community.mysql
Ansible
community.mysql | Ansible | |
---|---|---|
6 | 391 | |
88 | 61,210 | |
- | 0.7% | |
7.0 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | about 19 hours ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
community.mysql
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The Bullhorn #107 (Ansible Newsletter)
Please help the community.mysql collection define its mission statement. Any feedback will be much appreciated!
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The Bullhorn #101 (Ansible Newsletter)
The community.mysql collection versions 1.5.1, 2.4.1 and 3.7.0 have been released. Note that the release stream 1.x.y is now effectively End of Life. No more releases will be made for this branch. This stems from the decision to stop supporting major releases two years after the next major release.
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The Bullhorn #69 (Ansible Newsletter)
We are happy to announce that the community.mysql collection has found a new maintainer - Laurent Indermühle (laurent-indermuehle on GitHub). Our congratulations, Laurent, and thank you for your great contribution!
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The Bullhorn #59 (Ansible Newsletter)
The community.mysql collection versions 1.4.6, 2.3.7 and 3.2.1 have been released! Thanks to felixfontein!
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The Bullhorn #58 (Ansible Newsletter)
The community.mysql collection 1.4.5, 2.3.6 and 3.2.0 versions have been released! Thanks to rsicart, betanummeric, nerijus , kzinas-adv, pookey, the02 and hubiongithub!
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The Bullhorn, Issue 39 (Ansible Newsletter)
community.mysql 3.0.0 has been released!
Ansible
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Ansible Basics: Your First HelloWorld Playbook 🚀
Ansible is an open-source IT automation tool that simplifies application deployment, cloud provisioning, and configuration management across diverse environments. It uses a declarative language to describe the desired state of the system, and then takes the necessary actions to achieve that state. Ansible has become incredibly popular due to its simplicity, agentless architecture, and extensive community support. Document: ansible.com, ansible basics
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Grant Kubernetes Pods Access to AWS Services Using OpenID Connect
Ansible v2.16
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Set up an Automation script with Ansible
Ansible is a tool used to help manage software automation processes, configuration management across machines, deployment as well as remote execution of commands and scripts. In sports, Ansible operates as the coach of your team by providing strategies (playbooks), and actions, and ensuring the smooth execution of tasks across your infrastructure, just like a coach guides and directs players (Servers)during a game.
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Interesting Uses of Ansible's ternary filter
They support for-if from python, too: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/3.1.x/templates/#loop-f... but I haven't tried the "recursive" keyword to know if ansible supports that. I say "ansible supports that" because they don't just drop jinja2 into ansible and call it a draw, they have a bunch of custom execution integrations: https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/v2.16.3/lib/ansible/...
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
To manage a VM, you can use something as simple as just manual actions over SSH, or can use tools like Ansible, Hashicorp's Packer and Terraform or other automations. For an app where there is minimal load and security/reliability concern, VMs are still a great option that provide a lot of value for the buck
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A Journey to Find an Ultimate Development Environment
In this article's context, it is simply a tool that provides a declarative way to automate your machine/OS to configure the development machine as you want (install package, modify the configuration, etc). Examples of these tools are Ansible, Puppet, etc.
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The Director of "Toy Story" Also Drew the BSD Daemon Logo
Now we're getting more tangential, but for years, Ansible releases were named for Van Halen songs (see old Changelog here: https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/v1.8.4/CHANGELOG.md)
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Running stateful workloads on Kubernetes with Rook Ceph
In the lab to follow, we'll quickly provision a 3-node kubeadm cluster (1 master, 2 workers) on the cloud provider of your choice using an automation stack comprised of OpenTofu and Ansible, then deploy Rook Ceph using the official Helm charts and confirm that we are now able to successfully create CSI volume snapshots from PVCs by reusing the MinIO example from our last article.
- Looking for a way to remote in to K's of raspberry pi's...
- ansible builder collections path
What are some alternatives?
ansible-build-data - Holds generated but persistent results from building the ansible community package
Cloud-Init - unofficial mirror of Ubuntu's cloud-init
awx - AWX provides a web-based user interface, REST API, and task engine built on top of Ansible. It is one of the upstream projects for Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform.
pyinfra - pyinfra automates infrastructure using Python. It’s fast and scales from one server to thousands. Great for ad-hoc command execution, service deployment, configuration management and more.
cisco.ios - Ansible Network Collection for Cisco IOS
Home Manager using Nix - Manage a user environment using Nix [maintainer=@rycee]
awx-operator - An Ansible AWX operator for Kubernetes built with Operator SDK and Ansible. 🤖
Fabric - Simple, Pythonic remote execution and deployment.
ansible-inclusion - Requests to include new collections into the ansible package
cloudinit - Official upstream for the cloud-init: cloud instance initialization
vscode-ansible - vscode/vscodium extension for providing Ansible auto-completion and integrating quality assurance tools like ansible-lint, ansible syntax check, yamllint, molecule and ansible-test.
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