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Full Discussion: Configuration manager
Operating Systems Linux Configuration manager Post 302979791 by bakunin on Friday 19th of August 2016 04:40:01 AM
Old 08-19-2016
Stomp has made some very true remarks here. I'd like to add some points.

1) Most questions in IT are not about the tools to use but about planning and "strategic coherence". If you solve problems without having an overlaying strategic decision made chances are you end up with a (in a way running but) quite incomprehensible environment. This will at some point come to haunt you and - unfortunately - not immediately but in the long run, when it is hard to redesign. So plan, plan thoroughly and then rethink your plans. You will get the invested time and effort back in manifolds.

2) stomp already mentioned it, but i'd like to stress the point for emphasis: keep in mind that your environment will change over time and that means you need a tool with enough flexibility and compatibility to support these ever-changing platforms. We are right now starting to use chef too to manage our AIX environment, btw. but are not completely satisfied because we need to use a Linux system as a chef server instead of our native platform.

3) Never forget that practice and prospects are two fundamentally different things. I grew up in a time when PC networks were nearly exclusively served by Novell Netware servers. Then came M$$ and shoved their "WinNT server" onto the market, usually against the outcry of the IT department. Their selling argument was like see, it looks like the Windows desktop your secretary uses to type your correspondence, so she can administrate your network in between two letters. This, of course was utter nonsense (my kitchen knife has the same "interface" as a scalpel - that doesn't qualify me as a surgeon), but it sounded good in the presentation. Once (that was back ~1993) the single 64MB 2-processor Novell server was thrown out and replaced by 8(!) 256MB-4-processor WinNT-Servers (which combined produced about half the speed of the single server before) it was too late to change directions. You might want to avoid such decisions.

4) If you can rely on open source tools. On average (notice: if you look at a specific product you need to evaluate it specifically, not on some market average which may or may not apply in the specific case) they are usually better maintained than commercial software and are less prone to falling victim to "strategic market decisions" - forcing customers to do the manufacturers bidding, no matter what. OSS development directions are (again: in general) also not driven by the same rationale as commercial software. Commercial software is built to earn money for the manufacturer, the more the better. Things like usability, fitness for a certain purpose and code quality are just means to this end, not goals themselves. With OSS software, which is in most cases written by volunteers for the sheer fun of it, this is different.

OK, so far. I might add more points after thinking this over.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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subscription-manager-gui(8)				       Subscription Manager				       subscription-manager-gui(8)

NAME
subscription-manager-gui - Launches the UI client of the Subscription Manager. SYNOPSIS
subscription-manager-gui [--register] DESCRIPTION
subscription-manager-gui opens the local client tool to manage subscriptions and installed products on Red Hat Enterprise Linux systems. The same tasks that can be performed by invoking subscription-manager can be performed in the GUI, including registering systems with a subscription management service, applying and removing subscriptions, and viewing the subscription status of installed products. The Subscription Manager UI can also be opened by selecting the Red Hat Subscription Manager item from the Applications > System Tools menu in RHEL 5.x or the System > Administration menu in RHEL 6.x. OPTIONS
--register If a system has not yet been registered, then the GUI registration page can be opened immediately, as the Subscription Manager GUI comes up. This is only relevant for unregistered systems; if this is used after a system is registered, the option is ignored. REFERENCES
For procedures and tasks that can be performed in the Subscription Manager UI, check the Gnome help files (by pressing <F1>) or refer to the RHEL Subscription Management Guide at <https://access.redhat.com/knowledge/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Subscription_Management/1.0/html/Sub- scription_Management_Guide/index.html>. ASSOCIATED FILES
* /usr/sbin/subscription-manager-gui * /usr/sbin/subscription-manager * /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf BUGS
This client is part of Red Hat Subscription Manager. To file bugs against this client, go to https://bugzilla.redhat.com, and select Red Hat > Red Hat Enterprise Linux > subscription-manager. AUTHORS
Deon Lackey, <dlackey@redhat.com>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2010-2012 Red Hat, Inc. This is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2 (GPLv2). A copy of this license is available at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt. version 1.2 December 18, 2012 subscription-manager-gui(8)
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