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Date:      Thu, 05 Feb 2015 11:54:48 -0600
From:      Matthew Grooms <mgrooms@shrew.net>
To:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: push a few config files to dozen or so servers
Message-ID:  <54D3AE68.6040003@shrew.net>
In-Reply-To: <3552828A-536D-41AB-B56D-F47AA4164A79@gromit.dlib.vt.edu>
References:  <20150205130234.3fcbabfb@efreet.mimar.rs> <op.xtk288tykndu52@ronaldradial.radialsg.local> <54D37932.7010808@madpilot.net> <20150205154743.GO88387@mail0.byshenk.net> <3552828A-536D-41AB-B56D-F47AA4164A79@gromit.dlib.vt.edu>

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On 2/5/2015 11:27 AM, Paul Mather wrote:
> On Feb 5, 2015, at 10:47 AM, Greg Byshenk <freebsd@byshenk.net> wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Feb 05, 2015 at 03:07:46PM +0100, Guido Falsi wrote:
>>> On 02/05/15 13:20, Ronald Klop wrote:
>>>> On Thu, 05 Feb 2015 13:02:34 +0100, Marko Cupa?? <marko.cupac@mimar.rs>
>>>>> thanks to virtualization, my fleet of FreeBSD hosts have grown to more
>>>>> than dozen, and it still grows. There are some files that need to be
>>>>> identical on all of them (aliases, sudoers, root crontab, pkg repo
>>>>> files etc.).
>>>>>
>>>>> I was looking at puppet and cfengine but learning and implementing those
>>>>> seem like an overkill for my purpose.
>>>>>
>>>>> Are there any other elegant solutions which can help me achieve my goal?
>>>> Cron and rsync.
>>>> Or create a pkg which you install on all servers.
>>> He could also use an VCS system (subversion, git, fossil, whatever) and
>>> some scripts.
>>>
>>> This adds the advantage of having history.
>> If it's really limited, you should be able to wrap svn/git
>> and scp/rsync in python/bash/<tool of your choice> and have
>> something that works.
>>
>>
>>>> Just some quick ideas. In the end you just want to use something like
>>>> puppet. :-)
>>> I Agree, in the end that kind of solution is definitely more robust.
>> But, agreeing here, as well, there are some real advantages
>> in ensuring consistency, etc. with something like puppet.
>>
>> And a basic, minimalist puppet is pretty basic and minimal.
>> Puppet can get very complex, but that comes from managing
>> complex environments.
>
> I'm familiar with Puppet and agree with your observations above.  One
> thing that concerns me with Puppet, though, is that Puppet is not
> considered as a Tier 1 platform by Puppet Labs and so FreeBSD support
> is inconsistent.  With the current emphasis on modules and the Puppet
> Forge, the focus on the RedHat and Debian OS families in many modules
> makes it harder for FreeBSD users to use Puppet without reinventing the
> wheel.  Unfortunately, with Puppet, a lot of the "magic" happens under
> the covers in these modules, via Types and Providers, and if they don't
> support FreeBSD then they're not much use.  (This is another way of
> saying, "Puppet works great when it works.":)  I know this is a
> manifestation of the general "Linuxism" of *nix, so I know I'm swimming
> against the tide in a sense in hoping for better support. :-)
>
> However, I don't get a sense of the vibrancy of the community around
> FreeBSD and Puppet.  Is it thriving?  (Because Puppet abstracts away
> the OS from a sysadmin point of view, people might argue, "why run
> FreeBSD if you're using Puppet?")  Also, Puppet seems to have evolved
> rather than being the product of a clean, simple design.  (Maybe this
> is endemic to any Ruby-based project.:)  The orchestration (e.g.,
> Marionette Collective) seems a bit bolted-on to me.
>
> Despite all that, there is still lots and lots to recommend Puppet.
> However, if there's another configuration management framework that is
> more "FreeBSD-friendly," then it would be good to know of that.  With
> large-scale system installations becoming more and more prevalent, so
> too does the importance of configuration management and orchestration
> systems.  I've been looking at Salt recently, which I've heard is
> supposed to be quite "FreeBSD-friendly."  Does anyone know of any
> others that have a great FreeBSD community and support behind them?
>
> Cheers,
>
> Paul.

Have a look at saltstack. It's easier to setup/deploy, does centralized 
config management & orchestration in one tool ( like puppet + 
mcollective ), scales ridiculously well and is more platform agnostic ...

http://saltstack.com/community/
http://www.freshports.org/sysutils/py-salt/

-Matthew



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