Donnie Berkholz ([info]spyderous) wrote,
@ 2005-08-21 01:20:00
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[Gentoo] Enterprise-wide network/systems management
We had a discussion tonight on the uses of our newly released installer and how it could help increase enterprise use of Gentoo. One of the things that came up was using it as a plugin to some sort of Web-based management framework along the lines of RHN. Immediately we thought no reason existed for such a tool to be distribution-specific; as needed, it could have distro-specific plugins as gnome-system-tools does.

Nobody on #gentoo-installer knew of an open-source project designed to install and administer entire networks of machines along with monitoring and auditing of the network itself, so I went looking for one. The ideal system would have a plugin-based architecture, so the administrator could decide how much power the Web interface had. This would reduce the potential damage from screwups or security holes in the interface. Plugins would be available for installation of systems, installation and update of either specific packages or the entire system, backup/recovery, network monitoring and network auditing.

The goal of such a project is to have a single tool for creating and managing the network holistically, including the individual computers within the network as well as the network itself. This would reduce the work necessary for the network/systems administrator by centralizing and simplifying network maintenance.

What did I find?
m23: A Debian-specific tool for installation and administration of "hundreds of clients."
LRS -- Linbox Rescue Server: Centralizes images, backups, etc. Can restore with PXE, multicast TFTP, or using a bootable medium.
LCM -- Linux Cluster Manager: A Beowulf cluster installation/management tool that can run commands, show stats, and do system imaging.

That's about it. Anyone seen more?

Update: I'm talking primarily about management and configuration tools, not installation tools. Don't tell me about kickstart etc, I know about it.



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not very deep research
(Anonymous)
2005-08-21 12:05 pm UTC (link)
fai - fully automated installer for Debian installs but soon also rpm based
kick-start - the solaris grand-father
debian installer has preseeding which allows automated installs

but i know that rh has a product, you should do a better research. :-P

(Reply to this) (Thread)

Re: not very deep research
[info]spyderous
2005-08-21 12:13 pm UTC (link)
I searched all over freshmeat. If it's not on there or if its keywords suck, then I didn't see it.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

Re: not very deep research
(Anonymous)
2005-08-21 04:47 pm UTC (link)
jump-start is the solaris grandfather. kick-start is the redhat preseeding install.

And for the record, although I am a debian user, fai rocks.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]userunknown
2005-08-21 01:36 pm UTC (link)
cfengine?

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[info]spyderous
2005-08-21 07:45 pm UTC (link)
You're absolutely right, cfengine does probably have the power to do this. But (1) it needs a usable frontend, and (2) I'd have to write all the scripting by hand.

I'm looking for something that already exists.

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[info]robbat2
2005-08-21 06:41 pm UTC (link)
Have a look at AutoYAST from SuSE.

Also, consider many of the cluster systems like ROCKS.

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IMC : IDEALX Management Console
(Anonymous)
2005-08-21 11:55 pm UTC (link)
What abour IMC : http://imc.sourceforge.net/home.html

(Reply to this)

ClusterSSH
[info]bitwh0re
2005-08-22 03:06 pm UTC (link)
I was going to mention cfengine but I see it already has been. In a recent article in InfoWorld ClusterSSH (http://clusterssh.sourceforge.net/) was mentioned alongside cfengine.

(Reply to this)


(Anonymous)
2005-08-23 06:27 pm UTC (link)
I cant offer a free Open Source solution, but you seem to be looking for something like Novell Zenworks, right?
http://www.novell.com/products/zenworks/sysreqs.html

(Reply to this)

Webmin
(Anonymous)
2005-09-05 02:05 pm UTC (link)
I used to use webmin when I was a newbie messing around with slackware, I believe it can manage most of what you want and more, though never really messed about with the network features so getback to us on what they are like.

http://www.webmin.com/

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