Hello all,
I am planning to deploy a configuration / auditing software package for about 100 new nodes that we are planning to install. I am hearing many good things in regards to cfengine and puppet. Can someone shed some light in regards to these solutions?
Thanks,
jaysunn (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to instal the puppet. I get this error. Please help..
yum install puppet-server
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, presto
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
* base: mirrors.greenmountainaccess.net
* extras: mirror.lug.udel.edu
* updates:... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am working on RHEL 5.6 server, this is in private DMZ. No access to internet. I have downloaded the files I need to install the Puppet & Ruby. My goal is to install Puppet. I have downloaded....
mcollective-2.2.3-1.el5.noarch- SERVER.rpm ... (2 Replies)
I'm looking to deploy a configuration management system at my company and was wondering which config management was better: cfengine or Puppet? Pros/Cons? I'm looking to deploy the free version of each.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. (6 Replies)
Hello all,
can you please let me know if the free version of puppet provides dashboard?
Or how do you get info about failed installation or other staff for the puppet agents?
Sorry for not googling first :) (3 Replies)
Hi all,
This is more a satellite 6 question
Is it possible to add / assign a puppet client to a class on the master from the client ? This is for automation and I can't get it to work.
On an existing client used as a web server I found the following content in
cat... (0 Replies)
Hello Team,
Do You have any data/books/links related to Puppet? How to start, how to setup first env and execute "puppet" actions?
Thanks in advance!
Patryk (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nsmcny
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
yum-shell
yum(8)yum(8)NAME
yum - Yellowdog Updater Modified shell
SYNOPSIS
yum shell [filename]
DESCRIPTION
yum includes an interactive shell for conducting multiple commands or sets of commands during a single execution of yum. These commands can
be issued manually or passed to yum from a file. The commands are much the same as the normal yum command line options. See here yum(8) for
that information. There are a few additional commands documented below.
config
[argument] [value]
args: debuglevel, errorlevel, obsoletes, gpgcheck, assumeyes, exclude
If no value is given it prints the current value.
If value is given it sets that value.
repo
[argument] [option]
list: lists repositories and their status
enable: enable repositories. option = repository id
disable: disable repositories. option = repository id
transaction
[argument]
list: lists the contents of the transaction
reset: reset (zero-out) the transaction
solve: run the dependency solver on the transaction
run: run the transaction
Examples
The following are examples of using the yum shell.
list available packagename*
groupinfo 'Some Group'
install foo
remove bar
update baz
run
That will list available packages matching the glob 'packagename*'. It will return information on the group 'Some Group' It will
then queue the following commands into the transaction: install foo, remove bar, update baz. Then the 'run' command will resolve
dependencies for the transaction commands and run the transaction.
SEE ALSO
yum (8)
http://yum.baseurl.org/
AUTHORS
See the Authors file included with this program.
BUGS
There of course aren't any bugs, but if you find any, they should be sent to the mailing list: yum@lists.baseurl.org or filed in bugzilla.
Seth Vidalyum(8)