Any serious production servers yet?

Dave Hayes dave at jetcafe.org
Thu Jun 1 23:15:32 PDT 2006


Justin C Sherrill <justin at xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>Dave Hayes wrote:
>> So. What would it take to have a simple and concise set of commands
>> any inexperienced adopter could easily apply to get a basic DFly
>> system with X, gnome or KDE, and some basic applications?
> Someone writing it is what it takes.  Like much open source documentation,
> the handbook and other things are written in DocBook, 

I have no problem using DocBook (it's my current documentation system
as well) and I think I've even contributed one small patch to the
handbook. But I'm not sure the handbook is the answer.

> The wiki presents a nice alternative; it's much easier to add to. 

Except it's recently been unstable. At some point I presume it will
become stable again. :) 

> If you want to write something up and put it in the wiki, that would be
> great.  If you want to add something to the handbook or other documents in
> CVS under doc/, you can write the plain text and I'll happily do the
> conversion if you don't want to. 

I'm coming up on some actual work I have to do comparing DFly to
FreeBSD, but I lead three lives at the moment only one of which is 
computer science. If no one else beats me to it, I guess the best
place to start would be to bring up a DFly desktop, journal my
experiences, and attempt to put something together which can hopefully
be maintained. 

My one reservation is that I really want to know what the best
practices are, and I fear that I won't know that until 6 months down
the road where I encounter some problem that highlights that I haven't
done the best practice. :) Thus, hopefully if I write something like
this I can expect to have lots of peer and mentor review. 

> I completely 100% agree with you.  We need more docs that are easy and
> quick.  Even if the Handbook was up to date and revised, it'd still be
> quite the slog to get through.

There's a bit of conflicting information as well. 

Perhaps the real way to document the process of getting to a place
where you can just say "install this" is to write a shell script? 
I've been using that methodology to document processes for quite some
time.
------
Dave Hayes - Consultant - Altadena CA, USA - dave at xxxxxxxxxxx 
>>> The opinions expressed above are entirely my own <<<

Nasrudin was throwing handfuls of crumbs around his house. 
"What are you doing?" someone asked him.
               "Keeping the tigers away," replied Nasrudin.
"But there are no tigers in these parts."
               "That's right. Effective, isn't it?"










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