# This file managed by Salt, do not edit by hand!! # Based on salt version 0.17.4 default config {% set reserved_keys = ['master', 'minion', 'cloud', 'salt_cloud_certs'] -%} {% set salt = pillar.get('salt', {}) -%} {% set master = salt.get('master', {}) -%} {%- macro get_config(configname, default_value) -%} {%- if configname in master -%} {{ configname }}: {{ master[configname] }} {%- elif configname in salt and configname not in reserved_keys -%} {{ configname }}: {{ salt[configname] }} {%- else -%} #{{ configname }}: {{ default_value }} {%- endif -%} {%- endmacro -%} ##### Primary configuration settings ##### ########################################## # This configuration file is used to manage the behavior of the Salt Master # Values that are commented out but have no space after the comment are # defaults that need not be set in the config. If there is a space after the # comment that the value is presented as an example and is not the default. # Per default, the master will automatically include all config files # from master.d/*.conf (master.d is a directory in the same directory # as the main master config file) {{ get_config('default_include', 'master.d/*.conf') }} # The address of the interface to bind to {{ get_config('interface', '0.0.0.0') }} # Whether the master should listen for IPv6 connections. If this is set to True, # the interface option must be adjusted too (for example: "interface: '::'") {{ get_config('ipv6', 'False') }} # The tcp port used by the publisher {{ get_config('publish_port', '4505') }} # The user to run the salt-master as. Salt will update all permissions to # allow the specified user to run the master. If the modified files cause # conflicts set verify_env to False. {{ get_config('user', 'root') }} # Max open files # Each minion connecting to the master uses AT LEAST one file descriptor, the # master subscription connection. If enough minions connect you might start # seeing on the console(and then salt-master crashes): # Too many open files (tcp_listener.cpp:335) # Aborted (core dumped) # # By default this value will be the one of `ulimit -Hn`, ie, the hard limit for # max open files. # # If you wish to set a different value than the default one, uncomment and # configure this setting. Remember that this value CANNOT be higher than the # hard limit. Raising the hard limit depends on your OS and/or distribution, # a good way to find the limit is to search the internet for(for example): # raise max open files hard limit debian # {{ get_config('max_open_files', '100000') }} # The number of worker threads to start, these threads are used to manage # return calls made from minions to the master, if the master seems to be # running slowly, increase the number of threads {{ get_config('worker_threads', '5') }} # The port used by the communication interface. The ret (return) port is the # interface used for the file server, authentication, job returnes, etc. {{ get_config('ret_port', '4506') }} # Specify the location of the daemon process ID file {{ get_config('pidfile', '/var/run/salt-master.pid') }} # The root directory prepended to these options: pki_dir, cachedir, # sock_dir, log_file, autosign_file, autoreject_file, extension_modules, # key_logfile, pidfile. {{ get_config('root_dir', '/') }} # Directory used to store public key data {{ get_config('pki_dir', '/etc/salt/pki/master') }} # Directory to store job and cache data {{ get_config('cachedir', '/var/cache/salt/master') }} # Verify and set permissions on configuration directories at startup {{ get_config('verify_env', 'True') }} # Set the number of hours to keep old job information in the job cache {{ get_config('keep_jobs', '24') }} # Set the default timeout for the salt command and api, the default is 5 # seconds {{ get_config('timeout', '5') }} # The loop_interval option controls the seconds for the master's maintenance # process check cycle. This process updates file server backends, cleans the # job cache and executes the scheduler. {{ get_config('loop_interval', '60') }} # Set the default outputter used by the salt command. The default is "nested" {{ get_config('output', 'nested') }} # By default output is colored, to disable colored output set the color value # to False {{ get_config('color', 'True') }} # Set the directory used to hold unix sockets {{ get_config('sock_dir', '/var/run/salt/master') }} # The master can take a while to start up when lspci and/or dmidecode is used # to populate the grains for the master. Enable if you want to see GPU hardware # data for your master. # {{ get_config('enable_gpu_grains', 'False') }} # The master maintains a job cache, while this is a great addition it can be # a burden on the master for larger deployments (over 5000 minions). # Disabling the job cache will make previously executed jobs unavailable to # the jobs system and is not generally recommended. # {{ get_config('job_cache', 'True') }} # Cache minion grains and pillar data in the cachedir. {{ get_config('minion_data_cache', 'True') }} # The master can include configuration from other files. To enable this, # pass a list of paths to this option. The paths can be either relative or # absolute; if relative, they are considered to be relative to the directory # the main master configuration file lives in (this file). Paths can make use # of shell-style globbing. If no files are matched by a path passed to this # option then the master will log a warning message. # # # Include a config file from some other path: #include: /etc/salt/extra_config # # Include config from several files and directories: #include: # - /etc/salt/extra_config {{ get_config('include', '[]') }} ##### Security settings ##### ########################################## # Enable "open mode", this mode still maintains encryption, but turns off # authentication, this is only intended for highly secure environments or for # the situation where your keys end up in a bad state. If you run in open mode # you do so at your own risk! {{ get_config('open_mode', 'False') }} # Enable auto_accept, this setting will automatically accept all incoming # public keys from the minions. Note that this is insecure. {{ get_config('auto_accept', 'False') }} # If the autosign_file is specified, incoming keys specified in the # autosign_file will be automatically accepted. This is insecure. Regular # expressions as well as globing lines are supported. {{ get_config('autosign_file', '/etc/salt/autosign.conf') }} # Works like autosign_file, but instead allows you to specify minion IDs for # which keys will automatically be rejected. Will override both membership in # the autosign_file and the auto_accept setting. {{ get_config('autoreject_file', '/etc/salt/autosign.conf') }} # Enable permissive access to the salt keys. This allows you to run the # master or minion as root, but have a non-root group be given access to # your pki_dir. To make the access explicit, root must belong to the group # you've given access to. This is potentially quite insecure. # If an autosign_file is specified, enabling permissive_pki_access will allow group access # to that specific file. {{ get_config('permissive_pki_access', 'False') }} # Allow users on the master access to execute specific commands on minions. # This setting should be treated with care since it opens up execution # capabilities to non root users. By default this capability is completely # disabled. # #client_acl: # larry: # - test.ping # - network.* # {{ get_config('client_acl', '{}') }} # Blacklist any of the following users or modules # # This example would blacklist all non sudo users, including root from # running any commands. It would also blacklist any use of the "cmd" # module. # This is completely disabled by default. # {% if 'client_acl_blacklist' in master %} client_acl_blacklist: users: {% for user in master['client_acl_blacklist'].get('users', []) %} - {{ user }} {% endfor %} modules: {% for mod in master['client_acl_blacklist'].get('modules', []) %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'client_acl_blacklist' in salt %} client_acl_blacklist: users: {% for user in salt['client_acl_blacklist'].get('users', []) %} - {{ user }} {% endfor %} modules: {% for mod in salt['client_acl_blacklist'].get('modules', []) %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #client_acl_blacklist: # users: # - root # - '^(?!sudo_).*$' # all non sudo users # modules: # - cmd {% endif %} # The external auth system uses the Salt auth modules to authenticate and # validate users to access areas of the Salt system. # #external_auth: # pam: # fred: # - test.* # {{ get_config('external_auth', '{}') }} # Time (in seconds) for a newly generated token to live. Default: 12 hours {{ get_config('token_expire', '43200') }} # Allow minions to push files to the master. This is disabled by default, for # security purposes. {{ get_config('file_recv', 'False') }} # Set a hard-limit on the size of the files that can be pushed to the master. # It will be interpreted as megabytes. # Default: 100 {{ get_config('file_recv_max_size', '100') }} # Signature verification on messages published from the master. # This causes the master to cryptographically sign all messages published to its event # bus, and minions then verify that signature before acting on the message. # # This is False by default. # # Note that to facilitate interoperability with masters and minions that are different # versions, if sign_pub_messages is True but a message is received by a minion with # no signature, it will still be accepted, and a warning message will be logged. # Conversely, if sign_pub_messages is False, but a minion receives a signed # message it will be accepted, the signature will not be checked, and a warning message # will be logged. This behavior will go away in Salt 0.17.6 (or Hydrogen RC1, whichever # comes first) and these two situations will cause minion to throw an exception and # drop the message. # {{ get_config('sign_pub_message', 