Tutorial

How To Manage /etc with Version Control Using Etckeeper on CentOS 7

How To Manage /etc with Version Control Using Etckeeper on CentOS 7

Introduction

In the Linux ecosystem, installing, maintaining and upgrading software on a periodic basis is a must. However, tracking changes made to local configuration files is still necessary. As opposed to the old standby of making copies of configuration files before making changes, etckeeper lets you keep track of modifications using a Git, Mercurial, Bazaar, or Darcs repository, just like you would do with a software development project.

In addition, etckeeper integrates seamlessly with yum to automatically commit changes made to the contents of the /etc directory when packages are upgraded. This will allow you to revert to previous versions of your configuration files should you want — or need — to do so.

Prerequisites

To follow this tutorial, you will need:

  • One CentOS 7 Droplet with a sudo non-root user, which you can set up by following steps 1 through 4 in this tutorial.

etckeeper only tracks file permissions, metadata, and changes. It does not provide out-of-the-box tools to perform the restoration of files, so an understanding of the fundamentals of a revision control system is necessary.

In this article we will use Git, which is the default VCS that etckeeper uses. If you want to refresh your memory about Git and version control, you can check the this tutorial series. Although you will not use Git directly in this guide, you can run Git-specific commands through etckeeper.

Step 1 — Installing etckeeper

In this step, we will install etckeeper.

First, you will need to enable EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux) on your CentOS 7 server, because that is the repository which contains etckeeper.

sudo yum update && sudo yum install epel-release

Then install etckeeper.

sudo yum update && sudo yum install etckeeper

Git comes with CentOS 7 by default, so we don’t need to install it.

Step 2 — Customizing etckeeper’s Configuration

Once you have installed etckeeper, the next step is updating the /etc/etckeeper/etckeeper.conf configuration file.

First, open the configuration file with Nano or your favorite text editor.

sudo nano /etc/etckeeper/etckeeper.conf

The following are the essential variables that you need to configure in order for etckeeper to work properly. Feel free to leave the rest of the settings commented out.

First, under the comment # The VCS to use., make sure the VCS="git" is uncommented (i.e. there is no # at the beginning of the line). By default, this option will already be uncommented as git is the default VCS used by etckeeper installations on CentOS 7.

If you want to prevent etckeeper from committing changes automatically once per day, make sure the AVOID_DAILY_AUTOCOMMITS=1 is uncommented. In order to decide if you want to set this, you should consider whether your system configuration files undergo frequent changes (e.g. testing environments often change every day). If so, you should comment out that line; otherwise, you can leave it commented.

If you want yum install to abort when there are uncommitted changes in /etc, make sure to uncomment AVOID_COMMIT_BEFORE_INSTALL=1. This will require a manual commit before using yum to install packages. Otherwise, leave it commented out and yum will automatically commit the updated files before running an installation. This choice is entirely up to you; it depends largely on your environment, and the quantity of changes. This is much like the previous example, except that this time it will depend on the frequency with which you install packages.

When you’re done updating the options, save and close the file.

Step 3 — Initializing the Git Repository

In this step, we will initialize the Git repository in /etc.

First, change to the /etc directory.

cd /etc

Next, initialize the repository by running the following command.

sudo etckeeper init

You should get the following message:

Initialized empty Git repository in /etc/.git/

You should now see the .git directory and the .gitignore file inside /etc. For example, if you run the following command:

ls -la /etc | grep git

You should see these lines included in the output:

drwx------.  7 root     root       4096 Apr  2 21:42 .git
-rw-r--r--.  1 root     root        874 Apr  2 21:42 .gitignore

Note: .git must be protected in the local system (hence the read, write, and execute permissions for the superuser only); because version control systems don’t keep track of file permissions by themselves, etckeeper provides this feature instead.

The .git directory contains several configuration and description files and other subdirectories intended for the use of Git itself. The .gitignore file, which specifies explicitly untracked files that git should ignore, is intended to be managed by etckeeper in its entirety. It is not advisable to edit it by hand, with one exception.

If there are certain files that you don’t want to track using version control, you can add them to the .gitignore file manually. To stop tracking a file, first open .gitignore for editing.

sudo nano .gitignore

The last line of the file will read # end section managed by etckeeper. Add the filenames of the files you want to ignore, one per line, above this one.

file_to_ignore
another_file_to_ignore
# end section managed by etckeeper

Then save and close the file.

You additionally will need to remove those files from the cache that is currently being managed by git since you initialized the local repository earlier.

etckeeper vcs rm --cached file_to_ignore

Repeat the above command for as many files as you previously added to .gitignore.

Step 4 — Committing /etc to the Git Repository

In this step, we will commit our initial /etc.

