From bf70a442fcfd1fea08dbdee16f726ffd2add21a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kevin Fenzi Date: Jan 07 2024 19:47:07 +0000 Subject: Clean out old sops These are all out of date things for apps we have retired, hardware we no longer have, or services we no longer run. Lets delete them. Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi --- diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/arm.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/arm.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 77dbca7..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/arm.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,206 +0,0 @@ -= Fedora ARM Infrastructure - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-admin, sysadmin-main, sysadmin-releng -Location:: - Phoenix -Servers:: - arm01, arm02, arm03, arm04 -Purpose:: - Information on working with the arm SOCs - -== Description - -We have 4 arm chassis in phx2, each containing 24 SOCs (System On Chip). - -Each chassis has 2 physical network connections going out from it. The -first one is used for the management interface on each SOC. The second -one is used for eth0 for each SOC. - -Current allocations (2016-03-11): - -arm01:: - primary builders attached to koji.fedoraproject.org -arm02:: - primary arch builders attached to koji.fedoraproject.org -arm03:: - In cloud network, public qa/packager and copr instances -arm04:: - primary arch builders attached to koji.fedoraproject.org - -== Hardware Configuration - -Each SOC has: - -* eth0 and eth1 (unused) and a management interface. -* 4 cores -* 4GB ram -* a 300GB disk - -SOCs are addressed by: - -.... -arm{chassisnumber}-builder{number}.arm.fedoraproject.org -.... - -Where chassisnumber is 01 to 04 and number is 00-23 - -== PXE installs - -Kickstarts for the machines are in the kickstarts repo. - -PXE config is on noc01. (or cloud-noc01.cloud.fedoraproject.org for -arm03) - -The kickstart installs the latests Fedora and sets them up with a base -package set. - -== IPMI tool Management - -The SOCs are managed via their mgmt interfaces using a custom ipmitool -as well as a custom python script called 'cxmanage'. The ipmitool -changes have been submitted upstream and cxmanage is under review in -Fedora. - -The ipmitool is currently installed on noc01 and it has ability to talk -to them on their management interface. noc01 also serves dhcp and is a -pxeboot server for the SOCs. - -However you will need to add it to your path: - -.... -export PATH=$PATH:/opt/calxeda/bin/ -.... - -Some common commands: - -To set the SOC to boot the next time only with pxe: - -.... -ipmitool -U admin -P thepassword -H arm03-builder11-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org chassis bootdev pxe -.... - -To set the SOC power off: - -.... -ipmitool -U admin -P thepassword -H arm03-builder11-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org power off -.... - -To set the SOC power on: - -.... -ipmitool -U admin -P thepassword -H arm03-builder11-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org power on -.... - -To get a serial over lan console from the SOC: - -.... -ipmitool -U admin -P thepassword -H arm03-builder11-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org -I lanplus sol activate -.... - -== DISK mapping - -Each SOC has a disk. They are however mapped to the internal 00-23 in a -non direct manner: - -[cols="1,1,1,1"] -|=== -|HDD Bay |EnergyCard |SOC (Port 1) |SOC Num -|0 |0 | 3 | 03 -|1 |0 | 0 | 00 -|2 |0 | 1 | 01 -|3 |0 | 2 | 02 -|4 |1 | 3 | 07 -|5 |1 | 0 | 04 -|6 |1 | 1 | 05 -|7 |1 | 2 | 06 -|8 |2 | 3 | 11 -|9 |2 | 0 | 08 -|10 |2 | 1 | 09 -|11 |2 | 2 | 10 -|12 |3 | 3 | 15 -|13 |3 | 0 | 12 -|14 |3 | 1 | 13 -|15 |3 | 2 | 14 -|16 |4 | 3 | 19 -|17 |4 | 0 | 16 -|18 |4 | 1 | 17 -|19 |4 | 2 | 18 -|20 |5 | 3 | 23 -|21 |5 | 0 | 20 -|22 |5 | 1 | 21 -|23 |5 | 2 | 22 -|=== - -Looking at the system from the front, the bay numbering starts from left -to right. - -== cxmanage - -The cxmanage tool can be used to update firmware or gather diag info. - -Until cxmanage is packaged, you can use it from a python virtualenv: - -.... -virtualenv --system-site-packages cxmanage -cd cxmanage -source bin/activate -pip install --extra-index-url=http://sources.calxeda.com/python/packages/ cxmanage - -deactivate -.... - -Some cxmanage commands - -.... -cxmanage sensor arm03-builder00-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org -Getting sensor readings... -1 successes | 0 errors | 0 nodes left | . - -MP Temp 0 -arm03-builder00-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org: 34.00 degrees C -Minimum : 34.00 degrees C -Maximum : 34.00 degrees C -Average : 34.00 degrees