'False') }} ##### Master Module Management ##### ########################################## # Manage how master side modules are loaded # Add any additional locations to look for master runners {{ get_config('runner_dirs', '[]') }} # Enable Cython for master side modules {{ get_config('cython_enable', 'False') }} ##### State System settings ##### ########################################## # The state system uses a "top" file to tell the minions what environment to # use and what modules to use. The state_top file is defined relative to the # root of the base environment as defined in "File Server settings" below. {{ get_config('state_top', 'top.sls') }} # The master_tops option replaces the external_nodes option by creating # a plugable system for the generation of external top data. The external_nodes # option is deprecated by the master_tops option. # To gain the capabilities of the classic external_nodes system, use the # following configuration: # master_tops: # ext_nodes: # {{ get_config('master_tops', '{}') }} # The external_nodes option allows Salt to gather data that would normally be # placed in a top file. The external_nodes option is the executable that will # return the ENC data. Remember that Salt will look for external nodes AND top # files and combine the results if both are enabled! {{ get_config('external_nodes', 'None') }} # The renderer to use on the minions to render the state data {{ get_config('renderer', 'yaml_jinja') }} # The Jinja renderer can strip extra carriage returns and whitespace # See http://jinja.pocoo.org/docs/api/#high-level-api # # If this is set to True the first newline after a Jinja block is removed # (block, not variable tag!). Defaults to False, corresponds to the Jinja # environment init variable "trim_blocks". {{ get_config('jinja_trim_blocks', 'False') }} # # If this is set to True leading spaces and tabs are stripped from the start # of a line to a block. Defaults to False, corresponds to the Jinja # environment init variable "lstrip_blocks". {{ get_config('jinja_lstrip_blocks', 'False') }} # The failhard option tells the minions to stop immediately after the first # failure detected in the state execution, defaults to False {{ get_config('failhard', 'False') }} # The state_verbose and state_output settings can be used to change the way # state system data is printed to the display. By default all data is printed. # The state_verbose setting can be set to True or False, when set to False # all data that has a result of True and no changes will be suppressed. {{ get_config('state_verbose', 'True') }} # The state_output setting changes if the output is the full multi line # output for each changed state if set to 'full', but if set to 'terse' # the output will be shortened to a single line. If set to 'mixed', the output # will be terse unless a state failed, in which case that output will be full. {{ get_config('state_output', 'full') }} {{ get_config('yaml_utf8', 'False') }} ##### File Server settings ##### ########################################## # Salt runs a lightweight file server written in zeromq to deliver files to # minions. This file server is built into the master daemon and does not # require a dedicated port. # The file server works on environments passed to the master, each environment # can have multiple root directories, the subdirectories in the multiple file # roots cannot match, otherwise the downloaded files will not be able to be # reliably ensured. A base environment is required to house the top file. # Example: # file_roots: # base: # - /srv/salt/ # dev: # - /srv/salt/dev/services # - /srv/salt/dev/states # prod: # - /srv/salt/prod/services # - /srv/salt/prod/states {% if 'file_roots' in master -%} file_roots: {%- for name, roots in master['file_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {%- for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {% elif 'file_roots' in salt -%} file_roots: {%- for name, roots in salt['file_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {%- for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {% else -%} #file_roots: # base: # - /srv/salt {%- endif %} # The hash_type is the hash to use when discovering the hash of a file on # the master server. The default is md5, but sha1, sha224, sha256, sha384 # and sha512 are also supported. {{ get_config('hash_type', 'md5') }} # The buffer size in the file server can be adjusted here: {{ get_config('file_buffer_size', '1048576') }} # A regular expression (or a list of expressions) that will be matched # against the file path before syncing the modules and states to the minions. # This includes files affected by the file.recurse state. # For example, if you manage your custom modules and states in subversion # and don't want all the '.svn' folders and content synced to your minions, # you could set this to '/\.svn($|/)'. By default nothing is ignored. {% if 'file_ignore_regex' in master %} file_ignore_regex: {% for regex in master['file_ignore_regex'] %} - {{ regex }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'file_ignore_regex' in salt %} file_ignore_regex: {% for regex in salt['file_ignore_regex'] %} - {{ regex }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #file_ignore_regex: # - '/\.svn($|/)' # - '/\.git($|/)' {% endif %} # A file glob (or list of file globs) that will be matched against the file # path before syncing the modules and states to the minions. This is similar # to file_ignore_regex above, but works on globs instead of regex. By default # nothing is ignored. {% if 'file_ignore_glob' in master %} file_ignore_glob: {% for glob in master['file_ignore_glob'] %} - {{ glob }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'file_ignore_glob' in salt %} file_ignore_glob: {% for glob in salt['file_ignore_glob'] %} - {{ glob }} {% endfor %} {% else %} # file_ignore_glob: # - '*.pyc' # - '*/somefolder/*.bak' # - '*.swp' {% endif %} # File Server Backend # Salt supports a modular fileserver backend system, this system allows # the salt master to link directly to third party systems to gather and # manage the files available to minions. Multiple backends can be # configured and will be searched for the requested file in the order in which # they are defined here. The default setting only enables the standard backend # "roots" which uses the "file_roots" option. # #fileserver_backend: # - roots # # To use multiple backends list them in the order they are searched: # #fileserver_backend: # - git # - roots {% if 'fileserver_backend' in master -%} fileserver_backend: {%- for backend in master['fileserver_backend'] %} - {{ backend }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endif %} # # Uncomment the line below if you do not want the file_server to follow # symlinks when walking the filesystem tree. This is set to True # by default. Currently this only applies to the default roots # fileserver_backend. # {{ get_config('fileserver_followsymlinks', 'False') }} # # Uncomment the line below if you do not want symlinks to be # treated as the files they are pointing to. By default this is set to # False. By uncommenting the line below, any detected symlink while listing # files on the Master will not be returned to the Minion. # {{ get_config('fileserver_ignoresymlinks', 'True') }} # # By default, the Salt fileserver recurses fully into all defined environments # to attempt to find files. To limit this behavior so that the fileserver only # traverses directories with SLS files and special Salt directories like _modules, # enable the option below. This might be useful for installations where a file root # has a very large number of files and performance is impacted. Default is False. # {{ get_config('fileserver_limit_traversal', 'False') }} # # The fileserver can fire events off every time the fileserver is updated, # these are disabled by default, but can be easily turned on by setting this # flag to True {{ get_config('fileserver_events', 'False') }} # # Git fileserver backend configuration # # Gitfs can be provided by one of two python modules: GitPython or pygit2. If # using pygit2, both libgit2 and git must also be installed. {{ get_config('gitfs_provider', 'gitpython') }} # # When using the git fileserver backend at least one git remote needs to be # defined. The user running the salt master will need read access to the repo. # # The repos will be searched in order to find the file requested by a client # and the first repo to have the file will return it. # When using the git backend branches and tags are translated into salt # environments. # Note: file:// repos will be treated as a remote, so refs you want used must # exist in that repo as *local* refs. {% if 'gitfs_remotes' in master -%} gitfs_remotes: {%- for remote in master['gitfs_remotes'] %} {%- if remote is iterable and remote is not string %} {%- for repo, children in remote.iteritems() %} - {{ repo }}: {%- for child in children %} {%- for key, value in child.iteritems() %} - {{ key }}: {{ value }} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- else %} - {{ remote }} {%- endif -%} {%- endfor -%} {%- endif %} # #gitfs_remotes: # - git://github.com/saltstack/salt-states.git # - file:///var/git/saltmaster # # The gitfs_ssl_verify option specifies whether to ignore ssl certificate # errors when contacting the gitfs backend. You might want to set this to # false if you're using a git backend that uses a self-signed certificate but # keep in mind that setting this flag to anything other than the default of True # is a security concern, you may want to try using the ssh transport. {{ get_config('gitfs_ssl_verify', 'True') }} # # # The gitfs_root option gives the ability to serve files from a subdirectory # within the repository. The path is defined relative to the root of the # repository and defaults to the repository root. {{ get_config('gitfs_root', 'somefolder/otherfolder') }} ##### Pillar settings ##### ########################################## # Salt