You sir have taught me a lot. I have learned a lot from you. Respect sir. please continue making such a wonderful series. I love checking out new technologies and you are the best person who teaches stuff in a brilliant way.
Great Thanks for you time teaching us something very valuable ( Ansible ). now a days, this is a skill-sets that every Dev-Ops and Sysadmin must poses. you must be a very nice person to dedicate your personal time sharing your knowledge. Much Appreciated !!. Mat
Thanks for the series it is very timely and we are a Red Hat shop, well mostly Windows but you know... One thing I found was that the code for updating CentOS wasn't actually updating the OS. Did some digging and the way that is recommended is to use name: "*" and state: latest. The update_only parameter just prevents additional packages from being installed. Just wanted to point that out for other newbs to Ansible.
I really have benefited from your videos. They are full of great information. I do think you could make them more concise by avoiding time saying things like, "that is beyond the scope of this video..." and just either stop talking about the topic and trust the users know by the title of the video what subjects you are covering in depth and which are ancillary, or say something quick like, "I have a separate video on that". Avoid time stating the obvious.
I cant thank you enough for all your work your video series really shared a lot of light on so many grey areas cant thank you enough, but hope am not sounding like holiver twist the series didn't cover "ansible dynamic inventory "would love it if you can cover that in subsequent videos.All the same you did an awesome job , kudos
Great series! Thanks. Just a note, the db_servers group does not include ubuntu-1 but ubuntu-2. You installed mariadb on ubuntu-2 but used ubuntu-1 to demonstrate the installation result. That was not quite accurate.
I have been using yum with the following options to update a few servers - update_cache: yes, name: "*", state: latest. I'm honestly not sure what the difference is between this and dnf. Seem to be two modules that do the same thing at least for updating CentOS / RHEL.
As a web developer I've always found devops to be a little dry and boring. This video series is one of the few times I've actually enjoyed learning about devops.
In my whole life, I've never woken up the next day with so much enthousiast just to continue a playlist, Man you are incredible !
You sir have taught me a lot. I have learned a lot from you. Respect sir. please continue making such a wonderful series. I love checking out new technologies and you are the best person who teaches stuff in a brilliant way.
Great Thanks for you time teaching us something very valuable ( Ansible ). now a days, this is a skill-sets that every Dev-Ops and Sysadmin must poses. you must be a very nice person to dedicate your personal time sharing your knowledge. Much Appreciated !!. Mat
Best ansible tutorial ive found. Thank you for making this
Excellent wok. Detailed, precise and clear explanation on when to use all the modules.
Thanks for the series it is very timely and we are a Red Hat shop, well mostly Windows but you know... One thing I found was that the code for updating CentOS wasn't actually updating the OS. Did some digging and the way that is recommended is to use name: "*" and state: latest. The update_only parameter just prevents additional packages from being installed. Just wanted to point that out for other newbs to Ansible.
I really have benefited from your videos. They are full of great information. I do think you could make them more concise by avoiding time saying things like, "that is beyond the scope of this video..." and just either stop talking about the topic and trust the users know by the title of the video what subjects you are covering in depth and which are ancillary, or say something quick like, "I have a separate video on that". Avoid time stating the obvious.
I cant thank you enough for all your work your video series really shared a lot of light on so many grey areas cant thank you enough, but hope am not sounding like holiver twist the series didn't cover "ansible dynamic inventory "would love it if you can cover that in subsequent videos.All the same you did an awesome job , kudos
Great video and series. Getting ready for RHCSA
Thank you so much for your videos, sir! It was really really helpful!
Isn't Ansible going to run those tasks in sequence? Or is it smart enough to update the repos before running the dist-upgrade?
wow im really getting in to this. Thank you.
First of all, thank you so much for posting such instructive videos.
But why not to keep using variables for the play that applies to web servers?
Thanks for the content!! Youre really amazing!!
great tutorial. thanks
Great series! Thanks. Just a note, the db_servers group does not include ubuntu-1 but ubuntu-2. You installed mariadb on ubuntu-2 but used ubuntu-1 to demonstrate the installation result. That was not quite accurate.
ansible_distribution does not work with ubuntu 20.04.1.
awesome content, many thanks !!
The name of this video should be targeting specific groups of nodes. Thumbs-up of course, everything else is great.
Hi Jay, Can we use Yum as the package manager for centos instead of dnf?
I have been using yum with the following options to update a few servers - update_cache: yes, name: "*", state: latest. I'm honestly not sure what the difference is between this and dnf. Seem to be two modules that do the same thing at least for updating CentOS / RHEL.
@@musicjerm yum is the old way to update packages dnf is the new way
amazing guide
Thank's for the Video ! :)
Great series! Awesome!!
You made my day
I prefer if the hosts file contained easy to remember names or the host name instead of IP addresses
Many thanks
As a web developer I've always found devops to be a little dry and boring. This video series is one of the few times I've actually enjoyed learning about devops.
thanks
It's great
Thanks