This is the Boundary module.
To use it with Boundary Premium:
class { 'boundary':
token => 'api_token'
}
To use it with Boundary Enterprise:
class { 'boundary':
token => 'org_id:api_key',
tags => [ 'these', 'are', 'tags' ]
}
Or, as of Boundary Meter 3.1, you can use it with both at the same time:
class { 'boundary':
token => 'api_token,org_id:api_key',
tags => [ 'these', 'are', 'tags' ]
}
To remove a meter change your include to:
class { 'boundary::delete' }
To specify a stand-alone meter you can use the boundary_meter resource:
boundary_meter { "name_of_meter":
ensure => present,
token => ['api_token'],
tags => [ "production", "web", "cluster" ],
}
You can also use the proxy_addr and proxy_port options to specify an HTTPS
proxy server if required.
APT based distros will require the puppetlabs-apt module which requires wget. This has not been added as dependency because yum based distros shouldn't have to install an apt module.
It is possible to use this module from Puppet Dashboard (aka Console). To use
the module add boundary to the list of classes. Then add the boundary
class directly to a node or a group. The following dashboard parameters are
supported:
tokentags
The tags parameter is an array of tag names to apply to this meter
(e.g., [ 'a', 'list', 'of', 'tags' ] ).
Zachary Schneider [email protected]
James Turnbull [email protected]
The boundary_meter type and provider is heavily based on work by Joe Williams and Ben Black from Boundary.
Puppet Labs 2011-2013
Boundary 2014
Apache 2.0