RHEL / CentOS / Scientific Linux / Amazon Linux / Oracle Linux

Beginning with version 0.9.4, Salt has been available in EPEL. It is installable using yum. Salt should work properly with all mainstream derivatives of RHEL, including CentOS, Scientific Linux, Oracle Linux and Amazon Linux. Report any bugs or issues to the salt GitHub project.

Installation

Salt and all dependencies have been accepted into the yum repositories for EPEL5 and EPEL6. The latest salt version can be found in epel-testing, while an older but more tested version can be found in regular epel.

Example showing how to install salt from epel-testing:

yum --enablerepo=epel-testing install salt-minion

On RHEL6, the proper Jinja package 'python-jinja2' was moved from EPEL to the "RHEL Server Optional Channel". Verify this repository is enabled before installing salt on RHEL6.

Salt can be installed using yum and is available in the standard Fedora repositories.

Enabling EPEL on RHEL

If EPEL is not enabled on your system, you can use the following commands to enable it.

For RHEL 5:

rpm -Uvh http://mirror.pnl.gov/epel/5/i386/epel-release-5-4.noarch.rpm

For RHEL 6:

rpm -Uvh http://ftp.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/epel/6/i386/epel-release-6-8.noarch.rpm

Stable Release

Salt is packaged separately for the minion and the master. It is necessary only to install the appropriate package for the role the machine will play. Typically, there will be one master and multiple minions.

On the salt-master, run this:

yum install salt-master

On each salt-minion, run this:

yum install salt-minion

Post-installation tasks

Master

To have the Master start automatically at boot time:

chkconfig salt-master on

To start the Master:

service salt-master start

Minion

To have the Minion start automatically at boot time:

chkconfig salt-minion on

To start the Minion:

service salt-minion start

Now go to the Configuring Salt page.