Google is waiting on DNS propogation for some people still. -- Michael
On Dec 20, 2013, at 1:21 AM, Mark Maas <[email protected]> wrote: Hi Michael, I think somethings wrong with the Google Sign in: Fout:invalid_client > Bad request. The link as shown: https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?scope=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.googleapis.com%2Fauth%2Fuserinfo.profile+https%3A%2F%2Fwww.googleapis.com%2Fauth%2Fuserinfo.email&state=31U02EY6YAW7&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fgalaxy.ansibleworks.com%2Faccounts%2Fgoogle%2Flogin%2Fcallback%2F&response_type=code&client_id=ansibleworks.com Is what I'm getting back when I try. Mark On Thursday, December 19, 2013 2:55:54 AM UTC+1, Michael DeHaan wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > Today’s a great day as we get to unveil something that’s been in progress > for the last few months! > > People have been asking, “what’s the best way to reuse Ansible content”. > The answer of course is roles - We built roles in Ansible 1.2 - > http://ansibleworks.com/docs/playbooks_roles.html#roles. Role > dependencies and defaults were added shortly thereafter in 1.3. > > But how do we share roles? > > We thought about this a lot and built … AnsibleWorks Galaxy. If you were > at AnsibleFest in San Francisco you got an early preview from James > Cammarata, though we’ve since retooled many things from the ground up! > What’s Galaxy? Ansible Galaxy is an automation content site designed from > the ground up with an emphasis on being very dynamic — offering up a lot of > new ways to find content. > > Why is it called Galaxy? To us, Ansible is sort of like the Mos Eisley > Cantina (we assume you have seen the original Star Wars, if not, please > rectify this ASAP). We’re just one spot on one planet. All the content > and diaspora in the Ansible community, all that we create, compromises the > Galaxy. > > Galaxy is structured around roles. You download the roles you like, then > you write very simple play books that assemble all the roles together with > roles you also write yourself. Roles can contain tasks, default > variables, all you want, and special metadata provided in the role > instructs Galaxy about how to display it, along with a README. > > - hosts: webservers > > roles: > > - { role: author1.foo, x: 27 } > > - { role: author2.magic, port: 5000 } > > Galaxy has a lot of neat features which you should be able to explore > pretty quick. > > At the initial phase, we’ve made signup as painless as we could — you can > login with a local account, but you can also login with OAuth from Twitter, > GitHub, or Google+. (We just use this for login, so we won’t tweet for > you or anything). You can also link social accounts later if you sign up > first with a local account, but we expect social auth is the way to go for > many of you. > > Once you log in, from the “Explore” page, you can see not only the top > roles in each category, but also the top reviewers, top authors, new roles, > and new authors. You can browse the users arbitrarily and see what they > have contributed and reviewed. > > When we started Galaxy, a lot of our design influences were from consumer > sites — things like iTunes, Flickr (Explore), and most significantly … > beeradvocate.com! For this reason you’ll see linked reviews and ratings, > ratings with structure, and highlighted reviews from AnsibleWorks > employees. It’s designed to help you find what’s good very very clearly, > and explore other things you might be interested in. > > Once you find something you like, the roles detail page will tell you what > command line to use to install it. > > There’s a command line tool that’s embedded in Ansible 1.4.2 — which is > incidentally on PyPi *exactly right now* and a pip install away, or > otherwise available on http://ansibleworks.com/releases/ — and will soon > make it’s way to the distributions. > > This is all documented on the “About/Help” page of galaxy, but the command > line tool can help set you up with a scaffold of a new role, and can also > download roles and dependencies. The ansible-galaxy CLI is of course open > source, so it can take pull requests and get much smarter (I’ve heard some > nice requests for things like storing previous versions), but we’d probably > enjoy a discussion on [email protected] <javascript:> first as > it’s still pretty new and we would want to reduce duplicate efforts! > > Galaxy is all backed by GitHub, so to share a new role, all you need to do > is a host a GitHub repository as instructed on the “About/Help” page of > Galaxy, and then log in, and hit “Add Role”. (You can also have versions > of roles by using tags on the repo, if you want!) > > We should also point out that our RESTful API is fully browse-able too! > Go to http://galaxy.ansibleworks.com/api to see for yourself! You may > also enjoy watching Firebug as you are using the web application. If you > like the API, you may wish to know it shares a lot in common with the API > design and UI of AWX - http://ansibleworks.com/ansibleworks-awx, which > provides not only a UI and central server solution for Ansible, but also a > great API for embedding. Both use Angular.js and are powered by > Bootstrap, which we both pretty much love for frontend development. > > Galaxy will get some refreshes periodically and is currently in “beta”, so > let us know what your thoughts and ideas! Beta just means there may be > some kinks not worked out — and we may be revising the interface some. All > your role data you upload will stay there even as it goes out of beta, and > that applies to reviews and comments as well. > > Galaxy comes to you mostly through a lot of hard work from two great > AnsbileWorks engineers — James Cammarata and Chris Houseknecht, so thanks > very much to both of them for this — and thanks to all of you for waiting > so long for this, we wanted to take time to do it right, and hope you > really like it. Of course, we’re not done either! Please take a look > and let us know your thoughts! > > http://galaxy.ansibleworks.com/ > > > -- > Michael DeHaan <[email protected] <javascript:>> > CTO, AnsibleWorks, Inc. > http://www.ansibleworks.com/ > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Ansible Project" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. 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