RHEL 7/CentOS 7
If you’re just looking for a quick “one-liner” installation, check the top-level install guide. If you need a customised installation, use this guide for step-by-step instructions for installing StackStorm on a single system as per the Reference deployment.
Note
Use the Source, Luke! We strive to keep the documentation current, but the best way to find out what really happens is to look at the code of the installer scripts.
Contents
System Requirements
Please check the supported versions and system requirements.
Note
StackStorm on RHEL 7/CentOS 7 runs all services, actions and sensors using Python 3 only. It does not support Python 2 actions.
Minimal Installation
Adjust SELinux Policies
If your system has SELinux in Enforcing mode, please follow these instructions to adjust SELinux policies. This is needed for successful installation. If you are not happy with these policies, you may want to tweak them according to your security practices.
First check if SELinux is in Enforcing mode:
getenforce
If the previous command returns ‘Enforcing’, then run the following commands:
# SELINUX management tools, not available for some minimal installations sudo yum install -y policycoreutils-python # Allow network access for nginx sudo setsebool -P httpd_can_network_connect 1 # Allow RabbitMQ to use port '25672', otherwise it will fail to start sudo semanage port --list | grep -q 25672 || sudo semanage port -a -t amqp_port_t -p tcp 25672
Note
If you see messages like “SELinux: Could not downgrade policy file”, it means you are trying to adjust policy configurations when SELinux is disabled. You can ignore this error.
Install Dependencies
Note
The currently supported version of MongoDB is 4.0. This is the version installed by the installer script.
Install MongoDB, RabbitMQ, and Redis
sudo yum -y install https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
# Add key and repo for the latest stable MongoDB (4.0)
sudo rpm --import https://www.mongodb.org/static/pgp/server-4.0.asc
sudo sh -c "cat <<EOT > /etc/yum.repos.d/mongodb-org-4.repo
[mongodb-org-4]
name=MongoDB Repository
baseurl=https://repo.mongodb.org/yum/redhat/7/mongodb-org/4.0/x86_64/
gpgcheck=1
enabled=1
gpgkey=https://www.mongodb.org/static/pgp/server-4.0.asc
EOT"
sudo yum -y install crudini
sudo yum -y install mongodb-org
curl -sL https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/rabbitmq/erlang/script.rpm.sh | sudo bash
curl -sL https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-server/script.rpm.sh | sudo bash
sudo yum makecache -y --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='rabbitmq_rabbitmq-server'
sudo yum -y install erlang
sudo yum -y install rabbitmq-server
sudo yum -y install redis
sudo systemctl start mongod rabbitmq-server redis
sudo systemctl enable mongod rabbitmq-server redis
The default python on CentOS/RHEL 7.x is python 2, StackStorm uses python3 and requires the python3-devel package. The installation of the st2 package will automatically install python3-devel if it is available in an enabled repository. On CentOS distributions the relevant repository is typically enabled however on RHEL distributions it is provided by the rhel-7-server-optional-rpms repository (repository name dependant on RHEL distribution).
The following steps in this section are only required on RHEL 7.x systems. On CentOS 7.x systems these steps can be ignored, and you can proceed to Setup Repositories.
Use the following command to verify that the python3-devel package is available in an enabled repository:
sudo yum info python3-devel
If it is not available, locate the repository that contains the RPM. On RHEL 7.x it is located in the optional server RPMs repository (the name of that repository differs between RHEL distributions):
sudo yum repolist disabled | grep optional | grep server
Then either enable the optional repository using subscription-manager or yum-config-manager, or install python3-devel with a temporary repository enablement, e.g.:
sudo yum install python3-devel --enablerepo <optional-server-rpm repo>
Setup Repositories
The following script will detect your platform and architecture and setup the appropriate StackStorm repository. It will also add the the GPG key used for package signing.
curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/StackStorm/stable/script.rpm.sh | sudo bash
Install StackStorm Components
sudo yum install -y st2
If you are not running RabbitMQ, MongoDB, or Redis on the same system, or have changed the defaults, please adjust these settings:
RabbitMQ connection at
/etc/st2/st2.conf
MongoDB at
/etc/st2/st2.conf
Redis connection at coordination section of
/etc/st2/st2.conf
See the Configuration documentation for more information.
Setup Datastore Encryption
The Key-value store allows users to store encrypted values (secrets). These are stored using symmetric encryption (AES256). To generate a crypto key, run these commands:
DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEYS_DIRECTORY="/etc/st2/keys"
DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_PATH="${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEYS_DIRECTORY}/datastore_key.json"
sudo mkdir -p ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEYS_DIRECTORY}
sudo st2-generate-symmetric-crypto-key --key-path ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_PATH}
# Make sure only st2 user can read the file
sudo chgrp st2 ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEYS_DIRECTORY}
sudo chmod o-r ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEYS_DIRECTORY}
sudo chgrp st2 ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_PATH}
sudo chmod o-r ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_PATH}
# set path to the key file in the config
sudo crudini --set /etc/st2/st2.conf keyvalue encryption_key_path ${DATASTORE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_PATH}
sudo st2ctl restart-component st2api
Configure SSH and SUDO
To run local and remote shell actions, StackStorm uses a special system user (by default stanley
).
For remote Linux actions, SSH is used. We recommend configuring public key-based SSH access on all
remote hosts. We also recommend configuring SSH access to localhost for running examples and
testing.
Create StackStorm system user, enable passwordless sudo, and set up ssh access to “localhost” so that SSH-based actions can be tested locally. You will need elevated privileges to do this:
# Create an SSH system user (default `stanley` user may already exist) sudo useradd stanley sudo mkdir -p /home/stanley/.ssh sudo chmod 0700 /home/stanley/.ssh # Generate ssh keys sudo ssh-keygen -f /home/stanley/.ssh/stanley_rsa -P "" # Authorize key-based access sudo sh -c 'cat /home/stanley/.ssh/stanley_rsa.pub >> /home/stanley/.ssh/authorized_keys' sudo chown -R stanley:stanley /home/stanley/.ssh # Enable passwordless sudo sudo sh -c 'echo "stanley ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: SETENV: ALL" >> /etc/sudoers.d/st2' sudo chmod 0440 /etc/sudoers.d/st2 # Make sure `Defaults requiretty` is disabled in `/etc/sudoers` sudo sed -i -r "s/^Defaults\s+\+?requiretty/# Defaults +requiretty/g" /etc/sudoers
Configure SSH access and enable passwordless sudo on the remote hosts which StackStorm will be running remote actions on via SSH. Using the public key generated in the previous step, follow the instructions at Configure SSH. To control Windows boxes, configure access for Windows runners.
If you are using a different user, or path to their SSH key, you will need to change this section in
/etc/st2/st2.conf
:[system_user] user = stanley ssh_key_file = /home/stanley/.ssh/stanley_rsa
Start Services
Start services:
sudo st2ctl start
Register sensors, rules and actions:
sudo st2ctl reload
Verify
The following commands will test your StackStorm installation. They should all complete successfully:
st2 --version
st2 -h
# List the actions from a 'core' pack
st2 action list --pack=core
# Run a local shell command
st2 run core.local -- date -R
# See the execution results
st2 execution list
# Fire a remote comand via SSH (Requires passwordless SSH)
st2 run core.remote hosts='localhost' -- uname -a
# Install a pack
st2 pack install st2
Use the supervisor script to manage StackStorm services:
sudo st2ctl start|stop|status|restart|restart-component|reload|clean
At this point you have a minimal working installation, and can happily play with StackStorm: follow the Quick Start tutorial, deploy the examples, explore and install packs from StackStorm Exchange.
But there is no joy without a Web UI, no security without SSL or authentication, and no fun without ChatOps. Read on!
Configure Authentication
The reference deployment uses a file-based authentication provider for simplicity. Refer to Authentication to configure and use PAM or LDAP authentication backends.
To set up authentication with file-based provider:
Create a user with a password:
# Install htpasswd utility if you don't have it sudo yum -y install httpd-tools # Create a user record in a password file. echo 'Ch@ngeMe' | sudo htpasswd -i /etc/st2/htpasswd st2admin
Enable and configure authentication in
/etc/st2/st2.conf
:[auth] # ... enable = True backend = flat_file backend_kwargs = {"file_path": "/etc/st2/htpasswd"} # ...
Restart the st2api service:
sudo st2ctl restart-component st2api
Authenticate, and check that it works:
# Login - you will be prompted for password (default 'Ch@ngeMe') st2 login st2admin # Check that it works st2 action list
Install WebUI and Setup SSL Termination
NGINX is used to serve WebUI static files, redirect HTTP to HTTPS, provide
SSL termination, and reverse-proxy st2auth and st2api API endpoints. To set it up: install the
st2web
and nginx
packages, generate certificates or place your existing certificates under
/etc/ssl/st2
, and configure nginx with StackStorm’s supplied site config file st2.conf.
StackStorm depends on Nginx version >=1.7.5. RHEL has an older version in the package repositories, so you will need to add the official Nginx repository:
# Add key and repo for the latest stable nginx
sudo rpm --import http://nginx.org/keys/nginx_signing.key
sudo sh -c "cat <<EOT > /etc/yum.repos.d/nginx.repo
[nginx]
name=nginx repo
baseurl=http://nginx.org/packages/rhel/\\\$releasever/x86_64/
gpgcheck=1
enabled=1
EOT"
# Ensure that EPEL repo is not used for nginx
sudo sed -i 's/^\(enabled=1\)$/exclude=nginx\n\1/g' /etc/yum.repos.d/epel.repo
# Install nginx
sudo yum install -y nginx
# Install st2web
sudo yum install -y st2web
# Generate a self-signed certificate or place your existing certificate under /etc/ssl/st2
sudo mkdir -p /etc/ssl/st2
sudo openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout /etc/ssl/st2/st2.key -out /etc/ssl/st2/st2.crt \
-days 365 -nodes -subj "/C=US/ST=California/L=Palo Alto/O=StackStorm/OU=Information \
Technology/CN=$(hostname)"
# Copy and enable the supplied nginx config file
sudo cp /usr/share/doc/st2/conf/nginx/st2.conf /etc/nginx/conf.d/
# Disable default_server configuration in existing /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
sudo sed -i 's/default_server//g' /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
sudo systemctl restart nginx
sudo systemctl enable nginx
If you modify ports, or url paths in the nginx configuration, make the corresponding changes in
the st2web configuration at /opt/stackstorm/static/webui/config.js
.
Use your browser to connect to https://${ST2_HOSTNAME}
and login to the WebUI.
If you are unable to connect to the web browser, you may need to change the default firewall settings. You can do this with these commands:
firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-service=http --add-service=https
firewall-cmd --zone=public --permanent --add-service=http --add-service=https
This will allow inbound HTTP (port 80) and HTTPS (port 443) traffic, and make those changes survive reboot.
If you are trying to access the API from outside the box and you have configured nginx according to
these instructions, use https://${EXTERNAL_IP}/api/v1/${REST_ENDPOINT}
.
For example:
curl -X GET -H 'Connection: keep-alive' -H 'User-Agent: manual/curl' -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate' -H 'Accept: */*' -H 'X-Auth-Token: <YOUR_TOKEN>' https://1.2.3.4/api/v1/actions
Similarly, you can connect to auth REST endpoints with https://${EXTERNAL_IP}/auth/v1/${AUTH_ENDPOINT}
.
You can see the actual REST endpoint for a resource by adding a --debug
option to the CLI
command for the appropriate resource.
For example, to see the endpoint for getting actions, invoke:
st2 --debug action list
Setup ChatOps
If you already run a Hubot instance, you can install the hubot-stackstorm plugin and configure StackStorm environment variables, as described below. Otherwise, the easiest way to enable StackStorm ChatOps is to use the st2chatops package.
