freebsd-skq/share/examples/diskless
Luigi Rizzo 902e5bd188 Add comments to ME README.BOOTP README.TEMPLATING mentioning that
they contain stale information.
Remove files referring to the old diskless setup to avoid confusion.
2002-03-15 06:47:38 +00:00
..
clone_root
ME Add comments to ME README.BOOTP README.TEMPLATING mentioning that 2002-03-15 06:47:38 +00:00
README.BOOTP Add comments to ME README.BOOTP README.TEMPLATING mentioning that 2002-03-15 06:47:38 +00:00
README.TEMPLATING Add comments to ME README.BOOTP README.TEMPLATING mentioning that 2002-03-15 06:47:38 +00:00

IMPORTANT NOTE:

As of Feb. 11, 2002 (and indeed, for quite some time before that),
the /etc/rc.diskless{1,2} scripts support a slightly different
diskless boot process than the one documented in the rest of
this file (which is 3 years old).

I am not deleting the information below because it contains some
useful background information on diskless operation, but for the
actual details you should look at /etc/rc.diskless1, /etc/rc.diskless2,
and the /usr/share/examples/diskless/clone_root script which can
be useful to set up clients and server for diskless boot.

--- $FreeBSD$ ---
------------------------------------------------------------------------

		      TEMPLATING machine configurations

			    Matthew Dillon
			    dillon@backplane.com

    This document describes a general mechanism by which you can template
    / and /usr.  That is, to keep a 'master template' of / and /usr on a
    separate machine which is then used to update the rest of your machines.

    Generally speaking, you can't simply mirror /.  You might be able to 
    get away with mirroring /usr.  There are two main problems involved with
    templating:

    (1) Avoiding overwriting run-time generated files

	By default, the system maintains a number of files in the root 
	partition.  For example, sendmail will dbm /etc/aliases into
	/etc/aliases.db.  vipw or chpass or other password related routines
	will regenerate the password dbm's /etc/spwd.db, /etc/pwd.db, and
	passwd.  /etc/namedb/s might contain generated secondaries.  And
	so forth.

	The templating mechanism must avoid copying over such files.

    (2) Customizing machines.

	Customizing machines is actually considerably simpler.  You create
	a configuration hierarchy and convert the configuration files that
	have to be customized into softlinks that run through a special
	softlink in the configuration directory.  This will work for every
	configuration file except possibly /etc/master.passwd

	For example, /etc/resolv.conf would be turned into a softlink to
	/conf/ME/resolv.conf, and /conf/ME itself would be a softlink to
	/conf/<HOSTNAME>.  The actual resolv.conf configuration file
	would reside in /conf/<HOSTNAME>.

	If you have a lot of hosts, some configuration files may be commonly
	classified.  For example, all your shell machines might have the 
	same /etc/resolv.conf.  The solution is to make
	/conf/<HOSTNAME>/resolv.conf a softlink to a common directory, say
	/conf/HT.SHELL/resolv.conf.  It may sound a little messy, but this
	sort of categorization actually makes the sysadmins job much, much
	easier.

	The /conf/ directory hierarchy is stored on the template and
	distributed to all the machines along with the rest of the root
	partition.

	This type of customization is taken from my direct experience 
	instituting such a system at BEST.  At the time, BEST had over 45 
	machines managed from a single template.

		RUN-TIME GENERATED OR MODIFIED FILES IN / or /USR

	/etc/aliases.db
	/etc/master.passwd
	/etc/spwd.db
	/etc/pwd.db
	/etc/passwd
	/etc/namedb/s
	/root/.history
	/root/.ssh/identity
	/root/.ssh/identity.pub
	/root/.ssh/random_seed
	/root/.ssh/known_hosts
	/conf/ME
	/kernel*	( note 2 )
	/dev	( note 3 )
	/var	( note 4 )
	/home	( note 4 )
	/lost+found

