sudo su
yum update
yum install -y git
cd /usr/local/src
yum -y install git python-jinja2 python-paramiko PyYAML make MySQL-python
git clone git://github.com/ansible/ansible.git
cd ansible
git submodule update --init --recursive
make install
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#!/bin/bash | |
#title :wildfly-install.sh | |
#description :The script to install Wildfly 10.x | |
#more :http://sukharevd.net/wildfly-8-installation.html | |
#author :Dmitriy Sukharev | |
#date :2016-06-18T02:45-0700 | |
#usage :/bin/bash wildfly-install.sh | |
#tested-version1 :10.0.0.CR3 | |
#tested-distros1 :Ubuntu 15.10; Debian 7,8; CentOS 7; Fedora 22 | |
#tested-version2 :10.0.0.Final |
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#!/usr/bin/env python | |
""" | |
A script to query the Amazon Web Services usage reports programmatically. | |
Ideally this wouldn't exist, and Amazon would provide an API we can use | |
instead, but hey - that's life. | |
Basically takes your AWS account username and password, logs into the | |
website as you, and grabs the data out. Always gets the 'All Usage Types' |
Fabric is a deployment management framework written in Python which makes remotely managing multiple servers incredibly easy. If you've ever had to issue a change to a group servers, this should look pretty familiar:
for s in $(cat servers.txt); do ssh $s service httpd graceful; done
Fabric improves on this process by providing a suite of functions to run commands on the servers, as well as a number of other features which just aren't possible in a simple for loop. While a working knowledge of Python is helpful when using Fabric, it certainly isn't necessary. This tutorial will cover the steps necessary to get started with the framework and introduce how it can be used to improve on administering groups of servers.
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Step 1: Upgrade Packages | |
# yum update | |
# yum groupinstall "Development Tools" | |
Step 2: Installing Recommended Packages | |
# yum install gcc-c++ patch readline readline-devel zlib zlib-devel | |
# yum install libyaml-devel libffi-devel openssl-devel make | |
# yum install bzip2 autoconf automake libtool bison iconv-devel | |
Step 3: Install RVM ( Ruby Version Manager ) |