> clusterlabs.org/doc is as good as i can do for docs.
> i try to keep it up-to-date and version specific (so that 
> documenting corosync 2.x doesn't obliterate the cman/plugin stuff).
> 
> packages are mostly in the hands of the distros though.
> building the entire stack (and keeping it up-to-date) on all 
> the major distros is a massive job - i'd never get any actual 
> work done.
> and typically not easy unless you work for the enterprise 
> distro you're building for.
> 
> In theory you should at most need "scientific linux" (even 
> clusterlabs.org/rpm-next is somewhat optional) + your choice 
> of shell/gui.
> 


It's a good site, and it is easy to see that a lot of work has gone into it. 
For me, though, it seems there are a few gaps where historical knowledge is 
assumed that a newbie does not necessarily have. (Case in point: I have 5 
clusters in production and I have no idea what you mean by "cman/plugin 
stuff.") There has been a lot of change and development over the years, and 
there is a whole lot of Google noise, some of which can seem fairly 
authoritative, but which is nevertheless dated. Also, for some reason, people 
who write articles often don't date them, so when you're reading something you 
Googled it is often not clear how current and applicable it is. This leads 
newbies down long and fruitless paths. There's also a lot of repos out there 
and it is not at all clear which is the best to use. (Case in point: I 
originally used the clusterlabs repo, but then I was told to use the 
clusterlabs-next repo--which seems to have worked--but now I guess I'm being 
told that I should no
 rmally want to use the scientific-linux repo? I may have misunderstood.)

I would be thankful for a web page that said something along these lines:

1. No matter what else you may have read elsewhere, this is THE AUTHORITATIVE 
source for the latest up-to-date information and downloads.

2. Here's the right repo.

3. Here's links to the sources.

4. Here's a glossary of terms, with identification of ones that are 
outdated/deprecated and what they were replaced with.

5, Here's the most common pitfalls that newbies experience.

6. Here's where you can get community and/or paid support.

It's getting close to Christmas, so there's my wish list. :-)

--Eric





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