Latest Stories

In case you missed the webcast this morning, or want to review it again, we have posted the WebEx recording Also as promised, the guide that goes with the webcast is on the Help site. “This page describes how to build a simple Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP stack using Chef cookbooks provided by Opscode.

Joshua Timberman

Opscode will be upgrading the search infrastructure of the Opscode Platform to provide improved performance and an enhanced query syntax on Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 from 7:00-9:00pm PST. The API and the Management Console may be unavailable for some or all of this time.

Adam Jacob

It’s time for another Opscode Webcast! UPDATE: Here is the Link to the previous session: ! Date: Thursday, October 14, 2010 Time: 10:45 AM Pacific Presenter: Joshua Timberman (@jtimberman) This webcast will assume the audience has signed up for the Opscode Platform and followed getting started guide. We will cover: Downloading cookbooks from cookbooks.opscode.

Joshua Timberman

Mr. Devops ( Patrick Debois) and the Chef Ninja (Joshua Timberman ) will be teaming up to teach a Chef Fundamentals class is Europe.

By popular demand, I will run a second free Webex training session where I introduce Chef and show how to set up your organization on the Opscode Platform this Wednesday. Then on Thursday, John Willis will demonstrate an awesome, lightweight approach for user management with Chef.

Aaron Peterson

Caleb Tennis is one of Chef’s earliest adopters, and has been submitting valuable patches to Chef since the early days of 0.7.0. He works at CloudBees, which aims to be the leading Java Platform as a Service.

I will be doing a free Webex training introducing Chef and showing how to set up your organization on the Opscode Platform. We’ll look at a simple example cookbook and talk about some of the components used, as well as how to manage cookbooks as source code for your systems infrastructure.

Aaron Peterson

A few of us from the Training, Services and Evangelism team will be presenting at VMworld next week.

As many of you know, over the past 18 months, Chef has become the standard for cloud infrastructure automation, and is used by RightScale, EngineYard, VMware, Rackspace, OpenStack, and many others. Chef works anywhere: in data-centers, inside virtual machines, on desktops, and in the cloud.

Jesse Robbins