Documentation and readme update.

This commit is contained in:
Daan Selen
2025-01-09 10:26:15 +01:00
parent 577a8266ee
commit f67a36f8b7
2 changed files with 15 additions and 15 deletions

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# Meshbook
A way to programmatically manage MeshCentral-managed machines, a bit like Ansible does.<br>
What problem does it solve? Well, what I wanted to be able to do is to automate system updates through [MeshCentral](https://github.com/ylianst/meshcentral).<br>
A way to programmatically manage MeshCentral-managed machines, inspired by applications like [Ansible](https://github.com/ansible/ansible).<br>
What problem does it solve? Well, what I wanted to be able to do is to automate system updates through [MeshCentral](https://github.com/ylianst/meshcentral). And some machines are behind unmanaged or 3rd party managed firewalls.<br>
And many people will be comfortable with YAML configurations! It's almost like JSON, but different!<br>
# Quick-start:
The quickest way to start is to grab a template from the templates folder in this repository.<br>
Make sure to correctly pass the MeshCentral websocket API as `wss://<MeshCentral-Host>`.<br>
And make sure to fill in the credentails of an account which has `Remote Commands` permissions and `Device Details` permissions on the targeted devices or groups.<br>
And make sure to fill in the credentails of an account which has `Remote Commands` permissions on the targeted devices or groups.<br>
> I did this through a "Global Service" group which I added the meshbook account to!
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ git clone https://github.com/daanselen/meshbook
cd ./meshbook
python3 -m venv ./venv
source ./venv/bin/activate
pip3 install -r ./meshbook/requirements.txt
pip3 install -r ./requirements.txt
```
### Windows setup:
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ git clone https://github.com/daanselen/meshbook
cd ./meshbook
python3 -m venv ./venv
.\venv\Scripts\activate # Make sure to check the terminal prefix.
pip3 install -r ./meshbook/requirements.txt
pip3 install -r ./requirements.txt
```
Now copy the configuration template from ./templates and fill it in with the correct details. The url should start with `wss://`.<br>
@@ -44,13 +44,13 @@ After this you can use meshbook, for example:
### Linux run:
```shell
python3 .\meshbook\meshbook.py -pb .\examples\echo.yaml
python3 .\meshbook.py -pb .\examples\echo.yaml
```
### Windows run:
```shell
.\venv\Scripts\python.exe .\meshbook\meshbook.py -pb .\examples\echo.yaml
.\venv\Scripts\python.exe .\meshbook.py -pb .\examples\echo.yaml
```
### How to check if everything is okay?
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ This paragraph explains how the program interprets certain information.
### Targeting:
MeshCentral has `meshes` or `groups`, in this program they are called `companies`. Because of the way I designed this.<br>
MeshCentral has `meshes` or `groups`, in this program they are called `group(s)`. Because of the way I designed this.<br>
So to target for example a mesh/group in MeshCentral called: "Nerthus" do:
> If your group has multiple words, then you need to use `"` to group the words.
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ So to target for example a mesh/group in MeshCentral called: "Nerthus" do:
```yaml
---
name: example configuration
company: "Nerthus"
group: "Nerthus"
variables:
- name: var1
value: "This is the first variable"
@@ -88,13 +88,13 @@ tasks:
command: 'echo "{{ var1 }}"'
```
It is also possible to target a single device, as seen in: [here](./examples/echo.yaml).<br>
It is also possible to target a single device, as seen in: [here](./examples/apt_update_example.yaml).<br>
### Variables:
Variables are done by replacing the placeholders just before the runtime.<br>
Variables are done by replacing the placeholders just before the runtime (the Python program does this, not you).<br>
So if you have var1 declared, then the value of that declaration is placed wherever it finds {{ var1 }}.<br>
This is done to imitate popular methods. See below [from the example](./examples/variable_example.yaml).<br>
This is done to imitate popular methods. See below [from the example](./examples/variable_usage_example.yaml).<br>
### Tasks:
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ tasks:
command: "echo $(cat {{ file }})"
```
The following response it received when executing the first yaml of the above files (with the `-s` and the `-i` parameters).
The following response it received when executing the first yaml of the above files (without the `-s` parameters, which just outputs the below JSON).
```shell
python3 meshbook.py -pb examples/echo_example.yaml
@@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ The above without `-s` is quite verbose. use `--help` to read about parameters a
# Important Notice:
If you want to use this, make sure to use `NON-BLOCKING` commands. MeshCentral does not work if you send it commands that wait.<br>
A couple examples of `BLOCKING COMMANDS` which will never get back to the main MeshCentral server:
A couple examples of `BLOCKING COMMANDS` which will never get back to the main MeshCentral server, and Meshbook will quit after the timeout but the agent will not come back:
```shell
apt upgrade # without -y.

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---
name: Refresh the apt cache
group: "Temp-Agents"
device: Cubic
variables:
- name: package_manager
value: "apt"