	/usr/lost+found
	/usr/home	( note 4 )
	/usr/crash	( note 5 )
	/usr/obj	( note 5 )
	/usr/ports	( note 5 )
	/usr/src	( note 5 )
	/usr/local/crack ( note 5 )
	/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/xdm-errors ( note 6 )
	/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/xdm-pid 	  ( note 6 )
	/usr/local/etc/ssh_host_key	  ( note 6 )
	/usr/local/etc/ssh_host_key.pub	  ( note 6 )
	/usr/local/etc/ssh_random_seed	  ( note 6 )

	/conf/ME	( note 7 )

	note 2:	You typically want to update kernels manually and *NOT* 
		template them as a safety measure.  This also allows you to run
		different kernels on different machines or.

	note 3: /dev must be updated manually.  Some devices, such as tty's and
		pty's, use the access and/or modify time and/or user/group
		operationally and regenerating the devices on the fly would be
		bad.

	note 4:	/var and /home are usually separately mounted partitions and
		thus would not fall under the template, but as a safety measure
		the template copier refuse to copy directories named 'home'.

	note 5: These are directories that are as often created directly on
		/usr as they are separately-mounted partitions.  You typically
		do not want to template such directories.

	note 6: Note that you can solve the problem of xdm and sshd creating
		files in /usr.  With xdm, edit /usr/X11R6/lib/xdm/xdm-config
		and change the errorLogFile and pidFile config lines.

		With sshd, add 'HostKey' and 'RandomSeed' directives to specify
		/var/db for the location of the host key and run-time sshd
		random seed:

		HostKey /var/db/ssh_host_key
		RandomSeed /var/db/ssh_random_seed

	note 7: In this example, /conf/ME is the machine customizer and must
		be pointed to the /conf/<full-host-name>/ directory, which is
		different for each machine.  Thus, the /conf/ME softlink 
		should never be overwritten by the templating copy.


		TYPICAL CUSTOMIZED CONFIGRATION SOFTLINKS

    The following files typically need to be turned into softlinks 
    to /conf/ME/<filename>:

	/etc/ccd.conf		-> /conf/ME/ccd.conf
	/etc/ipfw.conf		...
	/etc/fstab
	/etc/motd
	/etc/resolv.conf
	/etc/aliases
	/etc/sendmail.cw
	/etc/organization
	/etc/named.conf
	/etc/rc.conf.local
	/etc/printcap
	/etc/inetd.conf
	/etc/login.conf
	/etc/gettytab
	/etc/ntp.conf
	/etc/exports
	/root/.k5login		-> /conf/ME/root/.k5login

    And, of course, /conf/ME is usually a softlink to the appropriate 
    /conf/<full-host-name>/.  Depending on your system configuration, 
    there may be other files not listed above that you have to worry about.

    In many cases, /conf/ME/filename is itself a softlink to 
    "../HT.xxxx/filename", where HT.xxxx is something like HT.STD ... this
    added complexity actually makes it easier to manage multiple
    classifications of machines.

				DELETION OF FILES

    Any file found on the template destination that does not exist in the
    source and is not listed as an exception by the source should be deleted.
    However, deletion can be dangerous and cpdup will ask for confirmation
    by default.  Once you know you aren't going to blow things up, you can
    turn this feature off and update your systems automatically from cron.

    By formalizing the delete operation, you can be 100% sure that it is
    possible to recreate / and /usr on any machine with only the original
    template and a backup of the ( relatively few ) explicitly-excepted 
    files.  The most common mistake a sysop makes is to make a change to a 
    file in / or /usr on a target machine instead of the template machine.
    If the target machine is updated once a night from cron, the sysop
    quickly learns not to do this ( because his changes get overwritten
    overnight ).  With a manual update, these sorts of mistakes can propogate
    for weeks or months before they are caught.

