[AusNOG] Wiki for network ops
Phillip Grasso
phillip.grasso at gmail.com
Sun Oct 9 14:31:30 EST 2011
Plug for google :-)
Google apps for your domain + sites for your domain (part of google apps
suite). Small companies its free, but disadvantage is that its on someone
elses infrasturcture.
Wysiwyg interface with ability to integrate other stuff fairly easily. Works
with app engine if you want to write your own stuff. Not as good as many
dedicated workflow products but hard to beat the price and reliability of
the system. Probably not suitable for bulk of this crowd in terms of just
being simple and easy to use and always works. Not so much to tinker and
fix. :-p
On Oct 8, 2011 6:07 PM, "Julien Goodwin" <jgoodwin at studio442.com.au> wrote:
> I'll certainly second the Confluence recommendation, but there's a few
> plug-ins which help for documentation, particularly Gliffy:
> http://www.gliffy.com/products/confluence-plugin/
>
> On 07/10/11 12:30, Sean K. Finn wrote:
> > ATLASSIAN + CONFLUENCE + FISHEYE is a killer combo.
> >
> > There's a 10 user free, if you need more users, you need to pay.
> >
> > The best part is that you can link it to SVN or CVS, so if you use RANCID
> to log network changes from your router you can,
> > http://www.atlassian.com/software/fisheye/
> >
> > Submit a ticket in your own system,
> > Make the change,
> > Link the new rancid CVS to the change,
> > Link with yEd
> http://www.yworks.com/en/products_diagramsforconfluence_about.html <-
> Again free for up to 10 users,
> > Draw a pretty picture of your network,
> > And add it to the WIKI.
> >
> > It makes sense to have the whole lot of back-office / back-network
> config, issue tracking, change management and diagramming all in one place.
> >
> > Sean.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net [mailto:
> ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Dale Shaw
> > Sent: Friday, October 07, 2011 10:35 AM
> > To: ausnog at ausnog.net
> > Subject: [AusNOG] Wiki for network ops
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I'm in the process of building a new wiki as a repository for network ops
> type information (work instructions, configuration standards, site
> information, howtos, and so on).
> >
> > I've previously used MediaWiki and I guess it was "OK" but I'm interested
> in learning what other people are using for similar purposes. I was leaning
> towards DokuWiki, based on a friend's positive experience. We don't have any
> special requirements, I don't think.
> > LDAP auth required, being able to PDF'ify articles would be nice.
> >
> > Does anything in particular stand out? What are the features of your wiki
> software that you really like?
> >
> > Open source preferred; underlying OS is Red Hat Linux.
> >
> > Feel free to reply on or off-list.
> >
> > cheers,
> > Dale
> > _______________________________________________
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>
>
> --
> Julien Goodwin
> Studio442
> "Blue Sky Solutioneering"
>
>
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>
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