Pillars allow for the building of global data that can be made selectively # available to different minions based on minion grain filtering. The Salt # Pillar is laid out in the same fashion as the file server, with environments, # a top file and sls files. However, pillar data does not need to be in the # highstate format, and is generally just key/value pairs. {% if 'pillar_roots' in master %} pillar_roots: {% for name, roots in master['pillar_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {% for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% elif 'pillar_roots' in salt %} pillar_roots: {% for name, roots in salt['pillar_roots']|dictsort %} {{ name }}: {% for dir in roots %} - {{ dir }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% else %} #pillar_roots: # base: # - /srv/pillar {% endif %} {% if 'ext_pillar' in master %} ext_pillar: {% for pillar in master['ext_pillar'] %} - {{ pillar.items()[0][0] }}: {{ pillar.items()[0][1] }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'ext_pillar' in salt %} ext_pillar: {% for pillar in salt['ext_pillar'] %} - {{ pillar.items()[0][0] }}: {{ pillar.items()[0][1] }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #ext_pillar: # - hiera: /etc/hiera.yaml # - cmd_yaml: cat /etc/salt/yaml {% endif %} # The pillar_gitfs_ssl_verify option specifies whether to ignore ssl certificate # errors when contacting the pillar gitfs backend. You might want to set this to # false if you're using a git backend that uses a self-signed certificate but # keep in mind that setting this flag to anything other than the default of True # is a security concern, you may want to try using the ssh transport. {{ get_config('pillar_gitfs_ssl_verify', 'True') }} # The pillar_opts option adds the master configuration file data to a dict in # the pillar called "master". This is used to set simple configurations in the # master config file that can then be used on minions. {{ get_config('pillar_opts', 'True') }} ##### Syndic settings ##### ########################################## # The Salt syndic is used to pass commands through a master from a higher # master. Using the syndic is simple, if this is a master that will have # syndic servers(s) below it set the "order_masters" setting to True, if this # is a master that will be running a syndic daemon for passthrough the # "syndic_master" setting needs to be set to the location of the master server # to receive commands from. # Set the order_masters setting to True if this master will command lower # masters' syndic interfaces. {{ get_config('order_masters', 'False') }} # If this master will be running a salt syndic daemon, syndic_master tells # this master where to receive commands from. {{ get_config('syndic_master', 'masterofmaster') }} # This is the 'ret_port' of the MasterOfMaster {{ get_config('syndic_master_port', '4506') }} # PID file of the syndic daemon {{ get_config('syndic_pidfile', '/var/run/salt-syndic.pid') }} # LOG file of the syndic daemon {{ get_config('syndic_log_file', 'syndic.log') }} ##### Peer Publish settings ##### ########################################## # Salt minions can send commands to other minions, but only if the minion is # allowed to. By default "Peer Publication" is disabled, and when enabled it # is enabled for specific minions and specific commands. This allows secure # compartmentalization of commands based on individual minions. # The configuration uses regular expressions to match minions and then a list # of regular expressions to match functions. The following will allow the # minion authenticated as foo.example.com to execute functions from the test # and pkg modules. # #peer: # foo.example.com: # - test.* # - pkg.* # # This will allow all minions to execute all commands: # #peer: # .*: # - .* # # This is not recommended, since it would allow anyone who gets root on any # single minion to instantly have root on all of the minions! {% if 'peer' in master %} peer: {% for name, roots in master['peer'].items() %} {{ name }}: {% for mod in roots %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% elif 'peer' in salt %} peer: {% for name, roots in salt['peer'].items() %} {{ name }}: {% for mod in roots %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% endif %} # Minions can also be allowed to execute runners from the salt master. # Since executing a runner from the minion could be considered a security risk, # it needs to be enabled. This setting functions just like the peer setting # except that it opens up runners instead of module functions. # # All peer runner support is turned off by default and must be enabled before # using. This will enable all peer runners for all minions: # #peer_run: # .*: # - .