On 9/3/07, Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > This is something similar to what I and others in my group did > long time before git was even invented. I'd suggest you go in > the opposite direction. Agreed. The infrustructures.org crowd has been exploring this space quite a bit, and developing tools like isconf that allow you to manage a huge number of machines across various unixen. And recently someone's integrated Debian APT with git tracking config files (called IsiSetup http://www.isisetup.ch/ ). I haven't reviewed it in detail, but it'd be first on my list. > If you have 5 configurations, each of which have 20 machines > that _should_ share that configuration (modulo obvious > differences that come from hostname, IP address assignment, > etc), then Indeed. I ended up liking the makefile-stanzas approach it is incredibly simple and flexible. Add debian/rpm packages, some of the tools in the cfengine toolchain, git to track your scripts/configuration and you are golden. For the Windows side of things, see "Real Men Don't Click" <http://isg.ee.ethz.ch/tools/realmen/> -- a bunch of unixy sysadmins with the "infrastructures.org" background took on Windows servers/desktops management -- and succeeded. PG-rated, fun for the whole family. ;-) HTH, martin-who-survived-the-sysadmin-wars - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html