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Alex Crawford 98484be434 userdata: change handling of bad userdata
Don't fail after encountering bad userdata. Continue processing the metadata
and then exit. This will allow people with bad userdata to actually log in and
see the error.
2014-09-10 17:50:23 -07:00
datasource digitalocean: Add DigitalOcean metadata service 2014-09-01 16:53:15 -07:00
Documentation docs: Update list of platforms supporting variable substitutions 2014-09-04 12:57:19 -07:00
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coreos-cloudinit_test.go metadata: Merge the network config 2014-09-01 09:29:45 -07:00
coreos-cloudinit.go userdata: change handling of bad userdata 2014-09-10 17:50:23 -07:00
cover feat(tests): add cover script 2014-05-10 01:42:57 -07:00
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MAINTAINERS docs: Update maintainers and contribution guide 2014-09-08 12:55:17 -07:00
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coreos-cloudinit Build Status

coreos-cloudinit enables a user to customize CoreOS machines by providing either a cloud-config document or an executable script through user-data.

Configuration with cloud-config

A subset of the official cloud-config spec is implemented by coreos-cloudinit. Additionally, several CoreOS-specific options have been implemented to support interacting with unit files, bootstrapping etcd clusters, and more. All supported cloud-config parameters are documented here.

The following is an example cloud-config document:

#cloud-config

coreos:
    units:
      - name: etcd.service
        command: start

users:
  - name: core
    passwd: $1$allJZawX$00S5T756I5PGdQga5qhqv1

write_files:
  - path: /etc/resolv.conf
    content: |
        nameserver 192.0.2.2
        nameserver 192.0.2.3

Executing a Script

coreos-cloudinit supports executing user-data as a script instead of parsing it as a cloud-config document. Make sure the first line of your user-data is a shebang and coreos-cloudinit will attempt to execute it:

#!/bin/bash

echo 'Hello, world!'

user-data Field Substitution

coreos-cloudinit will replace the following set of tokens in your user-data with system-generated values.

Token Description
$public_ipv4 Public IPv4 address of machine
$private_ipv4 Private IPv4 address of machine

These values are determined by CoreOS based on the given provider on which your machine is running. Read more about provider-specific functionality in the CoreOS OEM documentation.

For example, submitting the following user-data...

#cloud-config
coreos:
    etcd:
        addr: $public_ipv4:4001
        peer-addr: $private_ipv4:7001

...will result in this cloud-config document being executed:

#cloud-config
coreos:
    etcd:
        addr: 203.0.113.29:4001
        peer-addr: 192.0.2.13:7001