In computing, Red Hat Satellite[2] is a systems-management product by the company “Red Hat”. It allows system administrators to deploy and manage Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) hosts.
A Satellite server registers with Red Hat Subscription Management, mirrors all relevant software like security errata and bug fixes, and provides this together with locally added software and configuration to the attached servers.
The managed hosts register against the local Satellite server and access the provided resources like software packages, patches, configuration, etc. while they also provide information about the current health state of the server to the Satellite[3]
As of March 2017:
The Red Hat Satellite Server enables planning and management of the content life cycle and the configuration of Capsule Servers and hosts through GUI, CLI (Hammer), or API (RESTful API).
Capsule Servers mirror content from the Satellite Server to establish content sources in different geographical locations, they are analogous to the Red Hat Satellite 5 Proxy Server.
As well as Supported Managed Hosts Red Hat Satellite 6 also has some deployment and management capability on certain other hosts though Red Hat Support for these will be limited.[6] [7]
Satellite generally operates in "connected" mode, registering directly with the RHN and downloading relevant software into Satellite's software channels. The organisation's hosts then register against the local Satellite server, instead of directly against Red Hat Network.
For secure deployments, Satellite can operate in a "Disconnected" mode, where updates are downloaded directly from Red Hat via an Internet connected machine and then uploaded into Satellite or a local offline RHN proxy.
Both modes allow the organisation to control which versions of software it makes available for its hosts, as well as making additional software available within the local network.
Component[8] [9] | Details | |
---|---|---|
The Foreman | Provision and Life Cycle Management of physical and virtual systems | |
Katello | Foreman Plug-in for Subscription and Repository Management | |
Candlepin | Service in Katello to handle subscription management | |
Pulp | Service in Katello to handle repository and content management | |
Hammer | CLI tool providing command line and shell equivalents of most WEB UI functions | |
REST API | RESTful API service for System Administrators and Developers to write custom scripts and third party interface applications | |
Apache Tomcat | Embedded Tomcat server for Web UI and API service connections | |
Puppet | A Puppet Master server installed as part of a Red Hat Satellite 6 Master Server or Capsule server | |
Hiera[10] | A Key-Value database that is part of Puppet and helps keep site specific data out of manifests |
Satellite offers numerous methods for deploying hosts, including simple kickstart, bare metal install and re-imaging. Current versions of Satellite support kickstart using Cobbler as an underlying framework. PXE Boot, and Koan are methods that can be used to implement bare metal installs and re-imaging of hosts.
Satellite assists in remotely managing hosts in several areas: software, operational management, and configuration. The 3 main mechanisms for managing hosts are:
Satellite can provide monitoring of software and systems via probes. These probes periodically explore the target host and send alerts if the probes do not get the correct replies, or if the replies fall outside of some specified range.
A primary purpose of earlier versions of Satellite was to allow organizations to utilize the benefits of Red Hat Network (RHN) without having to provide public Internet access to their servers or other client systems.[12] Later version of the tool have developed increased functionality.
Satellite version | Release date | End of Full Support[13] | Last minor | Notes release | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 August 2005 | Initial Red Hat Satellite released. | ||||||
31 August 2005 | Red Hat Satellite 4 released. | ||||||
26 June 2007 | Red Hat Satellite 5 released. Later donated as open source project upstream for Red Hat Satellite 5.[14] | ||||||
31 January 2019 | |||||||
31 January 2019 | |||||||
20 June 2017 | 31 May 2020 | Last release based on Spacewalk. | |||||
10 September 2014 | 21 February 2018 | 6.0.8 | Technological base changed towards a combination of the Open Source projects Foreman (Web-Gui, Deployment), Foreman-Katello plugin (Content & Software Management), Puppet (Configuration Management) and others. Spacewalk is no longer upstream for Satellite. | ||||
12 August 2015 | 30 October 2018 | 6.1.12 | |||||
25 July 2016 | 31 May 2019 | 6.2.16 | |||||
[15] | 21 February 2018 | 31 October 2019 | 6.3.5 | This release allows integration with Ansible Tower. | |||
[16] | 16 October 2018 | 30 April 2020 | 6.4.4 | This release has built in Ansible Core, later Puppet 5. | |||
[17] | 14 May 2019 | Oct 2020 | 6.5.3 | ||||
22 October 2019 | 14 May 2021 | 6.6.3 | |||||
[18] | 15 April 2020 | Oct 2021 | 6.7.5 | With the introduction of Azure provisioning support, you can create a compute resource for Azure and provision new hosts on Azure from the Satellite web UI, API, or Hammer CLI. | |||
27 October 2020 | Jun 2022 | 6.8.6 | |||||
[19] | 21 April 2021 | Oct 2022 | 6.9.10 | ||||
[20] | 16 November 2021 | 31 May 2023 | |||||
[21] | 5 July 2022 | Jan 2024 | Originally planned as version 7 due to removing Puppet. Rebranded to 6.11 after deciding to make Puppet integration optional and disabled by default based on community feedback. | ||||
[22] | 16 November 2022 | May 2024 | Removes installation support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 | ||||
[23] | 3 May 2023 | Nov 2024 | |||||
[24] | 3 April 2024 | Nov 2024 | Still requires RHEL 8. RHEL 9 not supported for Satellite | ||||
The Lifecycle of Red Hat Satellite 6 is recorded at the Red Hat Satellite and Proxy Server Life Cycle which is updated as required, with future events on a bona fide basis.[25] When viewed in August 2019, Red Hat didn't indicate any date for end of support.
For Red Hat Satellite version 5 the Satellite Application was implemented by a toolset named Project Spacewalk.
Red Hat announced in June 2008 Project Spacewalk was to be made open source under the GPLv2 License[14]
Satellite 5.3 was the first version to be based on upstream Spacewalk code.[26]
In the Spacewalk FAQ[27] issued in 2015 after the release of Red Hat Satellite 6:
The Lifecycle of Red Hat Satellite 5 is recorded at the Red Hat Satellite and Proxy Server Life Cycle which is updated as required, with future events on a bona fide basis.[25] When viewed in March 2017 Red Hat indicated:
Satellite minor release 5.8 is in available in beta.[30]