version).
(However, if you set use_local_repo_only: yes
, TPA will disable
all other package repositories, so that instances can only use the
packages that you provide in local-repo
.)