Common or popular Configuration Management Software [closed] - deployment

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What are the most commonly used (or most popular) configuration management software packages available?

The four most popular configuration management software packages are: Chef, Puppet, Ansible and Salt. They are reviewed in this article and in this video. Bottom line: Chef and Puppet have been around much longer and thus are more established but some would argue that Salt and Ansible offer more elegant solutions. A more exhaustive list of open-source configuration management software in available on Wikipedia. I chose Ansible because it's powerful, easy to learn/use, requires no daemons, no agents, no dedicated management host, no PKI, no extra databases, and no clients or open ports because it uses SSH.

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I want to start learning Demandware [closed]

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Is there a website or tutorial to have a "Hello World" and more for demandware?
Where can I find the demand ware api documentation
Is there someway to have free server access, for training purpose ?
I already installed Eclipse and UX plugin..
Thanks
The main resources for such queries would be
https://xchange.demandware.com/community/developer
https://documentation.demandware.com
Both require that you have a valid Demandware XChange account.
It should be possible to request such by Demandware support.
There is no free server access as far as I am aware. To get a sandbox, you need to have an active subscription for Demandware SaaS.
It may be the case that your employer/client already has one, so it may be good to check with them.
It's a pay-to-play kind of model, so you can't really learn it without having an enterprise account with DW. If you do have one, you can get access to xchange where there are lots of training videos and documents....but basically it's just like NodeJS with some DW-specific calls and some, optional, funky flow chart things.

Is there anything like Fabric for Perl? [closed]

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I really like Fabric for personal projects, but I am working in a Perl-oriented environment in my day-to-day job. I’d like to stay away from introducing another language to the workflow, so I’m wondering if there exists something similar to Fabric for doing automated deployments in Perl.
Have a look at Rex. However its more based on Capistrano than Fabric.
Also check out this older SO question Is there a Perl or Lua alternative to Capistrano?
As noted in this answer if you can log in with SSH, you can use Fabric, no matter the language used in the running app. Unless there is some Perl specific code that can't be run by issuing a command in a shell.

Decision Support Systems or Content Management Systems [closed]

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I am looking at installing a Content Management System or something which can be used as a Decision Support System. I am not sure which content management system has options for Knowledge Management.
Appreciate inputs on this.
I am not aware of any CMS system with that functionality. Having said that, I'm really not a CMS expert. You might need to pick a flexible CMS and tweek it yourself, such as Drupal and Joomla. They both have very active support community. I think Drupal (compared to Joomla) is more flexible for developers.
You may also want to look at the research community in this topic. Some of them might make their research systems available: http://scholar.google.com.au/scholar?q=decision+management+system+cms&hl=en&btnG=Search&as_sdt=1%2C5&as_sdtp=on

Which is the best CMS for multi subdomains handling [closed]

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I am looking for a free CMS that would handle subdomains very well.
Say I want to create a website called cars.com and I want to have multiple blogs/wikis/forums... about each brand :
- ford.cars.com
- toyota.cars.com
- bmw.cars.com
Which CMS should I use to create this ?
My first guess was Liferay, does it stand the comparison with drupal when it comes to collaborative work?
Drupal's built-in multi-site functionality provides a lot of flexibility for running separate sites out-of-the-box. The add-on Domain Access module provides even more flexibility by allowing you to share content, users, and configuration between the sites.

i want to host a wiki site for an internal company project [closed]

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I don't have much experience with this. are there any free or low-cost solutions I can deploy? We have a relatively low-powered server running windows NT (ouch, i know).
Preferably something that allows multi-user access though something light-weight is the main consideration.
I used http://www.wikimatrix.org/ to compare features and prices of over 100 wiki engines last year for my company. Try it out.