Hej!
On dc., oct. 29 2025, Imre Jonk wrote:
On 10/28/25 19:45, Evilham wrote:
> Hej,
> maybe some remember me, probably most don't =D.
> I was using debops pretty intensively, and contributed whenever
> I could.
> According to my local clone of debops last commit I used was:
> commit 3ddd6a9bcafda2bbf20723bbb3d078e05505a8ad
October 2023, not too long ago ;)
And yes, I remember your nickname. But I did forget that I am
still subscribed
to this mailing list. It's not that active anymore, I think most
of the
discussions regarding DebOps can be found in the GitHub project.
I also remember your contributions <3
My (professional) use of DebOps as well as contributions ran
from april 2019
until september 2022, when I changed jobs. I've been working on
Dutch critical
infrastructure for the last couple of years: the .nl TLD and now
the IT systems
behind the Dutch railways, and Debian and DebOps are not really
used there. I'm
still working with Ansible and Linux though, as well as other
free and open
source software, but I'm not contributing back as much as I used
to. I've just
found different ways to contribute to society.
Those sound like fun, actually positive for society, jobs; kudos!
As a relevant side-question:
- did using and contributing to DebOps affect how you use Ansible
at work, on environments that are not using it? if so, is there
anything specific you'd like to share?
I know for me most of what's listed here:
https://docs.debops.org/en/stable-3.2/user-guide/debops-for-ansible.html
has been huge and has had a big effect in structuring projects,
and in general how I address managing infrastructure.
You can easily see what parts of DebOps I was most interested in
back then:
https://github.com/debops/debops/pulls?q=is%3Apr+author%3Aimrejonk+is%3Ac...
> Between switching to using mostly a form of BSD and using a
> different
> provisioning system that allowed me to iterate faster than
> ansible (albeit
> with its own limitations, like... the most obvious one: people
> know ansible
> and not the other thing), and other things, I've only been
> recommending debops
> to people and not actually using it.
> So, that was the why and how; and here is what I'm actually
> asking:
> other than considering myself a totally new user to debops, are
> there any
> shortcuts / warnings / heads-up, the community could give me,
> as a person that
> used to know debops pretty well back in the day?
I don't think I'm the most qualified person to help you out
here, but some
general advice: check the changelog [1] to get an overview of
what has happened
in the codebase lately, and also the upgrade notes [2] if you're
attempting to
dust off an old DebOps project. And of course, there is the
getting started
guide [3] for if you're starting over. Invoke your
troubleshooting skills if
things don't work out the way you expect, be eager to learn and
discover, and
ask for help (on this list, for example) if you get stuck. Good
luck!
[1]
https://docs.debops.org/en/master/news/changelog.html
[2]
https://docs.debops.org/en/master/news/upgrades.html
[3]
https://docs.debops.org/en/master/introduction/getting-started.html
=D thanks! These are more than fine, I was already OK with doing
this the long way, but figured saying hi and asking for a shortcut
was worth trying!
> That'd be the user perspective; the dev perspective would be
> similar, except
> I'd ideally like to toy with using debops with the BSDs, but
> that'd be
> posterior :-), again just some general pointers that could save
> me some time
> would be greatly appreciated.
The issue list may give you an idea of things that can be worked
on in DebOps:
https://github.com/debops/debops/issues
I think bugfixes for things that broke in Debian 13 and maybe
application
upgrades (lots of testing!) will be appreciated, but you'll have
to ask @drybjed
> Cheers, and congratulations for keeping things up!
Cheers, and mad kudos to Maciej for keeping the show running all
this time! I'd
be interested in his perspective on DebOps nowadays. I know at
one point he
accepted a job offer at a company that was using DebOps, pretty
cool :)
It's always nice to see people are still around and doing awesome
things <3
--
Evilham