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Ansible Arch

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Learning ansible?

Overview

The objective is to have an easy way to have fresh arch installation setup the way one desires. Reliably and with the least amount of effort. For this Ansible is used.

Ansible is an automation platform.
It executes tasks from playbooks on machines listed in inventory. Open source, developed by Red Hat. Written and dependent on python. Uses YAML configuration files. Agent-less, controlled machines need just ssh+python (linux) or winrm+powershell (windows).
Praised for simplicity.

This repo aims to be easily customizable, playbooks being as simple as possible. One should be able to look at them, see how stuff is done and make own changes.

How to execute

install arch linux (archinstall), log in to a non root account that can sudo

  • install ansible and git
    sudo pacman -S ansible git
  • clone this repo
    git clone https://github.com/DoTheEvo/ansible-arch.git
  • enter the directory
    cd ansible-arch
  • run the playbooks you want
    • ansible-playbook -u $USER -K playbook_core.yml
    • ansible-playbook -u $USER -K playbook_zsh.yml
    • ansible-playbook -u $USER -K playbook_docker.yml

yes, you write $USER there, which puts in the user you are logged in
the -K is short for --ask-become-pass which will prompt for password

Removal
After running playbooks it be good to remove ansible package and bunch of its dependencies. Saves ~600MB and noise during updates.

  • sudo pacman -Rns ansible

Playbooks

executing_playbook.webm

useful terminal programs, settings, maintenance services

  • arch update/upgrade, equivalent of pacman -Syu
  • install:
    nano, micro, man-db, git, curl, wget, rsync, nnn, fd, fzf, bat, tree, unarchiver, fastfetch, duf, ncdu, htop, btop, iotop, glances, nmap, gnu-netcat, tcpdump, net-tools, iperf3, iproute2, bind, nload, sysfsutils, lsof, fuse, python-llfuse, python-pip, python-setuptools, python-pexpect, sqlite
  • install yay to have access to AUR
    set - remove make dependencies, always clean builds, cleanup after
  • in pacman.conf enable color and enable parallel downloads
  • in makepkg.conf disable compression and enable parallel compilation
  • noatime set in fstab to avoid unnecessary writes of relatime
  • increase allowed failed login attempts to 10 before lock out
  • enable members of wheel group to sudo
  • add current user to root group and disable need for entering sudo password
  • services to install and enable
    • ssh - remote access
    • nnn - get plugins, no sudo needed
    • plocate - file search locate
    • cronie - cron time scheduler
    • archlinux-keyring - weekly update
    • fstrim - weekly ssd trim
    • trash-cli - delete to trash
    • paccache - weekly clearing of pacman cache
    • reflector - weekly update of mirrorlist - !!change the country codes!!
    • logrotate - if need to prevent logs from growing
  • install neofetch
  • check if in virtual machine and if vmware, hyperv, or virtualbox then install and enable supporting services
  • install micro text editor, copy config, keybinds, syntax highlight set micro as the default editor in .bashrc

steeef-theme

  • install zsh shell
  • copy bash history in to .zhistory
  • change the default shell from bash to zsh for the user
  • install zimfw using its own script
  • change the theme to steeef
  • copy .myownrc with various predefined stuff
  • source .myownrc in .zshrc
  • install docker, docker-compose, ctop
  • enable and start docker service
  • add the current user to the docker group to avoid need for sudo
  • set default max logs size to 250MB and set logs rotation
  • detect bootloader - systemd or grub
  • installs linux-lts package
  • switch to lts kernel

After experiencing a kernel regression, it became apparent that switch to lts kernel should be the default.
Archinstall script on ISO supports the choice of lts kernel during the installation. This playbook solves it for already running machines, if they use grub or systemd-boot.

Be careful. Snapshot before you try.

Local deployment

This is for a local deployment. Meaning the machine is changing itself, as oppose to more typical ansible use, where you run playbooks on one machine to change 143 virtual machines somewhere on the cloud.

To go from local to remote, edit inventory, replace local entries with IPs of machines you want to change.

