Rex - the friendly automation framework
Rex is an automation framework that is friendly to any combinations of local and remote execution, push and pull style of management, or imperative and declarative approach.
Its flexibility makes it a great fit for many different use cases, but most commonly Rex is used to automate application deployment and data center infrastructure management tasks.
bash# rex -h # Show usage bash# rex -T # List tasks bash# rex uname # Run the 'uname' task bash# rex -H server[01..10] uname # Run the 'uname' task on all the specified hosts bash# rex -G production uname # Run 'uname' on hosts on the 'production' hostgroup bash# rex deploy --gracefully # Pass '--gracefully' to the 'deploy' task
rex [<options>] [-H <host>] [-G <group>] <task> [<task-options>] rex -T[m|y|v] [<string>] -b Run batch -e Run the given code fragment -E Execute a task on the given environment -G|-g Execute a task on the given server groups -H Execute a task on the given hosts (space delimited) -z Execute a task on hosts from this command's output -K Public key file for the ssh connection -P Private key file for the ssh connection -p Password for the ssh connection -u Username for the ssh connection -d Show debug output -ddd Show more debug output (includes profiling output) -m Monochrome output: no colors -o Output format -q Quiet mode: no log output -qw Quiet mode: only output warnings and errors -Q Really quiet: output nothing -T List tasks -Ta List all tasks, including hidden -Tm List tasks in machine-readable format -Tv List tasks verbosely -Ty List tasks in YAML format -c Turn cache ON -C Turn cache OFF -f Use this file instead of Rexfile -F Force: disregard lock file -h Display this help message -M Load this module instead of Rexfile -O Pass additional options, like CMDB path -s Use sudo for every command -S Password for sudo -t Number of threads to use (aka 'parallelism' param) -v Display (R)?ex version
When you run rex it reads the file Rexfile in the current working directory. A Rexfile consists of 2 major parts: Configuration and Task Definitions.
rex
Rexfile
user "bruce"; password "batman"; pass_auth;
private_key "/path/to/your/private/key.file"; public_key "/path/to/your/public/key.file";
logging to_file => "rex.log"; logging to_syslog => "local0";
Rex gives you the ability to define groups of servers. Groups can be defined the Rexfile:
group "frontends" => "frontend01", "frontend02", "frontend03", "frontend04", "frontend[05..09]";
Groups can also be defined in a server.ini file:
[frontends] frontend[01..04]
timeout 10; # ssh timeout parallelism 2; # execute tasks in parallel
A basic task looks like this:
# task description desc "This task tells you how long since the server was rebooted"; # task definition task "shortname", sub { say run "uptime"; };
You can also set a default server group:
desc "This is a long description of a task"; task "shortname", group => "frontends", sub { say run "uptime"; };
To install Rex, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Rex
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Rex
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.