On Wed, Jan 21, 2015 at 7:53 AM, James B. Byrne <byrnejb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, January 20, 2015 18:37, Les Mikesell wrote: >> >> There's also saltstack which is one of the newer of the bunch. It has >> some chance of working reasonably across different platforms. How >> you feel about it will probably depend on how you feel about python in >> general - and how you expect upgrades to go in the future. >> > > Is this what you are talking about? > > Available Packages > salt.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-api.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-cloud.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-master.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-minion.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-ssh.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel > salt-syndic.noarch 2014.7.0-3.el6 epel Yes - the architecture is that you run one central salt master and a large number of salt-minions can connect to it and salt-syndic works as sort-of a proxy for even larger sets. It is somewhat cross-platform but with the caveat that the master should be updated to newer versions ahead of the minions and epel is one of the slower repositories to get updates. I haven't gone beyond simple testing myself because I think it shouldn't be more trouble to manage updates/compatibility on a configuration manager than just managing your own app in the first place. But we tend to make few changes beyond version updates once a system is deployed. If you regularly spin totally new clusters up and down all the time I could see how it could save time. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos