Windows

Salt has full support for running the Salt minion on Windows. You must connect Windows Salt minions to a Salt master on a supported operating system to control your Salt Minions.

Many of the standard Salt modules have been ported to work on Windows and many of the Salt States currently work on Windows as well.

Installation from the Official SaltStack Repository

Latest stable build from the selected branch:

Python2 x86: Salt-Minion-2018.3.5-x86-Setup.exe | md5

Python2 AMD64: Salt-Minion-2018.3.5-AMD64-Setup.exe | md5

Python3 x86: Salt-Minion-2018.3.5-x86-Setup.exe | md5

Python3 AMD64: Salt-Minion-2018.3.5-AMD64-Setup.exe | md5

The output of md5sum <salt minion exe> should match the contents of the corresponding md5 file.

Earlier builds from supported branches

Archived builds from unsupported branches

Note

The installation executable installs dependencies that the Salt minion requires.

The 64bit installer has been tested on Windows 7 64bit and Windows Server 2008R2 64bit. The 32bit installer has been tested on Windows 2008 Server 32bit. Please file a bug report on our GitHub repo if issues for other platforms are found.

There are installers available for Python 2 and Python 3.

The installer will detect previous installations of Salt and ask if you would like to remove them. Clicking OK will remove the Salt binaries and related files but leave any existing config, cache, and PKI information.

Salt Minion Installation

If the system is missing the appropriate version of the Visual C++ Redistributable (vcredist) the user will be prompted to install it. Click OK to install the vcredist. Click Cancel to abort the installation without making modifications to the system.

If Salt is already installed on the system the user will be prompted to remove the previous installation. Click OK to uninstall Salt without removing the configuration, PKI information, or cached files. Click Cancel to abort the installation before making any modifications to the system.

After the Welcome and the License Agreement, the installer asks for two bits of information to configure the minion; the master hostname and the minion name. The installer will update the minion config with these options.

If the installer finds an existing minion config file, these fields will be populated with values from the existing config, but they will be grayed out. There will also be a checkbox to use the existing config. If you continue, the existing config will be used. If the checkbox is unchecked, default values are displayed and can be changed. If you continue, the existing config file in c:\salt\conf will be removed along with the c:\salt\conf\minion.d directory. The values entered will be used with the default config.

The final page allows you to start the minion service and optionally change its startup type. By default, the minion is set to Automatic. You can change the minion start type to Automatic (Delayed Start) by checking the 'Delayed Start' checkbox.

Note

Highstates that require a reboot may fail after reboot because salt continues the highstate before Windows has finished the booting process. This can be fixed by changing the startup type to 'Automatic (Delayed Start)'. The drawback is that it may increase the time it takes for the 'salt-minion' service to actually start.

The salt-minion service will appear in the Windows Service Manager and can be managed there or from the command line like any other Windows service.

sc start salt-minion
net start salt-minion

Installation Prerequisites

Most Salt functionality should work just fine right out of the box. A few Salt modules rely on PowerShell. The minimum version of PowerShell required for Salt is version 3. If you intend to work with DSC then Powershell version 5 is the minimum.

Silent Installer Options

The installer can be run silently by providing the /S option at the command line. The installer also accepts the following options for configuring the Salt Minion silently:

Option

Description

/master=

A string value to set the IP address or hostname of the master. Default value is 'salt'. You can pass a single master or a comma-separated list of masters. Setting the master will cause the installer to use the default config or a custom config if defined.

/minion-name=

A string value to set the minion name. Default value is 'hostname'. Setting the minion name causes the installer to use the default config or a custom config if defined.

/start-minion=

Either a 1 or 0. '1' will start the salt-minion service, '0' will not. Default is to start the service after installation.

/start-minion-delayed

Set the minion start type to Automatic (Delayed Start).

/default-config

Overwrite the existing config if present with the default config for salt. Default is to use the existing config if present. If /master and/or /minion-name is passed, those values will be used to update the new default config.

/custom-config=

A string value specifying the name of a custom config file in the same path as the installer of the full path to a custom config file. If /master and/or /minion-name is passed, those values will be used to update the new custom config.

/S

Runs the installation silently. Uses the above settings or the defaults.

/?

Displays command line help.

Note

/start-service has been deprecated but will continue to function as expected for the time being.

Note

/default-config and /custom-config= will backup an existing config if found. A timestamp and a .bak extension will be added. That includes the minion file and the minion.d directory.

Here are some examples of using the silent installer:

# Install the Salt Minion
# Configure the minion and start the service

Salt-Minion-2017.7.1-Py2-AMD64-Setup.exe /S /master=yoursaltmaster /minion-name=yourminionname
# Install the Salt Minion
# Configure the minion but don't start the minion service

Salt-Minion-2017.7.1-Py3-AMD64-Setup.exe /S /master=yoursaltmaster /minion-name=yourminionname /start-minion=0
# Install the Salt Minion
# Configure the minion using a custom config and configuring multimaster

Salt-Minion-2017.7.1-Py3-AMD64-Setup.exe /S /custom-config=windows_minion /master=prod_master1,prod_master2

Running the Salt Minion on Windows as an Unprivileged User

Notes:

  • These instructions were tested with Windows Server 2008 R2

  • They are generalizable to any version of Windows that supports a salt-minion

Create the Unprivileged User that the Salt Minion will Run As

  1. Click Start > Control Panel > User Accounts.

  2. Click Add or remove user accounts.

  3. Click Create new account.

  4. Enter salt-user (or a name of your preference) in the New account name field.

  5. Select the Standard user radio button.

  6. Click the Create Account button.

  7. Click on the newly created user account.

  8. Click the Create a password link.

  9. In the New password and Confirm new password fields, provide a password (e.g "SuperSecretMinionPassword4Me!").

  10. In the Type a password hint field, provide appropriate text (e.g. "My Salt Password").

  11. Click the Create password button.

  12. Close the Change an Account window.

Add the New User to the Access Control List for the Salt Folder

  1. In a File Explorer window, browse to the path where Salt is installed (the default path is C:\Salt).

  2. Right-click on the Salt folder and select Properties.

  3. Click on the Security tab.

  4. Click the Edit button.

  5. Click the Add button.

  6. Type the name of your designated Salt user and click the OK button.

  7. Check the box to Allow the Modify permission.

  8. Click the OK button.

  9. Click the OK button to close the Salt Properties window.

Update the Windows Service User for the salt-minion Service

  1. Click Start > Administrative Tools > Services.

  2. In the Services list, right-click on salt-minion and select Properties.

  3. Click the Log On tab.

  4. Click the This account radio button.

  5. Provide the account credentials created in section A.

  6. Click the OK button.

  7. Click the OK button to the prompt confirming that the user has been granted the Log On As A Service right.

  8. Click the OK button to the prompt confirming that The new logon name will not take effect until you stop and restart the service.

  9. Right-Click on salt-minion and select Stop.

  10. Right-Click on salt-minion and select Start.

Building and Developing on Windows

This document will explain how to set up a development environment for Salt on Windows. The development environment allows you to work with the source code to customize or fix bugs. It will also allow you to build your own installation.

There are several scripts to automate creating a Windows installer as well as setting up an environment that facilitates developing and troubleshooting Salt code. They are located in the pkg\windows directory in the Salt repo (here).

Scripts:

Script

Description

build_env_2.ps1

A PowerShell script that sets up a Python 2 build environment

build_env_3.ps1

A PowerShell script that sets up a Python 3 build environment

build_pkg.bat

A batch file that builds a Windows installer based on the contents of the C:\Python27 directory

build.bat

A batch file that fully automates the building of the Windows installer using the above two scripts

Note

The build.bat and build_pkg.bat scripts both accept a parameter to specify the version of Salt that will be displayed in the Windows installer. If no version is passed, the version will be determined using git.

Both scripts also accept an additional parameter to specify the version of Python to use. The default is 2.

Prerequisite Software

The only prerequisite is Git for Windows.

Create a Build Environment

1. Working Directory

Create a Salt-Dev directory on the root of C:. This will be our working directory. Navigate to Salt-Dev and clone the Salt repo from GitHub.

