2.6 KiB
etcd
etcd is a strongly consistent, distributed key-value store that provides a reliable way to store data that needs to be accessed by a distributed system or cluster of machines. It gracefully handles leader elections during network partitions and can tolerate machine failure, even in the leader node.
Our current setup and documentation are aiming at running etcd for internal purposes (as a dependency for other services).
If you need a production deployment, you will need to install multiple etcd instances (on multiple machines) and connect them in a cluster. This is beyond the scope of our documentation here.
Configuration
To enable this service, add the following configuration to your vars.yml
file and re-run the installation process:
########################################################################
# #
# etcd #
# #
########################################################################
etcd_enabled: true
# By default, the playbook will set a root password by itself.
# If you'd like to set your own, uncomment and explicitly set this.
# etcd_environment_variable_etcd_root_password: ''
# Uncomment this if you'd like to run etcd without password-protection.
# etcd_environment_variable_allow_none_authentication: true
########################################################################
# #
# /etcd #
# #
########################################################################
If you'd like to do something more advanced, the ansible-role-etcd
Ansible role is very configurable and should not get in your way of exposing ports or configuring arbitrary settings.
Take a look at its default/main.yml
file for available Ansible variables you can use in your own vars.yml
configuration file.
Usage
As mentioned above, the purpose of the etcd component in this Ansible playbook is to serve as a dependency for other services. For this use-case, you don't need to do anything special beyond enabling the component.