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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if watchmaker has installed?

To determine whether watchmaker is installed, the simplest method is to run the command watchmaker --help. If it displays the cli help page, watchmaker is installed. Another option is to check pip list | grep watchmaker.

What do I do if watchmaker failed to install?

First, review the installation document. Then double-check the output of a failed installation. Usually, the output points pretty clearly at the source of the problem. Watchmaker can be re-installed over itself with no problem, so once the root cause is resolved, simply re-install watchmaker.

Why does the watchmaker install fail if my system is FIPS enabled?

This is primarily a question for Red Hat (and derived distributions). As of this writing, the pip utility in all Red Hat releases up through 7.4.1708, default to looking for pypi packages signed with MD5 signatures. If you’ve enabled FIPS (or are using a build that has FIPS pre-enabled), MD5 is disabled in the kernel (due to being a weak hashing-method). You can either disable FIPS (not recommended) or explicitly force pip to use a different signature-index. The latter is detailed in the Linux section of the usage document.

How do I know if watchmaker has completed without errors?

By default, watchmaker will reboot the system after a sucessful execution. Therefore, if the system reboots, watchmaker executed successfully. If you are investigating sometime after watchmaker completed, check the logs for errors. If anything fails, watchmaker will suppress the reboot. (Though note that the --no-reboot flag can be used to suppress the reboot even after a successful execution.)

You can also test the watchmaker exit code programmatically. If watchmaker fails, it will return a non-zero exit code. If watchmaker completes successfully, it will return an exit code of zero. You would typically pass the --no-reboot flag if you intend to test the exit code and determine what to do from there.

What do I do if watchmaker failed to complete or completes with errors?

Start by checking the logs generated by watchmaker. The logs are stored in the directory specified by the --log-dir argument. Search the log for entries that have [ERROR], this will give you a starting point to begin troubleshooting. Also, if a salt state failed, look for the pattern Result: False. If it is not an obvious or simple issue, feel free to create an issue on the watchmaker github page. If there is a salt_call.debug.log in the watchmaker log directory, you can look for [ERROR] messages in there as well. However, this log file can be very noisy and a message with the error label may not be related to the error you are encountering.

Does watchmaker support Enterprise Linux 7?

Watchmaker is supported on RedHat 7 and CentOS 7. See the index page for a list of all supported operating systems.

How can I exclude salt states when executing watchmaker?

The Salt worker in Watchmaker supports an exclude_states argument. When present, the value is passed directly to the exclude option of the salt highstate execution module. To use this option with watchmaker from the command line, pass the argument --exclude-states <sls_glob>. For example:

# Exclude the state "foo" with an exact match
watchmaker --exclude-states foo

# Exclude all state names that begin with "foo"
watchmaker --exclude-states foo*

# Exclude multiple states "foo" and "bar" with an exact match
watchmaker --exclude-states foo,bar

Can I use the underlying salt functionality directly?

Yes, by passing watchmaker’s salt configuration directory to the salt command, using the -c|--config-dir argument:

  • Linux: /opt/watchmaker/salt

  • Windows: C:\Watchmaker\salt\conf

For example:

# -c|--config-dir
salt-call -c /opt/watchmaker/salt state.show_top

Can I use watchmaker to toggle my RedHat/Centos host’s FIPS mode?

Yes, indirectly. Because watchmaker implements most of its functionality via SaltStack modules, you can directly-use the underlying SaltStack functionality to effect the desired change. This is done from the commandline - as root - by executing:

  • Disable FIPS-mode: salt-call -c /opt/watchmaker/salt ash.fips_disable

  • Enable FIPS-mode: salt-call -c /opt/watchmaker/salt ash.fips_enable

And then rebooting the system.

How do I install watchmaker when I am using Python 2.6?

The trouble here is that a lot of the Python ecosystem has begun deprecating support for Python 2.6. Watchmaker still supports Python 2.6, and does control its dependency versions based on the Python version. However, there are three python “setup” packages needed just to install watchmaker, and these packages cannot be platform-restricted within the watchmaker package specification.

Below is the list of packages in question, and the versions that no longer support Python 2.6:

  • pip>=10

  • wheel>=0.30.0

  • setuptools>=37

In order to install pip in Python 2.6, you can get it from:

Once a Python 2.6-compatible pip version is installed, you can install compatible versions of the other packages like this:

pip install --upgrade "pip<10" "wheel<0.30.0" "setuptools<37"

You can then install watchmaker normally.

How do I get Watchmaker release/project notifications?

Users may use an RSS reader of their choice to subscribe to the Watchmaker Release feed to get notifications on Watchmaker releases. The Watchmaker RSS release feed is https://github.com/plus3it/watchmaker/releases.atom.

Users can also “watch” the GitHub project to receive notifications on all project activity, https://github.com/plus3it/watchmaker/subscription.