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Contents
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/petecheslock/berks2env.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/petecheslock/berks2env) [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/berks2env.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/berks2env) [![Dependency Status](https://gemnasium.com/petecheslock/berks2env.svg)](https://gemnasium.com/petecheslock/berks2env) [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/petecheslock/berks2env.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/petecheslock/berks2env) berks2env ========= Convert a Berkshelf Lockfile to a Chef Environment json With Berks3 - ```berks apply``` is an awesome feature - but doesn't work if you want to create a net new environment (via your CI system) What this does is allows you to pass in a branch or version number (or any arbitrary data really) and a Berksfile.lock and convert them into a Chef server supported envrionment json. TODO ======== Currently this is the raw, original version of the script we use to create environment files per our workflow that was discussed at ChefConf 2014 - You can watch this talk here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L__8o02od6Q Use [this link](http://youtu.be/L__8o02od6Q?t=21m16s) to jump directly to the section I talk about Jenkins/CI workflows If you just want the original script we used on CI (per the talk above) - you can [find it here](https://github.com/petecheslock/berks2env/blob/4fa764134c11912a9c82391540903697fe7fe5a6/berks2env.rb) * ~~Going to eventually convert this into a rubygem~~ * Going to support another command option to injest json into the resultant environment json * General cleanup and refactor to make it more flexible. * This is raw and has only a single specific use case - Watch my talk if you want more info about how and why this is used.
Version data entries
1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems
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berks2env-0.3.1 | README.md |