Validate that the
chatops
pack is installed, and a notification rule is enabled:# Ensure chatops pack is in place ls /opt/stackstorm/packs/chatops # Create notification rule if not yet enabled st2 rule get chatops.notify || st2 rule create /opt/stackstorm/packs/chatops/rules/notify_hubot.yaml
-
curl -sL https://rpm.nodesource.com/setup_14.x | sudo -E bash -
Install the
st2chatops
package:sudo yum install -y st2chatops
Review and edit the
/opt/stackstorm/chatops/st2chatops.env
configuration file to point it to your StackStorm installation and the Chat Service you are using. At a minimum, you should generate an API key and set theST2_API_KEY
variable. By defaultst2api
andst2auth
are expected to be on the same host. If that is not the case, please update theST2_API
andST2_AUTH_URL
variables or just point to the correct host withST2_HOSTNAME
.The example configuration uses Slack. To set this up, go to the Slack web admin interface, create a Bot, and copy the authentication token into
HUBOT_SLACK_TOKEN
.If you are using a different Chat Service, set the corresponding environment variables under the
Chat service adapter settings
section inst2chatops.env
: Slack, Flowdock, IRC , Mattermost, RocketChat, XMPP.Start the service:
sudo systemctl start st2chatops # Start st2chatops on boot sudo systemctl enable st2chatops
Reload st2 packs to make sure the
chatops.notify
rule is registered:sudo st2ctl reload --register-all
That’s it! Go to your Chat room and begin ChatOps-ing. Read more in the ChatOps section.
A Note on Security
By default, when MongoDB and RabbitMQ are installed, they have authentication disabled or use a default static password. As such, after you install those services you should configure them and enable authentication with strong randomly generated passwords.
NB: If you use the StackStorm installation script, this is done automatically for you.
Configuring authorization and passwords for those services is out of the scope for this documentation. For more information refer to the links below:
MongoDB - https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/enable-authentication/, https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/core/authorization/
RabbitMQ - https://www.rabbitmq.com/authentication.html
After you enable authentication for those components, you will also need to update StackStorm services to use the new settings.
This means editing the following configuration options:
StackStorm -
/etc/st2/st2.conf
database.username
- MongoDB database username.
database.password
- MongoDB database password.
messaging.url
- RabbitMQ transport url (amqp://<username>:<password>@<hostname>:5672
)
In addition, you are strongly encouraged to follow these best practices for running network services:
Ensure communication between services is encrypted. Enable SSL/TLS for MongoDB and RabbitMQ,
Configure services to only listen on localhost, and where needed, internal IP addresses. There is usually no need for most services which are used by StackStorm (MongoDB, RabbitMQ) to be available on a public IP address.
Configure a firewall and set up a whitelist. The firewall should only allow access by those users and systems which need access to those services. API and auth services usually need to be accessible to your users, but other dependent services such as MongoDB and RabbitMQ don’t. These should not be directly accessible by users, and only StackStorm components should be allowed to talk to them.
Where possible, you should also utilize additional network-based isolation and security features such as DMZs.
The steps mentioned above are especially important for distributed production deployments where StackStorm components are running on multiple servers.
Upgrade to Extreme Workflow Composer
For StackStorm versions earlier than 3.3, Extreme Networks provided a commercial version of the StackStorm automation platform (EWC). EWC added priority support, advanced features such as fine-tuned access control (RBAC), LDAP, and Workflow Designer.
As these enterprise features were donated to the Linux Foundation, RBAC, LDAP and Workflow Designer components are now available in StackStorm Open Source since 3.4. The Workflow Designer is integrated into the StackStorm Web UI, and RBAC and LDAP components are installed (but not configured) with the default installation.
What’s Next?
Check out the Quick Start Guide to build a simple automation.
Get more actions, triggers, rules:
Install integration packs from StackStorm Exchange - follow the Packs guide.
Learn how to write custom actions.
Use workflows to stitch actions into higher level automations - Workflows.
Check out tutorials on stackstorm.com