C -... (and about 20 more sensors)... -.... - -.... -cxmanage info arm03-builder00-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org -Getting info... -1 successes | 0 errors | 0 nodes left | . - -[ Info from arm03-builder00-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org ] -Hardware version : EnergyCard X04 -Firmware version : ECX-1000-v2.1.5 -ECME version : v0.10.2 -CDB version : v0.10.2 -Stage2boot version : v1.1.3 -Bootlog version : v0.10.2 -A9boot version : v2012.10.16-3-g66a3bf3 -Uboot version : v2013.01-rc1_cx_2013.01.17 -Ubootenv version : v2013.01-rc1_cx_2013.01.17 -DTB version : v3.7-4114-g34da2e2 -.... - -firmware update: - -.... -cxmanage --internal-tftp 10.5.126.41:6969 --all-nodes fwupdate package ECX-1000_update-v2.1.5.tar.gz arm03-builder00-mgmt.arm.fedoraproject.org -.... - -(note that this runs against the 00 management interface for the chassis -and updates all the nodes), and that we must run a tftpserver on port -6969 for firewall handling. - -== Links - -http://sources.calxeda.com/python/packages/cxmanage/ - -== Contacts - -help.desk@boston.co.uk is the contact to send repair requests to. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fas-notes.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fas-notes.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 17a40d0..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fas-notes.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,154 +0,0 @@ -= Fedora Account System - -Notes about FAS and how to do things in it: - -* where are certs for fas accounts for koji, etc? on fas01 -`/var/lib/fedora-ca` - makefile targets allow you to do things with them. - -look in `index.txt` for certs. One's marked with an 'R' in the left-most -column are 'REVOKED' - -to revoke a cert: - -.... -cd /var/lib/fedora-ca -.... - -find the cert number in `index.txt` - the number is the 3rd column in the -file - you can match it to the user by searching for their username. You -want the highest number cert for their account. - -once you have the number you would run (as root or fas): - -.... -make revoke cert=newcerts/$that_number.pem -.... - -== How to gather information about a user - -You'll want to have direct access to query the database for this. The -common way is to have someone in _sysadmin-db_ ssh to the postgres db -hosting FAS (currently _db01_). Then access it via ident auth on the box: - -.... -sudo -u postgres psql fas2 -.... - -There are several tables that will have information about a user. Some -of it is redundant but it's good to check all the sources there -shouldn't be inconsistencies: - -.... -select * from people where username = 'USERNAME'; -.... - -Of interest here are: - -id:: - for later queries -password_changed:: - tells when the password was last changed -last_seen:: - last login to fas (including through jsonfas from other TG1/2 apps. - Maybe wiki and insight as well. Not fedorahosted trac, shell login, - etc) -status_change:: - last time that the user's status was updated via the website. Usually - triggered when the user was marked inactive for a mass password change - and then they reset their password. - -Next table is the log table: - -.... -select * from log where author_id = ID_FROM_PREV_QUERY or description ~ '.*USERNAME.*'; -.... - -The FAS writes certain events to the log table. This will get those -events. We use both the author_id field (who made the change) and the -username in a description regex search because a few changes are made to -users by admins. Fields of interest are pretty self explanatory here: - -changetime:: - when the log was made -description:: - description of the event that's being logged - -[NOTE] -==== -FAS does not log every event that happens to a user. Only "important" -ones. FAS also cannot record direct changes to the database here (for -instance, when we mark accounts inactive administratively via the db). -==== - -Lastly, there's the groups and person_roles table. When a user joins -a group, the person_roles table is updated to reflect the user's status -in the group, when they applied, and when they were approved: - -.... -select groups.name, person_roles.