Personal workflow

The core application is nnn file manager.
launched by n command, or nnnn to run it as root, but with user ENVS

  • nnn is configured through exports in .myownrc file and through flags used in the n and nnnn
  • ? key - shows hotkeys, can also see what bookmarks are set
    bookmarks are used by pressing 'b' and then one of the offered letters, like 'h' for home or 'e' for /etc
  • ! key - opens terminal in the current directory, to return back to nnn press ctrl+d, there is N1 indication that we are in a terminal opened from under nnn
  • e key - edits currently selected file in preset editor - micro for me
  • ;f keys - open fzf file search in current directory,
  • d key - switches to detail view, pressing t and d shows directories size

Useful

bunch of linux commands

  • journalctl -p 3 -rb
  • journalctl -p 3 -rxb
  • journalctl -rb
  • systemctl --failed
  • systemctl list-units --type=service --state=active
  • systemctl list-units --type=timer --state=active
  • systemctl list-timers
  • journalctl -ru borg.timer
  • systemctl list-units --type=mount
  • systemctl list-units --type=automount
  • findmnt
  • cat /proc/cmdline
  • lsmod
  • lspci -k
  • rsync -ah --info=progress2 ./minecraft /mnt/bigdisk/backup
  • sudo dd bs=4M if=arch.iso of=/dev/sdX status=progress oflag=direct
  • sudo nethogs - realtime traffic per process
  • sudo ss -tulpn - shows what uses which port
  • host 10.0.19.2 - hostname lookup
  • curl ipinfo.io - get current public IP
  • sudo nc -vv -l -p 8789 - netcat starts tiny server listening at port 8789,
    do port forwarding on router/firewall, then test on https://www.grc.com/x/portprobe=8789
  • sudo nc -vv -u -l -p 8789 netcat server now in udp mode
    can be tested with another netcat instance running nc -u <ip> 8789
    writing something and pressing enter shows the text on the server
  • sudo tcpdump -n udp port 21116 - see udp traffic on a port
  • pacman -F <path to a file> - which package owns that file
  • grep -i upgraded /var/log/pacman.log | tac | less - last upgraded packages
  • duf

Encountered issues

  • In vmware issue with an error in journal - piix4_smbus SMBus Host Controller not enabled
    solution - in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf add blacklist i2c_piix4, reboot
    check - sudo journalctl -p 3 -xb and lsmod | grep i2c
  • Weekly hang-up because swap was off. Archlinux VM docker host experienced huge spike of constant disk use which was cause by the lack of SWAP. After adding 6GB swap file it was rock solid.
  • If running arch without update for a long time - sudo pacman -Sy archlinux-keyring before updating everything else with pacman -Syu.
    Enabling archlinux-keyring-wkd-sync.timer will update the package weekly. It's part of the core playbook.
    It's run history be checked - journalctl -ru archlinux-keyring-wkd-sync.timer
  • To update zim zsh framework- zimfw upgrade and zimfw update.

disk commands

  • equivalent of win diskpart > clean that wipes everything
    sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX bs=1M count=1
  • create clean partition
    sudo cfdisk /dev/sdX
    sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdx1
  • check uuid
    sudo lsblk -f
  • fstab entry
    UUID=e2516713-8c13-430f-84a6-3c2fefe3ec1e /mnt/data-1 ext4 rw,noatime,nofail 0 1

dd commands

  • create bootable usb and dont want ventoy for some reason
    sudo dd bs=4M if=archlinux-2023.12.01-x86_64.iso of=/dev/sdX status=progress oflag=direct

sure as hell I am not using dd to backup stuff, but in case...

  • backup
    dd if=/dev/sdc conv=noerror | pv | dd of=~/backup.img
  • restore
    dd if=~/backup.img conv=noerror | pv | dd of=/dev/sdc

https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/1fykml6/some_aliases_ive_found_to_be_useful_for_arch/

devices and drivers info

  • lspci -k - which device which driver
  • lshw -C network - network info
  • lspci -vvv | grep --color ASPM - list pci devices info and highlight aspm

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