Provided by: chef_12.14.60-3ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       chef-client - The man page for the chef-client command line tool.

       A  chef-client  is  an  agent  that  runs  locally on every node that is under management by Chef. When a
       chef-client is run, it will perform all of the steps that  are  required  to  bring  the  node  into  the
       expected state, including:

       • Registering and authenticating the node with the Chef server

       • Building the node object

       • Synchronizing cookbooks

       • Compiling  the  resource  collection  by  loading  each  of  the required cookbooks, including recipes,
         attributes, and all other dependencies

       • Taking the appropriate and required actions to configure the node

       • Looking for exceptions and notifications, handling each as required

       The chef-client executable is run as a command-line tool.

       NOTE:
          A client.rb file is used to specify the configuration details for the chef-client.

          • This file is loaded every time this executable is run

          • On UNIX- and Linux-based machines, the default location for this  file  is  /etc/chef/client.rb;  on
            Microsoft  Windows  machines,  the  default  location  for  this  file is C:\chef\client.rb; use the
            --config option from the command line to change this location

          • This file is not created by default

          • When a client.rb file is present in this directory, the settings contained  within  that  file  will
            override the default configuration settings

OPTIONS

       This command has the following syntax:

          chef-client OPTION VALUE OPTION VALUE ...

       This command has the following options:

       -A, --fatal-windows-admin-check
              Use to cause a chef-client run to fail when the chef-client does not have administrator privileges
              in Microsoft Windows.

       --chef-zero-port PORT
              The  port  on  which chef-zero will listen. If a port is not specified---individually, as range of
              ports, or from the chef_zero.port setting in the client.rb file---the chef-client  will  scan  for
              ports between 8889-9999 and will pick the first port that is available.

       -F FORMAT, --format FORMAT
              The output format: doc (default) or min.

              Use  doc to print the progress of the chef-client run using full strings that display a summary of
              updates as they occur.

              Use min to print the progress of the chef-client run using single characters. A summary of updates
              is printed at the end of the chef-client run. A dot (.) is printed for events  that  do  not  have
              meaningful  status information, such as loading a file or synchronizing a cookbook. For resources,
              a dot (.) is printed when the resource is up to date, an S is printed when the resource is skipped
              by not_if or only_if, and a U is printed when the resource is updated.

              Other formatting options are available when those formatters are configured in the client.rb  file
              using the add_formatter option.

       --force-formatter
              Use to show formatter output instead of logger output.

       --force-logger
              Use to show logger output instead of formatter output.

       -g GROUP, --group GROUP
              The  name  of  the  group  that owns a process. This is required when starting any executable as a
              daemon.

       -h, --help
              Shows help for the command.

       -i SECONDS, --interval SECONDS
              The frequency (in seconds) at  which  the  chef-client  runs.  When  the  chef-client  is  run  at
              intervals,  --splay  and  --interval values are applied before the chef-client run. Default value:
              1800.

       -j PATH, --json-attributes PATH
              The path to a file that contains JSON data.

              Use this option to define a run_list object. For example, a JSON file similar to:

                 "run_list": [
                   "recipe[base]",
                   "recipe[foo]",
                   "recipe[bar]",
                   "role[webserver]"
                 ],

              may be used by running chef-client -j path/to/file.json.

              In certain situations this option may be used to update normal attributes.

              WARNING:
                 Any other attribute type that is contained in this JSON  file  will  be  treated  as  a  normal
                 attribute. For example, attempting to update override attributes using the -j option:

                     {
                       "name": "dev-99",
                       "description": "Install some stuff",
                       "override_attributes": {
                         "apptastic": {
                           "enable_apptastic": "false",
                           "apptastic_tier_name": "dev-99.bomb.com"
                         }
                       }
                     }

                 will result in a node object similar to:

                     {
                       "name": "maybe-dev-99",
                       "normal": {
                       "name": "dev-99",
                         "description": "Install some stuff",
                         "override_attributes": {
                           "apptastic": {
                             "enable_apptastic": "false",
                             "apptastic_tier_name": "dev-99.bomb.com"
                           }
                         }
                       }
                     }

       -k KEY_FILE, --client_key KEY_FILE
              The location of the file which contains the client key. Default value: /etc/chef/client.pem.

       -K KEY_FILE, --validation_key KEY_FILE
              The  location of the file which contains the key used when a chef-client is registered with a Chef
              server. A validation key is signed using the validation_client_name  for  authentication.  Default
              value: /etc/chef/validation.pem.

       -l LEVEL, --log_level LEVEL
              The level of logging that will be stored in a log file.

       -L LOGLOCATION, --logfile c
              The  location  in  which log file output files will be saved. If this location is set to something
              other than STDOUT, standard output logging will still be performed (otherwise there  would  be  no
              output  other  than  to  a  file).  This  is recommended when starting any executable as a daemon.
              Default value: STDOUT.

