49

I'm learning Chef and I'm going to do right now for Ubuntu:

execute "add-apt-repository ppa:#{node[:some_repo]}" do
  user "root"
end

execute "apt-get update" do
  user "root"
end

but may be there is a better ("chef-style"?) way to do it. Also, I concerned that sometimes add-apt-repository waits for "Enter" key on it's execution, so this approach might not work as is. What is the Right way of doing it?

Edit: I only have ppa link in format: ppa:something/user

4 Answers 4

67

If you use chef v12.9 and above, Use the apt_repository resource for managing apt repositories. If you use chef lower than v12.8, you can use APT Cookbook provided by Chef Software, Inc. This cookbook provides same LWRP Following is the example usage of the resource:

apt_repository "nginx-php" do
  uri "http://ppa.launchpad.net/nginx/php5/ubuntu"
  distribution node['lsb']['codename']
  components ["main"]
  keyserver "keyserver.ubuntu.com"
  key "C300EE8C"
end
8
  • 2
    How to find out what is key server and key if I only have PPA name/username?
    – Artem
    Mar 6, 2012 at 18:20
  • I don't know how you could get the key, but the keyserver i'm almost certain is the same as above: "keyserver.ubuntu.com"
    – Leo Gamas
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:46
  • 4
    Where would one put that code? Could I put it in my own cookbook, which does a bunch of other stuff, for instance? Jan 15, 2013 at 16:34
  • 1
    Oh, you need to have the lsb-release package installed. And that's not included in Debian minimal :(
    – Peter
    May 27, 2013 at 16:46
  • 1
    The linked documentation is super useful. supermarket.chef.io/cookbooks/apt I just used it to add a repo in a slightly non-standard format. A++ would buy again ;- )
    – jorfus
    Jan 22, 2016 at 23:46
16

There is also a third-party apt cookbook that provides a ppa method:

ppa "user/repo"

https://github.com/sometimesfood/chef-apt-repo

Ideally this functionality should be added to the opscode apt cookbook.

2
  • What functionality does the ppa method have over the apt_repository LWRP mentioned in Leo Gamas answer above?
    – DonBecker
    Jul 14, 2014 at 16:33
  • We used to build our own inhouse as well. And recently moved it all to utilize the community cookbook. There are just too many edge cases around aptitude and discovering repositories efficiently to care. :) In this case, you just have to provide the complete launchpad URL to the repo and not just user/repo and it will work with apt_repository.
    – Till
    Aug 1, 2014 at 14:48
7

Adding another answer since I just found myself back here. If you just have the URL for a key and not the key signature you can simply specify the URL in the key attribute:

apt_repository 'some_repo' do
  uri          'http://some_url/ubuntu/precise/amd64/'
  arch         'amd64'
  distribution 'precise'
  components   ['contrib']
  key          'https://some_key_url.com/debian/release.key'
end

From the documentation

2

One additional note is that once you have added the apt cookbook you should add a dependency statement to your cookbook. Update metadata.rb (should be in the base of your cookbook dir)

depends 'apt', '>= 2.7.0'

This will prevent the failure mode where a node can't update because it doesn't have the apt cookbook in it's runlist.

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