Skip to content
/ Rex Public
forked from RexOps/Rex

A framework for server orchestration and to simplify system administration

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jbearden0/Rex

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Rex Build Status

With (R)?ex you can manage all your boxes from a central point through the complete process of configuration management and software deployment.

This is the development branch for the 1.x version tree. Use this branch if you want to send a bugfix or enhancement for Rex 1.x.

Getting started

We have a Getting started guide on the website that should help you with the first steps.

Installation

There are several methods to install (R)?ex: use your distro's package manager, download it from CPAN or build it from source. Check out the Get Rex page on the website for the different options, and choose the one that fits you best.

Build from source

To build (R)?ex from source, you need to install Dist::Zilla:

cpanm Dist::Zilla

Dist::Zilla provides the dzil command, which you can use to install (R)?ex dependencies:

dzil authordeps --missing | cpanm
dzil listdeps --missing | cpanm

Then to install (R)?ex:

dzil install

Or to build a .tar.gz release file:

dzil build

Need help?

If a new user has difficulties to get on board, then it's a bug. Let us know!

Feel free to join us on irc.freenode.net in the #rex channel, ask us on the Rex Users on Google Groups, or browse and open issues on GitHub.

If you need commercial support for (R)?ex, check out the Support page on the website.

Contributing

All contributions are welcome: documentation, patches, bug reports, ideas, promoting (R)?ex at conferences and meetups, or anything else you can think of.

For more details, see the Help (R)?ex page on the website.

If you want to contribute new functionality or fix things, you can just clone the repository on GitHub and send pull requests against the master branch. We encourage you to logically group your commits together in topic/feature branches and send a pull request for each of your topic branches.

We use perltidy to help us to maintain a consequent code style throughout the project (check out our .perltidyrc for more details). We recommend setting it up with your favorite IDE or text editor, so you can apply formatting easily or even automatically to your changes before committing them.

If you have any questions about how to implement something, join us on irc.freenode.net / #rex.

About

A framework for server orchestration and to simplify system administration

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Perl 97.0%
  • Other 2.3%
  • Shell 0.6%
  • Elixir 0.1%
  • REXX 0.0%
  • Roff 0.0%