* from person_roles, groups where person_id = ID_FROM_INITIAL_QUERY and groups.id = person_roles.group_id; -.... - -This will give you the following fields to pay attention to: - -name:: - Name of the group -role_status:: - If this is unapproved, it just means the user applied for it. If it is - approved, it means they are actually in the group. -creation:: - When the user applied to the group -approval:: - When the user was approved to be in the group -role_type:: - What role the person has or wants to have in the group -sponsor_id:: - If you suspect something is suspicious with one of the roles, you may - want to ask the sponsor if they remember sponsoring this person - -== Account Deletion and renaming - -[NOTE] -==== -See also <> for information on how to disable, rename, -and remove accounts. -==== - -== Pseudo Users - -[NOTE] -==== -See also <> for information on creating pseudo user -accounts for use in pkgdb/bugzilla -==== - -== fas staging - -We have a staging fas db setup on `db-fas01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org` - -it's accessed by `fas01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org` - -This system is not autopopulated by production fas - it must be done -manually. To do this you must: - -* dump the fas2 db on `db-fas01.iad2.fedoraproject.org`: -+ -.... -sudo -u postgres pg_dump -C fas2 > fas2.dump -scp fas2.dump db-fas01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org:/tmp -.... -* then on `fas01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org`: -+ -.... -/etc/init.d/httpd stop -.... -* then on `db02.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org`: -+ -.... -echo "drop database fas2\;" | sudo -u postgres psql ; cat fas2.dump | sudo -u postgres psql -.... -* then on `fas01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org`: -+ -.... -/etc/init.d/httpd start -.... - -that should do it. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fedmsg-irc.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fedmsg-irc.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index e90f93b..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fedmsg-irc.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,29 +0,0 @@ -= fedmsg-irc SOP - -____ -Echo fedmsg bus activity to IRC. -____ - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Messaging SIG, Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-apps, #fedora-fedmsg, #fedora-admin, #fedora-noc -Servers:: - value03 -Purpose:: - Echo fedmsg bus activity to IRC - -== Description - -_fedmsg-irc_ is a daemon running on _value03_ and _value01.stg_. It is -listening to the fedmsg bus and echoing that activity to the -_#fedora-fedmsg_ channel in IRC. - -It can be configured to ignore certain messages, join certain rooms, and -take on a different nick by editing the values in `/etc/fedmsg.d/irc.py` -and restarting it with `sudo service fedmsg-irc restart` - -See https://fedmsg.readthedocs.org/en/latest/configuration/#irc for more -information on configuration. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fmn.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fmn.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index f577e18..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/fmn.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,197 +0,0 @@ -= FedMsg Notifications (FMN) SOP - -Route individualized notifications to fedora contributors over email, -irc. - -== Contact Information - -=== Owner - -* Messaging SIG -* Fedora Infrastructure Team - -=== Contact - -____ -* #fedora-apps for FMN development -* #fedora-admin for problems with the deployment of FMN -* #fedora-noc for outage/crisis alerts -____ - -=== Servers - -Production servers: - -____ -* notifs-backend01.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -* notifs-web01.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -* notifs-web02.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -____ - -Staging servers: - -____ -* notifs-backend01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -* notifs-web01.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -* notifs-web02.stg.iad2.fedoraproject.org (RHEL 7) -____ - -=== Purpose - -Route notifications to users - -== Description - -fmn is a pair of systems intended to route fedmsg notifications to -Fedora contributors and users. - -There is a web interface running on notifs-web01 and notifs-web02 that -allows users to login and configure their preferences to select this or -that type of message. - -There is a backend running on notifs-backend01 where most of the work is -done. - -The backend process is a 'fedmsg-hub' daemon, controlled by systemd. - -== Hosts - -=== notifs-backend - -This host runs: - -* `fedmsg-hub.service` -* One or more `fmn-worker@.service`. Currently notifs-backend01 runs -`fmn-worker@\{1-4}.service` -* `fmn-backend@1.service` -* `fmn-digests@1.service` -* `rabbitmq-server.service`, an AMQP broker used to communicate between -the services. -* `redis.service`, used for caching. - -This host relies on a PostgreSQL database running on -db01.phx2.fedoraproject.org. - -=== notifs-web - -This host runs: - -* A Python WSGI application via Apache httpd that serves the -https://apps.fedoraproject.org/notifications[FMN web user interface]. - -This host relies on a PostgreSQL database running on -db01.iad2.fedoraproject.org. - -== Deployment - -Once upstream releases a new version of -https://github.com/fedora-infra/fmn[fmn], -https://github.com/fedora-infra/fmn.web[fmn-web], or -https://github.com/fedora-infra/fmn.sse[fmn-sse] creating a Git tag, a -new version can be built an deployed into Fedora infrastructure. - -=== Building - -FMN is packaged in Fedora and EPEL as -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn/[python-fmn] -(the backend), -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn-web/[python-fmn-web] -(the frontend), and the optional -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn-sse/[python-fmn-sse]. - -Since all the hosts run RHEL 7, you need to build all these packages for -EPEL 7. - -=== Configuration - -If there are any configuration updates required by the new version of -FMN, update the `notifs` Ansible roles on -batcave01.iad2.fedoraproject.org. Remember to use: - -.... -{% if env == 'staging' %} - -{% else %} - -{% endif %} -.... - -When deploying the update to staging. You can apply configuration -updates to staging by running: - -.... -$ sudo rbac-playbook -l staging groups/notifs-backend.yml -$ sudo rbac-playbook -l staging groups/notifs-web.yml -.... - -Simply drop the `-l staging` to update the production configuration. - -=== Upgrading - -To upgrade the -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn/[python-fmn], -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn-web/[python-fmn-web], -and -https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/python-fmn-sse/[python-fmn-sse] -packages, apply configuration changes, and restart the services, you -should use the manual upgrade playbook: - -.... -$ sudo rbac-playbook -l staging manual/upgrade/fmn.yml -.... - -Again, drop the `-l staging` flag to upgrade production. - -Be aware that the FMN services take a significant amount of time to -start up as they pre-heat their caches before starting work. - -== Service Administration - -Disable an account (on notifs-backend01): - -.... -$ sudo -u fedmsg /usr/local/bin/fmn-disable-account USERNAME -.... - -Restart: - -.... -$ sudo systemctl restart fedmsg-hub -.... - -Watch logs: - -.... -$ sudo journalctl -u fedmsg-hub -f -.... - -Configuration: - -.... -$ ls /etc/fedmsg.d/ -$ sudo fedmsg-config | less -.... - -Upgrade (from batcave): - -.... -$ sudo -i ansible-playbook /srv/web/infra/ansible/playbooks/manual/upgrade/fmn.yml -.... - -== Mailing Lists - -We use FMN as a way to forward certain kinds of messages to mailing -lists so people can read them the good old fashioned way that they like -to. To accomplish this, we create 'bot' FAS accounts with their own FMN -profiles and we set their email addresses to the lists in question. - -If you need to change the way some set of messages are forwarded, you -can do it from the FMN web interface (if you are an FMN admin as defined -in the config file in roles/notifs/frontend/). You can navigate to -https://apps.fedoraproject.org/notifications/USERNAME.id.fedoraproject.org -to do this. - -If the account exists as a FAS user already (for instance, the -`virtmaint` user) but it does not yet exist in FMN, you can add it to -the FMN database by logging in to notifs-backend01 and running -`fmn-create-user --email DESTINATION@EMAIL.COM --create-defaults FAS_USERNAME`. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/jenkins-fedmsg.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/jenkins-fedmsg.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 5f7df51..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/jenkins-fedmsg.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,40 +0,0 @@ -= Jenkins Fedmsg SOP - -Send information about Jenkins builds to fedmsg. - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Ricky Elrod, Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-apps - -== Reinstalling when it disappears - -For an as-of-yet unknown reason, the plugin sometimes seems to -disappear, though it still shows as "installed" on Jenkins. - -To re-install it, grab _fedmsg.hpi_ from -_/srv/web/infra/bigfiles/jenkins_. Go to the Jenkins web -interface and log in. Click _Manage Jenkins_ -> -_Manage Plugins_ -> _Advanced_. Upload the -plugin and on the page that comes up, check the box to have Jenkins -restart when running jobs are finished. - -== Configuration Values - -These are written here in case the Jenkins configuration ever gets lost. -This is how to configure the jenkins-fedmsg-emit plugin. - -Assume the plugin is already installed. - -Go to _Configure Jenkins_ -> _System Configuration_ - -Towards the bottom, look for _Fedmsg Emitter_ - -Values:: - * Signing: Checked Fedmsg - * Endpoint: tcp://209.132.181.16:9941 Environment - * Shortname: prod - * Certificate File: /etc/pki/fedmsg/jenkins-jenkins.fedorainfracloud.org.crt - * Keystore File: /etc/pki/fedmsg/jenkins-jenkins.fedorainfracloud.org.key diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/nuancier.