I've got an in-house cassandra cookbook that's been getting some love here. It's the ben black -> infochimps cookbook, with ironfan stuff removed, and a focus on AWS and using Priam to discover nodes so it works with chef-solo. I'll look at releasing it sometime in the near future.On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 12:46 PM, Three Tee < " target="_blank"> > wrote:+1 to this, especially as tools like berkshelf also encourage users to default to the community site for cookbooks.Looks good! I'll have a look at this one and maybe switch to using it.Either way, I think that the community cookbooks should have a better management strategy in terms of cookbook usability.It's quite daunting for a new user to go around hunting for better cookbooks on github than the ones in the opscode repo. This was a major source of anger and frustration for me when I was starting to learn Chef. :)--Cassiano LealOn Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 10:52, Andrea Campi wrote:
I've been using this one with success: https://github.com/brianbianco/redisio ; every pull request I've sent has been merged in a reasonable time.On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:01 PM, Cassiano Leal < " target="_blank"> > wrote:I'll second the redis-angst as I'm going through it myself.This [0] seems to be the most usable redis cookbook out there, but it hasn't been updated in a while and has to be patched in order to install the latest version of the redis server.I'm currently using my own fork of it, but by looking through the pull requests it's obvious that there are other people in the same situation.--Cassiano LealOn Wednesday, January 9, 2013 at 09:58, Mike wrote:
Hey all,There's been lackluster response to this.I currently have this list:* route53* cassandra* node, nodejs, npm - candidates for rollup* scout_agentI know there's also some redis-angst out there.-Mike
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