       --[no-]color
              Use to view colored output. Default setting: --color.

       -N NODE_NAME, --node-name NODE_NAME
              The name of the node.

       -o RUN_LIST_ITEM, --override-runlist RUN_LIST_ITEM
              Replace the current run list with the specified items. This option will  not  clear  the  list  of
              cookbooks (and related files) that is cached on the node.

       --once Use to run the chef-client only once and to cancel interval and splay options.

       -P PID_FILE, --pid PID_FILE
              The  location in which a process identification number (pid) is saved. An executable, when started
              as a daemon, will write the pid to the specified file. Default value: /tmp/name-of-executable.pid.

       -r RUN_LIST_ITEM, --runlist RUN_LIST_ITEM
              Use to permanently replace the current run-list with the specified run-list items.

       -R, --enable-reporting
              Use to enable Chef reporting, which performs data collection during a chef-client run.

       RECIPE_FILE
              The path to  a  recipe.  For  example,  if  a  recipe  file  is  in  the  current  directory,  use
              recipe_file.rb. This is typically used with the --local-mode option.

       --run-lock-timeout SECONDS
              The  amount  of  time (in seconds) to wait for a chef-client run to finish. Default value: not set
              (indefinite). Set to 0 to cause a second chef-client to exit immediately.

       -s SECONDS, --splay SECONDS
              A number (in seconds) to add  to  the  interval  that  is  used  to  determine  the  frequency  of
              chef-client  runs. This number can help prevent server load when there are many clients running at
              the same time. When the chef-client is run at intervals, --splay and --interval values are applied
              before the chef-client run.

       -S CHEF_SERVER_URL, --server CHEF_SERVER_URL
              The URL for the Chef server.

       -u USER, --user USER
              The user that owns a process. This is required when starting any executable as a daemon.

       -v, --version
              The version of the chef-client.

       -W, --why-run
              Use to run the executable in why-run mode, which is a type of chef-client run that does everything
              except modify the system. Use why-run mode to understand why the chef-client makes  the  decisions
              that it makes and to learn more about the current and proposed state of the system.

       -z, --local-mode
              Use  to  run  the  chef-client  in local mode. This allows all commands that work against the Chef
              server to also work against the local chef-repo.

RUN WITH ELEVATED PRIVILEGES

       The chef-client may need to be run with elevated  privileges  in  order  to  get  a  recipe  to  converge
       correctly.  On  UNIX  and UNIX-like operating systems this can be done by running the command as root. On
       Microsoft Windows this can be done by running the command prompt as an administrator.

   Linux
       On Linux, the following error sometimes occurs when the permissions  used  to  run  the  chef-client  are
       incorrect:

          $ chef-client
          [Tue, 29 Nov 2011 19:46:17 -0800] INFO: *** Chef 10.X.X ***
          [Tue, 29 Nov 2011 19:46:18 -0800] WARN: Failed to read the private key /etc/chef/client.pem: #<Errno::EACCES: Permission denied - /etc/chef/client.pem>

       This can be resolved by running the command as root. There are a few ways this can be done:

       • Log in as root and then run the chef-client

       • Use su to become the root user, and then run the chef-client. For example:

                $ su

            and then:

                $ chef-client

       • Use the sudo utility

                $ sudo chef-client

       • Give  a  user  access  to  read /etc/chef and also the files accessed by the chef-client. This requires
         super user privileges and, as such, is not a recommended approach

   Windows
       On Microsoft Windows, running without elevated privileges (when they are  necessary)  is  an  issue  that
       fails  silently. It will appear that the chef-client completed its run successfully, but the changes will
       not have been made.  When  this  occurs,  do  one  of  the  following  to  run  the  chef-client  as  the
       administrator:

       • Log  in  to  the  administrator  account.  (This  is  not the same as an account in the administrator's
         security group.)

       • Run the chef-client process from the administrator account while being logged into another account. Run
         the following command:

                $ runas /user:Administrator "cmd /C chef-client"

            This will prompt for the administrator account password.

       • Open a command prompt by right-clicking on the command prompt application, and then  selecting  Run  as
         administrator. After the command window opens, the chef-client can be run as the administrator

EXAMPLES

       Start a Chef run when the chef-client is running as a daemon

       A  chef-client  that is running as a daemon can be woken up and started by sending the process a SIGUSR1.
       For example, to trigger a chef-client run on a machine running Linux:

          $ sudo killall -USR1 chef-client

       Start a Chef run manually

          $ ps auxw|grep chef-client

       to return something like:

          root           66066   0.9  0.0  2488880    264 s001  S+   10:26AM   0:03.05
          /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/1.8/usr/bin/ruby /usr/bin/chef-client -i 3600 -s 20

       and then enter:

          $ sudo kill -USR1 66066

AUTHOR

       Chef

                                                    Chef 12.0                                     CHEF-CLIENT(8)