On Nov 9, 2010, at 6:06 AM, Rob McBroom wrote:
> On Nov 5, 2010, at 4:20 PM, byron appelt wrote:
>
>> Is it possible to use a Service resource, but not have puppet start or
>> start the service? I want to declare service resources so that I can
>> easily make sure that puppet will restart them w
On Nov 5, 2010, at 4:20 PM, byron appelt wrote:
> Is it possible to use a Service resource, but not have puppet start or
> start the service? I want to declare service resources so that I can
> easily make sure that puppet will restart them when packages are
> upgraded, etc., but I do not want pup
Use the audit meta-parameter. Set it to enable and ensure, or all.
service { "foo":
audit => ['ensure','enable'];
}
http://www.puppetlabs.com/blog/all-about-auditing-with-puppet/
On Nov 5, 2010, at 3:20 PM, byron appelt wrote:
> Is it possible to use a Service resource, but not have pu
On Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 1:20 PM, byron appelt wrote:
> Is it possible to use a Service resource, but not have puppet start or
> start the service? I want to declare service resources so that I can
> easily make sure that puppet will restart them when packages are
> upgraded, etc., but I do not want
Is it possible to use a Service resource, but not have puppet start or
start the service? I want to declare service resources so that I can
easily make sure that puppet will restart them when packages are
upgraded, etc., but I do not want puppet to restart them if a sysadmin
shuts the down for some