Adding your first commit is easy; simply enter the following command. Although not strictly necessary, you should add a description to each commit to be able to easily identify them later.

sudo etckeeper commit "First commit of my /etc directory"

You should then see the outputted list of files being committed to your repository, like the below (truncated):

create mode 100644 selinux/targeted/modules/active/modules/dnsmasq.pp
create mode 100644 selinux/targeted/modules/active/modules/dnssec.pp
create mode 100644 selinux/targeted/modules/active/modules/docker.pp
create mode 100644 selinux/targeted/modules/active/modules/dovecot.pp

Step 5 — Making Changes

In this step, we will make some changes to a file in /etc and commit them. In the next step, we will revert these changes.

First, make a change to the contents of a file of your choice. For example, you can add a new host to your local name resolution by adding a line consisting of an IP address and its associated hostname at the end of /etc/hosts.

First, open the file.

sudo nano /etc/hosts

Then, add the following line to the end of the file.

192.168.0.2    node01

Save and close the file. Now, let’s commit this change.

sudo etckeeper commit "Added a line to the hosts file"

Finally, modify the file’s permissions.

sudo chmod 640 /etc/hosts

And modify its ownership (making sure to replace sammy with your own username).

sudo chown sammy:sammy /etc/hosts

You can check the current permissions and ownership of /etc/hosts.

ls -l /etc/hosts

The output should look like this:

-rw-r----- 1 sammy sammy 675 Apr 17 15:01 /etc/hosts

Step 6 — Undoing Changes

Now let’s test the restoring capabilities of etckeeper — not just of the file and its contents, but also its permissions and ownership.

First, list the commits you’ve made so far.

sudo git log --pretty=oneline

The first column of the output is a SHA-1 hash that uniquely identifies the commit; the second is the description that you used when you submit the changes earlier.

Your output should look similar to this, with different hashes.

d0958fbe4d947a6a3ad98141f9fe89d1fd1a95c4 Added a line to the hosts file
76c193da740a3e137fa000773a79de8bb5c898b7 First commit of my /etc directory

Take note of the hash of each commit. You will use them to roll back to that previous state.

Let’s roll back /etc/hosts to how it looked before we started this tutorial. Replace the characters in red with the SHA-1 hash that corresponds to your first commit. Note that you don’t need to specify the whole SHA-1 hash string; a few characters that uniquely identify it will do.

sudo etckeeper vcs checkout 76c19 /etc/hosts

Now we can check the contents, permissions, and ownership of /etc/hosts to see that they’ve been changed back.

Look at the last few lines of the file.

tail /etc/hosts

Should give you an output like this, which is missing the 192.168.0.2 node01 line we added, as expected.

...

# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
::1 test-etckeeper test-etckeeper
::1 localhost.localdomain localhost
::1 localhost6.localdomain6 localhost6

Check the current permissions and ownership of /etc/hosts again.

ls -l /etc/hosts

You’ll see an output that looks like this.

-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 704 Apr 17 15:01 /etc/hosts

The contents of the file were restored correctly, as well as the permissions and ownership.

Conclusion

In this tutorial we have explained how to use etckeeper, a great tool to store your /etc directory in a Git repository. You can also use to a Bazaar, Mercurial, or Darcs repository.

Regardless of the VCS of your choice, etckeeper will help you keep on top of your configuration files and ensure that you can always roll back to a previous state if you need to undo changes or modify functionality.

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hi! i write do.co/docs now, but i used to be the senior tech editor publishing tutorials here in the community.


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Step 6 is very misleading about restoring of permissons and ownership.

Command sudo etckeeper vcs checkout 76c19 /etc/hosts does not restore metadata (permissions and ownership) as saved in the git repositopry. It merely creates files with DEFAULT metadata (permissions are determined by umask, ownership – by current user and group).

File /etc/hosts luckily has the default metadata. But metadata of a file having any other permissions or ownership could not be restored by checkout command. And if one had any other umask, then even /etc/hosts could not be restored.

To restore metadata of all files in /etc one might run “sudo etckeeper init”. See, for example, https://etckeeper.branchable.com/README/ (“If you do decide to check out a branch or tag, make sure you run “etckeeper init” again, to get any metadata changes”) and https://etckeeper.branchable.com/todo/Restore_metadata_at_checkout/

As for restore metadata of only one file – etckeeper likely can not do this. But one can know metadata from the proper version of file .etckeeper and then run commands chmod, chown, chgrp manually.

Tested in etckeeper Version: 1.18.2 : The /etckeeper/.gitignore file can be created with the user specified files to omit BEFORE calling “etckeeper init”.

after init, those user specified files will remain at the top of the file, and below will be etckeeper managed section.

Likewise, if “etckeeper uninit” is called, only the etckeeper managed section will be removed from “.gitignore”. The “.gitignore” file itself will remain and contain only the user specified files.

Thanks for the article. I think that manually added items in the .gitignore file should be placed at the end of the file, thus

# end section managed by etckeeper
ignore_file_one
ignore_file_two

and not before the end section. I suspect they could get wiped otherwise. The example at https://github.com/joeyh/etckeeper also shows this:

echo printcap >> .gitignore

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