* # # To enable just the manage.up runner for the minion foo.example.com: # #peer_run: # foo.example.com: # - manage.up {% if 'peer_run' in master %} peer_run: {% for name, roots in master['peer_run'].items() %} {{ name }}: {% for mod in roots %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% elif 'peer_run' in salt %} peer_run: {% for name, roots in salt['peer_run'].items() %} {{ name }}: {% for mod in roots %} - {{ mod }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %} {% endif %} ##### Mine settings ##### ########################################## # Restrict mine.get access from minions. By default any minion has a full access # to get all mine data from master cache. In acl definion below, only pcre matches # are allowed. # # mine_get: # .*: # - .* # # Example below enables minion foo.example.com to get 'network.interfaces' mine data only # , minions web* to get all network.* and disk.* mine data and all other minions won't get # any mine data. # # mine_get: # foo.example.com: # - network.inetrfaces # web.*: # - network.* # - disk.* ##### Logging settings ##### ########################################## # The location of the master log file # The master log can be sent to a regular file, local path name, or network # location. Remote logging works best when configured to use rsyslogd(8) (e.g.: # ``file:///dev/log``), with rsyslogd(8) configured for network logging. The URI # format is: ://:/ #log_file: /var/log/salt/master #log_file: file:///dev/log #log_file: udp://loghost:10514 {{ get_config('log_file', '/var/log/salt/master') }} {{ get_config('key_logfile', '/var/log/salt/key') }} # The level of messages to send to the console. # One of 'garbage', 'trace', 'debug', info', 'warning', 'error', 'critical'. {{ get_config('log_level', 'warning') }} # The level of messages to send to the log file. # One of 'garbage', 'trace', 'debug', info', 'warning', 'error', 'critical'. {{ get_config('log_level_logfile', 'warning') }} # The date and time format used in log messages. Allowed date/time formating # can be seen here: http://docs.python.org/library/time.html#time.strftime {{ get_config('log_datefmt', "'%H:%M:%S'") }} {{ get_config('log_datefmt_logfile', "'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'") }} # The format of the console logging messages. Allowed formatting options can # be seen here: http://docs.python.org/library/logging.html#logrecord-attributes {{ get_config('log_fmt_console', "'[%(levelname)-8s] %(message)s'") }} {{ get_config('log_fmt_logfile', "'%(asctime)s,%(msecs)03.0f [%(name)-17s][%(levelname)-8s] %(message)s'") }} # This can be used to control logging levels more specificically. This # example sets the main salt library at the 'warning' level, but sets # 'salt.modules' to log at the 'debug' level: # log_granular_levels: # 'salt': 'warning', # 'salt.modules': 'debug' # {% if 'log_granular_levels' in master %} log_granular_levels: {% for name, lvl in master['log_granular_levels'] %} {{ name }}: {{ lvl }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'log_granular_levels' in salt %} log_granular_levels: {% for name, lvl in salt['log_granular_levels'] %} {{ name }}: {{ lvl }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #log_granular_levels: {} {% endif %} ##### Node Groups ##### ########################################## # Node groups allow for logical groupings of minion nodes. # A group consists of a group name and a compound target. # #nodegroups: # group1: 'L@foo.domain.com,bar.domain.com,baz.domain.com and bl*.domain.com' # group2: 'G@os:Debian and foo.domain.com' {% if 'nodegroups' in master %} nodegroups: {% for name, lvl in master['nodegroups'] %} {{ name }}: {{ lvl }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'nodegroups' in salt %} nodegroups: {% for name, lvl in salt['nodegroups'] %} {{ name }}: {{ lvl }} {% endfor %} {% endif %} ##### Range Cluster settings ##### ########################################## # The range server (and optional port) that serves your cluster information # https://github.com/grierj/range/wiki/Introduction-to-Range-with-YAML-files # {{ get_config('range_server', 'range:80') }} ##### Windows Software Repo settings ##### ############################################## # Location of the repo on the master {{ get_config('win_repo', '/srv/salt/win/repo') }} # Location of the master's repo cache file {{ get_config('win_repo_mastercachefile', '/srv/salt/win/repo/winrepo.p') }} # List of git repositories to include with the local repo {% if 'win_gitrepos' in master %} win_gitrepos: {% for repo in master['win_gitrepos'] %} - {{ repo }} {% endfor %} {% elif 'win_gitrepos' in salt %} win_gitrepos: {% for repo in salt['win_gitrepos'] %} - {{ repo }} {% endfor %} {% else %} #win_gitrepos: # - 'https://github.com/saltstack/salt-winrepo.git' {% endif %} {% if 'halite' in master %} ##### Halite ##### ########################################## halite: {% for name, value in master['halite'].iteritems() %} {{ name }}: {{ value }} {% endfor %} {% endif %} {% if 'rest_cherrypy' in master %} ##### rest_cherrypy ##### ########################################## rest_cherrypy: {% for name, value in master['rest_cherrypy'].iteritems() %} {{ name }}: {{ value }} {% endfor %} {% endif %}