Latest Stories

Blog-Icon_5_100x385_Small

Here’a a quick run down of some of the amazing events going on in the Chef community this week: Monday DevOps/Cloud SIG – Lake Mary, FL Portland DevOps user group meeting Tuesday Food Fight Show – Elasticsearch Chef Cafe in Austin, TX Chef Introductory Workshop – Minneapolis – SOLD OUT Wednesday Triangle DevOps – Learn […]

Nathen Harvey
Blog-Icon_4_100x385_Small

Editor’s Note: A previous version of this blog post recommended setting cookbook\_path to nil in the knife.rb file. That line has been removed, as it causes an error in newer version of knife/chef-client. Either do not set the cookbook\_path or do not set it to nil when following these instructions.

John Keiser
Blog-Icon_2_100x385_Small

In this post, we’re going to look at how easy it is to get up and running with a Chef Server on a brand new Ubuntu 12.04 or CentOS 6.3 system. We’ll also explore the new Chef Server management tool, chef-server-ctl, and the new configuration file.

Joshua Timberman
Blog-L_News_4_1283x494_Small

Another week, another tale of some Awesome Chefs in our Community doing big things with Chef. This time, the story comes from right here in Opscode’s backyard of Seattle.

Lucas Welch
Blog-L_News_3_1283x494_Small

We’re heading into our second annual user conference and we couldn’t be more excited about our speaker lineup and sponsoring partners. But, before I get into all that, please remember Early Bird Pricing ends March 10th, so register today!

Nathen Harvey
Blog-Icon_5_100x385_Small

It has been an eventful February here at Opscode.  As many of you know, on February 4th, we announced that Facebook is using Private Chef to automate the configuration and management of its web-tier infrastructure. That is some hefty validation of Chef at dramatic scale.

Lucas Welch
Blog-L_Generic_-1_Small

More customer awesomeness today, this time from our friends at Getaroom, who make finding the best rates on hotels anywhere in the world fast and easy.

Lucas Welch
Blog-L_News_3_1283x494_Small

This release includes a few important security fixes. Solr Security Fix The default solr configuration has some tunables that are enabled for updating data and debugging that provide a remote attack surface. The configuration in this release disables those features.

Blog-Delivery_100x385_Small

The Chef 11 Server provides significant improvements in terms of compute efficiency, scalability, and operability. We achieved these improvements by rewriting the API server in Erlang and switching the data store from CouchDB to PostgreSQL.