Home
Reductive: Systems Building Systems¶
Reductive Labs was founded with one goal: revolutionize computer administration.
Puppet Can Manage¶
Puppet, an automated administrative engine for your *nix systems, performs administrative tasks (such as adding users, installing packages, and updating server configurations) based on a centralized specification.
Puppet can let you focus more on how things should be done and less on doing them. Let computers do what they are good at, precisely perform patterns, so you can focus on creating solutions. The act of specifying the services will help you clarify the systems you actually need and once your services are modeled using puppet, your ability to scale and recover from hardware failure could just be plugging in a new blade, setting the hostname and starting puppet.
If your systems aren't going to change or scale you probably don't need puppet, but your competition might. . .
Service and Support¶
Reductive Labs releases Puppet as an Open Source project.
If you want to jump start your Puppet implementation, need help with Puppet or have other special needs, Reductive Labs provides training, support and consulting.
The thriving Puppet community of users and developers can also be a great resource.
Latest projects
-
Puppet Recruiter (02/05/2009 07:46 pm)
A simple tool for adding nodes to a Puppet environment.
-
Naginator (09/10/2008 06:15 am)
Ruby parser/generator libraries for Nagios
-
PuppetCommonModules (07/29/2008 10:11 pm)
The Puppet Common Modules project is designed to provide a common architecture, documentation, language, and style for modules. Also included is a collection of common modules.
-
Facter (06/03/2008 05:41 am)
Facter is a cross-platform library for retrieving simple operating system facts, like operating system, linux distribution, or MAC address.
-
Puppet (06/03/2008 03:21 am)
Puppet, an automated administrative engine for your *nix systems, performs administrative tasks (such as adding users, installing packages, and updating server configurations) based on a centralized specification.
Puppet can let you focus more on how things should be done and less on doing them. Let computers do what they are good at, precisely perform patterns, so you can focus on creating solutions. The act of specifying the services will help you clarify the systems you actually need and once your services are modelled using Puppet, your ability to scale and recover from hardware failure could just be plugging in a new blade, setting the hostname and starting puppet....