Open a command line and type:

cd \
md Salt-Dev
cd Salt-Dev
git clone https://github.com/saltstack/salt

Go into the salt directory and checkout the version of salt to work with (2016.3 or higher).

cd salt
git checkout 2017.7.2

2. Setup the Python Environment

Navigate to the pkg\windows directory and execute the build_env.ps1 PowerShell script.

cd pkg\windows
powershell -file build_env_2.ps1

Note

You can also do this from Explorer by navigating to the pkg\windows directory, right clicking the build_env_2.ps1 powershell script and selecting Run with PowerShell

This will download and install Python 2 with all the dependencies needed to develop and build Salt.

Note

If you get an error or the script fails to run you may need to change the execution policy. Open a powershell window and type the following command:

Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned

3. Salt in Editable Mode

Editable mode allows you to more easily modify and test the source code. For more information see the Pip documentation.

Navigate to the root of the salt directory and install Salt in editable mode with pip

cd \Salt-Dev\salt
pip install -e .

Note

The . is important

Note

If pip is not recognized, you may need to restart your shell to get the updated path

Note

If pip is still not recognized make sure that the Python Scripts folder is in the System %PATH%. (C:\Python2\Scripts)

4. Setup Salt Configuration

Salt requires a minion configuration file and a few other directories. The default config file is named minion located in C:\salt\conf. The easiest way to set this up is to copy the contents of the salt\pkg\windows\buildenv directory to C:\salt.

cd \
md salt
xcopy /s /e \Salt-Dev\salt\pkg\windows\buildenv\* \salt\

Now go into the C:\salt\conf directory and edit the minion config file named minion (no extension). You need to configure the master and id parameters in this file. Edit the following lines:

master: <ip or name of your master>
id: <name of your minion>

Create a Windows Installer

To create a Windows installer, follow steps 1 and 2 from Create a Build Environment above. Then proceed to 3 below:

3. Install Salt

To create the installer for Window we install Salt using Python instead of pip. Navigate to the root salt directory and install Salt.

cd \Salt-Dev\salt
python setup.py install

4. Create the Windows Installer

Navigate to the pkg\windows directory and run the build_pkg.bat with the build version (2017.7.2) and the Python version as parameters.

cd pkg\windows
build_pkg.bat 2017.7.2 2
              ^^^^^^^^ ^
                  |    |
# build version --     |
# python version ------

Note

If no version is passed, the build_pkg.bat will guess the version number using git. If the python version is not passed, the default is 2.

Creating a Windows Installer: Alternate Method (Easier)

Clone the Salt repo from GitHub into the directory of your choice. We're going to use Salt-Dev.

cd \
md Salt-Dev
cd Salt-Dev
git clone https://github.com/saltstack/salt

Go into the salt directory and checkout the version of Salt you want to build.

cd salt
git checkout 2017.7.2

Then navigate to pkg\windows and run the build.bat script with the version you're building.

cd pkg\windows
build.bat 2017.7.2 3
          ^^^^^^^^ ^
              |    |
# build version    |
# python version --

This will install everything needed to build a Windows installer for Salt using Python 3. The binary will be in the salt\pkg\windows\installer directory.

Testing the Salt minion

  1. Create the directory C:\salt (if it doesn't exist already)

  2. Copy the example conf and var directories from

    pkg\windows\buildenv into C:\salt

  3. Edit C:\salt\conf\minion

    master: ipaddress or hostname of your salt-master
    
  4. Start the salt-minion

    cd C:\Python27\Scripts
    python salt-minion -l debug
    
  5. On the salt-master accept the new minion's key

    sudo salt-key -A
    

    This accepts all unaccepted keys. If you're concerned about security just accept the key for this specific minion.

  6. Test that your minion is responding

    On the salt-master run:

    sudo salt '*' test.ping
    

You should get the following response: {'your minion hostname': True}

Packages Management Under Windows 2003

Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP have both reached End of Support. Though Salt is not officially supported on operating systems that are EoL, some functionality may continue to work.

On Windows Server 2003, you need to install optional component "WMI Windows Installer Provider" to get a full list of installed packages. If you don't have this, salt-minion can't report some installed software.