			    TEMPLATE COPYING AND SAFETY
			       THE CPDUP PROGRAM

    The 'cpdup' program is a program which efficiently duplicates a directory
    tree.  The program copies source to destination, duplicating devices, 
    softlinks, hardlinks, files, modification times, uid, gid, flags, perms,
    and so forth.  The program incorporates several major features:

	*   The program refuses, absolutely, to cross partition boundries.
	    i.e. if you were copying the template /usr from an NFS mount to
	    your /usr, and you had a mount point called /usr/home, the
	    template copying program would *NOT* descend into /usr/home on
	    the destination.

	    This is a safety.

	*   The program accesses a file called .cpignore in each directory
	    it descending into on the source to obtain a list of exceptions
	    for that directory -- that is, files not to copy or mess with.

	    This is a templating function.

	*   The program refuses to delete a directory on the destination
	    being replaced by a softlink or file on the source.

	    This is a safety mechanism

	*   The program is capable of maintaing MD5 check cache files and
	    doing an MD5 check between source and destination during the
	    scan.

	*   The program is capable of deleting files/directories on the
	    destination that do not exist on the source, but asks for
	    confirmation by default.

	    This is a templating and a safety mechanism.

	*   The program uses a copy-to-tmp-and-rename methodology allowing
	    it to be used to update live filesystems.

	    This is a templating mechanism.

	*   The program, by default, tries to determine if a copy is required
	    by checking modify times, file size, perms, and other stat
	    elements.  If the elements match, it does not bother to copy
	    ( unless an MD5 check is being made, in which case it must read
	    the destination file ).

    You typically run cpdup on the target machine.  The target machine
    temporarily mounts the template machine's / and /usr via NFS, read-only,
    and runs cpdup to update / and /usr.  If you use this methodology note
    that THERE ARE SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS!  See 'SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH
    NFS' below.  

    Whatever script you use that does the NFS mounts should ensure that the
    mount succeeded before continuing with the cpdup.

    You should create .cpignore files in the appropriate directories on the 
    template machine's / and /usr partitions so as not to overwrite active
    files on the target.  The most critical .cpignore files should be
    protected with 'chflags schg .cpignore'.  Specifically, the ones in /
    and /etc, but possibly others as well.  For example, the .cpignore
    hierarchy for protect /root is:

	# /root/.cpignore contains
	.history

	# /root/.ssh/.cpignore contains
	random_seed
	known_hosts
	authorized_keys
	identity
	identity.pub

    WHEN INITIALLY CONVERTING A TARGET MACHINE TO USE TEMPLATING, ALWAYS
    MAKE A FULL BACKUP OF THE TARGET MACHINE FIRST!  You may accidently delete
    files on the target during the conversion due to forgetting to enter
    items into appropriate .cpignore files on the source.

	SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH NFS ROOT EXPORT FROM TEMPLATE MACHINE
	SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH NFS USR EXPORT FROM TEMPLATE MACHINE

    There are some serious security considerations that must be taken into
    account when exporting / and /usr on the template machine.

	* only export read-only 

	* the password file ( aka vipw ) may not contain any crypted passwords
	  at all.  You MUST use ssh or kerberos to access the template machine.

	  You can get away with giving only root a crypted password, but only
	  if you disallow network root logins and only allow direct root
	  logins on the  console.

	* The machine's private ssh_host_key usually resides in /usr/local/etc.
	  You must move this key to /var/db.  You can softlink link so no
	  modification of sshd_config is required.

	* The machine's private ~root/.ssh/identity file is also exposed by
	  the NFS export, you should move this file to /var/db as well and
	  put a softlink in ~root/.ssh.

	* DON'T EXPORT /var !  Either that, or don't put the private keys
	  in /var/db ... put them somewhere else.

	* You may want to redirect the location of the random_seed file, which
	  can be done by editing ~root/.ssh/sshd_config and
	  /usr/local/etc/sshd_config so it is not exposed either.

					-Matt
					Matthew Dillon
					dillon@backplane.com