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/nuancier.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 0667b13..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/nuancier.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,142 +0,0 @@ -= Nuancier SOP - -Nuancier is the web application used by the design team and the -community to submit and vote on the supplemental wallpapers provided -with each version of Fedora. - -== Contents - -* <<_contact_information>> -* <<_review_an_election>> -* <<_vote_on_an_election>> -* <<_view_all_the_candidates_of_an_election>> -* <<_view_the_results_of_an_election>> -* <<_miscellaneous>> - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-admin -Location:: - https://apps.fedoraproject.org/nuancier -Servers:: - nuancier01, nuancier02, nuancier01.stg, nuancier02.stg -Purpose:: - Provide a system to submit and vote on supplemental wallpapers - -== Create a new election - -* Login -* Go to the _Admin_ panel via the menu at the top -* Click on _Create a new election_ -* Complete the form: -+ -Election name:: - A short name used in all the pages, most often since we have one - election per release it has been of the form _Fedora XX_ -Name of the folder containing the pictures:: - This just links the election with the folder where the images will be - uploaded on disk. Keep it simple, safe, something like - _fXX_ will do. -Year:: - The year when the election will be happening, this will just give some - quick sorting option -Submission start date (in UTC):: - The date from which the people will be able to submit wallpapers for - the election. The submission starts on the exact day at midnight UTC. -Start date (in UTC):: - The date when the election starts (and thus the submissions end). - There is no buffer between when the submissions end and when the votes - start which means admins have to keep up with the submissions as they - are done. -End date (in UTC):: - The date when the election ends. There are no embargo on the results, - they are available right after the election ends. -URL to claim a badge for voting:: - The URL at which someone can claim a badge. This URL is displayed on - the voting page as well as ones people have voted. Which means that - having the badge does not ensure people voted, at max it ensures - people visited nuancier during a voting phase. -Number of votes an user can make:: - The number of wallpapers an user can choose/vote on. This was made as - they was a debate in the design team if having everyone vote on all 16 - wallpapers was a good idea or not. -Number of candidate an user can upload:: - Restricts the number of wallpapers an user can submit for an election - to prevent people from uploading tens of wallpapers in one election. - -== Review an election - -Admins must do that regularly during a submission phase to avoid -candidates from piling up. - -* Login -* Go to the _Admin_ panel via the menu at the top -* Find the election of interest in the list and click on -_Review_ - -If the images are not showing, you can generate the thumbnails using the -button _(Re-)generate cache_. - -On the review page, you will be able to filter the candidates by -_Approved_, _Pending_, _Rejected_ or -see them _All_ (default). - -You can then check the images one by one, select their checkbox and then -either _Approve_ or _Deny_ all the ones you -selected. - -[NOTE] -==== -Rejections must be motivated in the _Reason for rejection / Comments_ -input field. This motivation is then sent by email to the user -explaining why a wallpaper they submitted was not accepted into the -election. -==== - -== Vote on an election - -Once an election is opened, a link announcing it will be available from -the front page and in the page listing the elections -(_Elections_ tab in the menu) a green check-mark will appear -on the _Votes_ column while a red forbidden sign will appear -on the _Submissions_ column. - -You can then click on the election name which will take you on the -voting page. - -There, enlarge the image by clicking on them and make your choice by -clicking on the bottom right corner of the image. - -On the column on the right the total number of vote available will -appear. If you need to change remove a wallpaper from your selection, -simply click on