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Ansible Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to Ansible
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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gokrazy
turn your Go program(s) into an appliance running on the Raspberry Pi 3, Pi 4, Pi Zero 2 W, or amd64 PCs!
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SaaSHub
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
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sbts-install
Discontinued Installs StalkedByTheState over the sbts-base system to build a home and business security appliance on NVIDIA Jetson series computers.
Ansible reviews and mentions
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Considerations for a long-running Raspberry Pi
I use some Pis for various things in my house including Zeroes through CM4s and 4Bs.
The Zeroes run Raspbian configured with the read-only filesystem option. I have found it necessary to uninstall `unattended-upgrades` because the overlayfs employed for read-only root caches disk writes in RAM and the update/upgrade process exhausts RAM. For the same reason I disable swap. It makes no sense to swap to RAM on a 512GB system.
Upgrades are tedious since they require disabling overlayfs, rebooting, upgrading, rebooting, and enabling overlayfs. I wrote Ansible playbooks to perform these tasks. (https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/tree/main/Pi)
I have a Pi 4B performing as a file server and running Debian (not Raspbian) It boots from an SD card so that the entire HDDs can be used for a ZFS pool. To reduce wear and tear on the SD card I have mounted `/var` to a ZFS filesystem. I should probably use `tmpfs` for `/tmp`.
I use a Pi CM4 to run HomeAssistant and that boots and runs from an NVME SSD where durability is less an issue.
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Setup your RPi with only one command using Ansible
Nice. I've written some playbooks for my herd of Pis as well. (https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/tree/main/Pi) I dropped by mainly to say "well done!"
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"Bootstrapping" a Debian install/config from a Raspberry Pi?
I use Ansible for a lot of repetitive tasks on R-Pi OS - mostly for a bunch of zeroes. https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/tree/main/Pi I haven't bothered automating stuff on Debian but it could be done.
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Unable to boot the headless Pi
I've been using Ansible to configure Pis instead of the imager just because I've done it manually in the past and just automated that process. https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/blob/main/Pi/provision-local.yml
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How many SD cards have you destroyed over the years while running Pis? This is going to be my 4th. Not sure what am I doing wrong, I know they are generally sensible for power outages, but come on, or is it just me?
I've started employing the readonly configuration available in raspi-config for systems that don't require writable storage. I've written some Ansible playbooks to make that a little more convenient. https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/tree/main/Pi On Pi 3/4 I usually use an SSD but I have a few zeroes that are more or less IoT devices and run from SD cards.
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ERROR! Unexpected Exception, this is probably a bug: Unknown OpenSSL error ...
Yes, thanks - I meant to. https://github.com/HankB/Ansible/blob/0c4a1bce42f84acc4176624fed671ee460c683a6/Pi/provision-local.yml
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Was Ansible Hard For You To Learn?
At one point (well before I finished the series) I decided to start doing rather than continue learning. My results have been very satisfying. (https://github.com/HankB/Ansible *) When I want to perform some task that I'm not familiar with, I check the online manual and/or search for examples. In that way my learning is more self directed. I do plan to get back to watching the series at some point but in the mean time my learning is more goal/self directed. I'm over the hump and at the point where Ansible is a useful tool. (I did not have any experience with other automation tools such as Chef or Puppet and my prior experience is as a S/W developer and not an administrator.)
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 3 May 2024
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HankB/Ansible is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.
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