Hello,

I have an interest in automation and configuration management and became
aware of Pure Blends on another list thanks the Jonas' input.

If I understand correctly, in Pure Blend ideal, configuration is controlled
as a function of the software packages via debconf. This then provides a
consistent interface packaging a variety of target distributions of Debian
with much of the heavy lifting done at image creation time. This system is
then used to provide a consistent way of applying user configuration items
to the individual packages once the system is deployed. This has many
benefits: the package maintainer has control over the changes so can best
manage how they integrate, there is a standard way of configuring software,
it allows for a module approach to software management as the person dealing
with a package doesn't need to know about the internal configuration format
used by the software.

So, some questions:

Is the above a fair assessment of the current state?
How do you see this goal being achieved? Where is the now on the road to
this goal?
What needs to be done?
How much buy in is there from the broader Debian community?
How would complex configurations be handles? (e.g. BIND configuration and
zone files) ?
How can duplication of data be avoided?


Thanks for your time,


Matt

Reply via email to