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23:46
i'm getting started with chef. being able to use the knife install command for dependencies is a must. i do not have the resources for a chef server machine at the moment, but i hope to in the future, and as such would prefer not to use hosted chef. at this point, it seems like my best option is a git repo for my own "chef-repo", with git submodules for things like environments and cookbooks as they become necessary. this seems like it will be a pain. anyone have a better idea?
Wow, I didn't run out of close votes!
@dyelawn Paying someone to take your pain away seems like it might be a good idea in some circumstances.
thank you. but not a real answer
@dyelawn There's a lot more eyes on questions on the main site
Yeah, but that would get hit with "not constructive" pretty fast.
@ShaneMadden thanks. didn't think this warranted a real question though. i don't have enough rep to be losing it
23:50
The real problem is it's the weekend, and the only people here are those of us who either (1) have no life, or (2) are working.
(3) both
And, I personally use Puppet.
uhoh, don't mean to start another great puppet chef war
Haha, what war? That would be a rout :)
23:51
Haha, I don't have anything against Chef, I just don't have much experience with it.
@dyelawn SaltStack, fools!
Never trust a cat.
(and cfengine cowers in the corner eating paste)
@WesleyDavid heard about it third, already read two sets of docs, said meh
But yeah, hosted chef is really expensive and I can't figure out why.
23:53
I like the idea of salt. Using the templating language in the yaml files seemed just hideous though.
$120 a month for 20 managed nodes? I'm in the wrong hosting business.
i don't have enough tech knowledge, or frankly enough scale for it to really matter. i'm a designer who wants to be a dev who wants to be a sysadmin, so ruby and JSON won over a new language construct.
wait wait wait, yaml? i might have to look again
Aww see now you gone and done it, @ShaneMadden.
@WesleyDavid Hah!
ideally i'd have my own chef server, but i can't afford to leave an m1.small instance running to set up 6/8 machines a month
23:54
@WesleyDavid Yeah, I'm seriously thinking about doing a hosted puppet service. As soon as they implement the necessary features.
@MichaelHampton Not a bad idea! I think there's merit and plenty, plenty of customers.
Oh, there's your problem, you're on EC2.
Maybe I'll have to do a hosted saltstack.
@MichaelHampton invested too much time in it not to be
@MichaelHampton I was actually thinking that would be a good idea. What features are missing?
23:55
not because of any practical reasons like money, just bc i'm extremely stubborn
@WesleyDavid I actually had a chat with the Puppet UX people a few months back about it.
Hi everyone, I have a question that has been driving me mad, but, will probably get closed on the site!... There is a strange thing in Windows networking where you can have a gateway OUTSIDE of your subnet, and, as long as it is contactable, everything works fine! I know this works in Linux with some ARP tricks, but, I am not sure how/why it works in Windows out the box - I was wondering if this is a bug, or if this behaviour is defined in some obscure RFC somewhere?
@ShaneMadden The ability to restrict what users can see.
@WilliamHilsum That's interesting - I've never tried that.
tbh i do prefer the way puppet handles dependencies, though
23:56
@WilliamHilsum I think that would be a bug, but am not familiar enough with the range of networking RFCs to say definitively. Windows plays fast and loose with the TCP/IP stack though - witness Vista and autoscaling.
If you think interesting, do you think it is ok to ask on the website? Just sounded like something weird that may be closed
@MichaelHampton Why not just do a master process instance per client?
@WilliamHilsum I think it would be okay - you've got my upboat.
@ShaneMadden That's not the real problem, the real problem is the web front end.
seems like chef's pricing model (and inconveniencing of people who want to hold their own sh*t), they're trying to make themselves "indispensable"
23:57
@MichaelHampton That's what I was thinking. I figured there would have to be a lot of customization to the UI to get a hosted instance working.
@WilliamHilsum That's really strange. What did you do to confirm it works on windows?
thanks, will do
@MichaelHampton Just dashboard or?
@dyelawn The pricing model definitely doesn't seem like it's made to focus on resources, but more prestige.
@WesleyDavid If I got really bored one weekend I might be tempted to do my own web front end (would probably have to anyway) but I haven't had the time yet.
@ShaneMadden Yeah, dashboard, AND puppet enterprise. Guess which one will get the feature first?
23:59
@ShaneMadden set local ip to 192.168.2.5/24 and set gateway to 192.168.1.1 (the real one), and, everything just worked! I remember reading about this ages ago about having a gateway outside your local lan as OVH assign /32 subnets
tell you what puppet/chef could both stand to do, though: take a look at vagrant's docs
Meh. If Vagrant wasn't so tied to VirtualBox it might actually be interesting.
@MichaelHampton Heh. Well what I'd do would be to spin up a separate puppetdb instance and dashboard per client - none of 'em are good at isolation so just separate it all.

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