A curated list of awesome SaltStack resources, tutorials, tools, and community content.
Awesome SaltStack is a curated collection of resources for SaltStack, a Python-based configuration management and infrastructure automation platform. It compiles tutorials, tools, integrations, books, videos, and community content to help users learn and implement SaltStack effectively. The list is community-driven and regularly updated to include the most relevant and high-quality materials.
System administrators, DevOps engineers, and developers who use or are evaluating SaltStack for infrastructure automation and configuration management. It's also valuable for teams managing large-scale server environments or transitioning to infrastructure-as-code practices.
It saves time by aggregating the best SaltStack resources in one place, eliminating the need to scour the internet for reliable tutorials, tools, and community insights. The list is collaboratively maintained, ensuring it stays current with the evolving SaltStack ecosystem.
🧂 A collaborative curated list of awesome SaltStack resources, tutorials and other salted stuff.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates over 15 categories including tutorials, tools, integrations, books, and videos, providing a one-stop shop for all SaltStack learning needs, as detailed in the structured Contents section.
Features blog posts, presentations, and formulas contributed by the SaltStack community, ensuring diverse, real-world insights and practical examples beyond official documentation.
Divides resources into clear sections like Tutorials, Code, and Integrations, making it easy to find specific information without sifting through unrelated content.
Links to recent SaltConf presentations and official documentation updates, helping users stay current with SaltStack developments and ecosystem changes.
As a curated list without formal vetting, it includes resources from various authors of differing reliability, requiring users to manually assess accuracy and relevance.
It's a passive collection of links; doesn't offer troubleshooting, direct assistance, or interactive help for SaltStack implementation issues, leaving users to rely on external communities.
Maintenance depends on community contributions, so some links may become broken or outdated over time, as evidenced by the 'Attic' section for deprecated content.