Puppet and Puppet Enterprise operate on multiple Unix-like systems (including Linux, Solaris, BSD, Mac OS X, AIX, HP-UX) and has Microsoft Windows support.[6][7] Puppet itself is written in Ruby. Facter, Puppet’s cross-platform system profiling library, is written in C++. Puppet Server and Puppet DB are written in Clojure.[8]
Design
Puppet consists of a custom declarative language to describe system configuration.
Puppet is model-driven, requiring limited programming knowledge to use.[9]
Puppet follows client-server architecture. The client is known as an agent and the server is known as the master. For testing and simple configuration, it can also be used as a stand-alone application run from the command line.
Puppet Server is installed on one or more servers, and Puppet Agent is installed on all the machines to be managed. Puppet Agents communicate with the server and fetch configuration instructions. The Agent then applies the configuration on the system and sends a status report to the server.[10][11]
In 2005, Puppet was founded by former CEO Luke Kanies.[citation needed] On Jan. 29, 2019 Yvonne Wassenaar replaced Sanjay Mirchandani as CEO. Wassenaar previously worked at Airware, New Relic and VMware. In February 2011 Puppet released its first commercial product, Puppet Enterprise, built on its open-source base, with some extra commercial components.[14] Puppet purchased the infrastructure automation firm Distelli in September 2017.[15] Puppet rebranded Distelli's VM Dashboard (a continuous integration / continuous delivery product) as Puppet Pipelines for Applications,[16] and K8s Dashboard as Puppet Pipelines for Containers.[17] The products were made generally available in October, 2017.[18] In May 2018, Puppet released Puppet Discovery, a tool to discover and manipulate resources in hybrid networks.[19] In June 2018, Puppet raised an additional $42 million for a total of $150 million in funding. The round was led by Cisco and included Kleiner Perkins, True Ventures, EDBI, and VMware.[20] Puppet's partners include VMware, Amazon Web Services, Cisco, OpenStack, Microsoft Azure, Eucalyptus, and Zenoss.[21]
In April 2022, it was announced Puppet had been acquired by the Minneapolis-headquartered software developer, Perforce.[22] The company subsequently laid off 15% of Puppet's workforce in Portland.[23]