On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 1:25 AM, Kevin Kofler <kevin.kof...@chello.at> wrote:
> Michal Novotny wrote:
>> I am no flatpack expert, but I think that really any container technology
>> in question should be just a porter of an rpm or set of rpms and there
>> should (could) be packaged ansible scripts that are able to setup and
>> spawn those containers e.g. in OpenShift or just on a host machine through
>> ssh or by other communication means. This approach is not bound to a
>> particular container technology and therefore provides huge amount of
>> flexibility. We could also actually provide flatpacks for downloading to
>> create some 'halo' effect but that again should be result of an automated
>> image-creation process in which we should be able to chose what kind of
>> containerization we want.
>
> Keep in mind that Ansible is also something small-scale admins don't use. It
> only makes sense at all if you have at least 2 servers, and it is only
> really worthwhile if you have several, mostly identical servers. If you have
> just one server, or two or three servers with very different configuration
> from each other, it's just not worth it. So the workflow you suggest
> introduces an extra learning curve.

Actually I disagree with you, I know people that use ansible to manage
their laptop config (IE a single device) so that if they rebuild it
they can get all their configs back quickly.

While ultimately you do get better scale with ansible across a lot of
similar devices it's by no means the only way people use it, just
because it's not the way you would.
_______________________________________________
devel mailing list -- devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe send an email to devel-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to