it in the right column. - -As long as you have not picked the maximum number of candidates allowed, -you can cast your vote multiple times (but not on the same candidates of -course). - -== View all the candidates of an election - -All the candidates of an election are only accessible once the election -is over. If you wish to see all the images uploaded, simply go to the -_Elections_ tab and click on the election name. - -== View the results of an election - -The results of an election are accessible immediately after the end of -it. To see them, simply click the _Results_ tab in the menu. - -There you can click on the name of the election to see the wallpaper -ordered by their number of votes or on _stats_ to view some -stats about the election (such as the number of participants, the number -of voters, votes or the evolution of the votes over time). - -== Miscellaneous - -Nuancier uses a gluster volume shared between the two hosts (in prod and -in stg) where are stored the images, making sure they are available to -both frontends. This may make things a little trickier sometime, be -aware of it. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/simple_koji_ci.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/simple_koji_ci.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 3da9639..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/simple_koji_ci.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,48 +0,0 @@ -= simple-koji-ci - -_simple-koji-ci_ is a small service running in our infra cloud that -listens for fedmsg messages coming from pagure on dist-git about new -pull-requests. It then creates a SRPM based on the content of each -pull-request, kicks off a scratch build in koji and reports the outcome -of that build on the pull-request. - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-admin, #fedora-apps -Persons:: - pingou -Location:: - the cloud ☁ -Servers:: - * simple-koji-ci-dev.fedorainfracloud.org - * simple-koji-ci-prod.fedorainfracloud.org -Purpose:: - Performs scratch builds for pull-request opened on dist-git - -== Hosts - -The current deployment is made in a single host: - -* `simple-koji-ci-prod.fedorainfracloud.org` for prod -* `simple-koji-ci-dev.fedorainfracloud.org` for stagging - -== Service - -_simple-koji-ci_ is a fedmsg-based service, so it can be turned on or off -via the `fedmsg-hub` service. - -It interacts with koji via a keytab created by the `keytab/service` role -in ansible. - -The configuration of the service (including the weight of the builds -kicked off in koji) is located at `/etc/fedmsg.d/simple_koji_ci.py`. - -One can monitor the service using: `journalctl -lfu fedmsg-hub`. - -== Impact - -This service is purely informative, nothing does nor should rely on it. -If anything goes wrong, there are no consequences for stopping it. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/tag2distrepo.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/tag2distrepo.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index fd590a4..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/tag2distrepo.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -= Tag2DistRepo Infrastructure SOP - -== Contents - -* <<_contact_information>> -* <<_description>> -* <<_configuration>> - -== Contact Information - -Owner:: - Fedora Infrastructure Team -Contact:: - #fedora-admin -Primary upstream contact:: - Patrick Uiterwijk - FAS: puiterwijk -Servers:: - bodhi-backend02.iad2.fedoraproject.org -Purpose:: - Tag2DistRepo is a Fedmsg Consumer that waits for tag operations in - specific tags, and then instructs Koji to create Distro Repos. - -== Description - -Tag2DistRepo is a Fedmsg Consumer that waits for tag operations in -specific tags, and then instructs Koji to create Distro Repos. - -== Configuration - -Configuration is handled by the `bodhi-backend.yaml` playbook in Ansible. -This can also be used to reconfigure application, if that becomes -nessecary. diff --git a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/virtio.adoc b/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/virtio.adoc deleted file mode 100644 index 99b8b48..0000000 --- a/modules/sysadmin_guide/pages/virtio.adoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,19 +0,0 @@ -= Virtio Notes - -We have found that virtio is faster/more stable than emulating other -cards on our VMs. - -To switch a VM to virtio: - -* Remove from DNS if it's a proxy -* Log into the vm and shut it down -* Log into the virthost that the VM is on, and -`sudo virsh edit ` -* Add this line to the appropriate bridge interface(s): -+ -.... - -.... -* Save/quit the editor -* `sudo virsh start ` -* Re-add to DNS if it's a proxy