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SaltStack
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=========
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Salt, a new approach to infrastructure management, is easy enough to get
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running in minutes, scalable enough to manage tens of thousands of servers,
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and fast enough to communicate with those servers in *seconds*.
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Salt delivers a dynamic communication bus for infrastructures that can be used
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for orchestration, remote execution, configuration management and much more.
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Download
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========
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Salt source releases are available for download via the following PyPI link:
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https://pypi.python.org/pypi/salt
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The installation document, found in the following link, outlines where to
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obtain packages and installation specifics for platforms:
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:doc:`Installation </topics/installation/index>`
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The Salt Bootstrap project, found in the following repository, is a single
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shell script, which automates the install correctly on multiple platforms:
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https://github.com/saltstack/salt-bootstrap
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Get Started
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===============
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A new `Get Started Guide <http://docs.saltstack.com/en/getstarted/>`_ walks you
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through the basics of getting SaltStack up and running. You'll learn how to:
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* Install and configure SaltStack
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* Remotely execute commands across all managed systems
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* Design, develop, and deploy system configurations
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Tutorials
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=========
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This walkthrough is an additional tutorial to help you get started quickly and gain a
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foundational knowledge of Salt:
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:doc:`Official Salt Walkthrough </topics/tutorials/walkthrough>`
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The following getting started tutorials are also available:
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States - Configuration Management with Salt:
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- :doc:`Getting Started with States <topics/tutorials/starting_states>`
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- :doc:`Basic config management <topics/tutorials/states_pt1>`
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- :doc:`Less basic config management <topics/tutorials/states_pt2>`
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- :doc:`Advanced techniques <topics/tutorials/states_pt3>`
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- :doc:`Salt Fileserver Path Inheritance <topics/tutorials/states_pt4>`
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Masterless Quickstart:
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:doc:`Salt Quickstart </topics/tutorials/quickstart>`
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Running Salt without root access in userland:
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:doc:`Salt Usermode <topics/tutorials/rooted>`
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A list of all tutorials can be found here:
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:doc:`All Salt tutorials <topics/tutorials/index>`
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Salt in depth
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=============
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While setting up, and using, Salt is a simple task, its capabilities run much
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deeper. These documents provide a greater understanding of how Salt
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empowers infrastructure management.
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Remote execution
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----------------
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Running pre-defined or arbitrary commands on remote hosts, also known as
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remote execution, is the core function of Salt. The following links explore
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modules and returners, which are two key elements of remote execution.
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**Modules**
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Salt modules, fundamental to remote execution, provide
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functionality such as installing packages, restarting a service,
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running a remote command, transferring files, and so on.
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:doc:`Full list of modules </ref/modules/all/index>`
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Contains: a list of core modules that ship with Salt.
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:doc:`Writing modules <ref/modules/index>`
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Contains: a guide on how to write Salt modules.
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**Returners**
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Salt returners allow saving minion responses in various datastores, or
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to various locations, in addition to displaying the responses at the CLI.
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Returners can be used to extend Salt to communicate with new, or custom,
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interfaces and to support new databases.
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:doc:`Full list of returners </ref/returners/all/index>`
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Contains: list of returner modules used to store minion responses
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in Redis, Mongo, Cassandra, SQL, and others.
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:doc:`Writing returners <ref/returners/index>`
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Contains: instructions for writing returner modules.
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Targeting
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---------
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Use :ref:`targeting <targeting>` to specify which minions should
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execute commands and manage server configuration. The following links provide
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additional information about targeting and matching minions.
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:ref:`Globbing and regex <targeting-glob>`
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Match minions using globbing and regular expressions.
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:ref:`Grains <targeting-grains>`
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Match minions using grains, which are bits of static information about the
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minion such as OS, software version, virtualization, CPU, memory, and so on.
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:ref:`Pillar <targeting-pillar>`
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Match minions using user-defined variables.
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:ref:`Subnet/IP Address <targeting-ipcidr>`
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Match minions by subnet or IP address (currently IPv4 only).
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:ref:`Compound matching <targeting-compound>`
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Combine any of the above matchers into a single expression.
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:ref:`Node groups <targeting-nodegroups>`
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Statically define groups of minions in the master config file using the
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:ref:`compound <targeting-compound>` matching syntax.
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:ref:`Batching execution <targeting-batch>`
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Loop through all matching minions so that only a subset are executing a
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command at one time.
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Configuration management
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------------------------
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Salt contains a robust and flexible configuration management framework, which
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is built on the remote execution core. This framework executes on the minions,
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allowing effortless, simultaneous configuration of tens of thousands of hosts,
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by rendering language specific state files. The following links provide
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resources to learn more about state and renderers.
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**States**
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Express the state of a host using small, easy to read, easy to
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understand configuration files. *No programming required*.
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:doc:`Full list of states <ref/states/all/index>`
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Contains: list of install packages, create users, transfer files, start
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services, and so on.
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:doc:`Pillar System <topics/pillar/index>`
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Contains: description of Salt's Pillar system.
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:doc:`States Overview<ref/states/index>`
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Contains: an overview of states and some of the core components.
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:doc:`Highstate data structure <ref/states/highstate>`
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Contains: a dry vocabulary and technical representation of the
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configuration format that states represent.
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:doc:`Writing states <ref/states/writing>`
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Contains: a guide on how to write Salt state modules, easily extending
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Salt to directly manage more software.
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**Renderers**
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Renderers use state configuration files written in a variety of languages,
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templating engines, or files. Salt's configuration management system is,
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under the hood, language agnostic.
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:doc:`Full list of renderers <ref/renderers/all/index>`
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Contains: a list of renderers.
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YAML is one choice, but many systems are available, from
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alternative templating engines to the PyDSL language for rendering
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sls formulas.
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:doc:`Renderers <ref/renderers/index>`
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Contains: more information about renderers. Salt states are only
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concerned with the ultimate highstate data structure, not how the
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data structure was created.
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Miscellaneous topics
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--------------------
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The following links explore various Salt topics in depth.
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:doc:`Salt Cloud <topics/cloud/index>`
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Salt Cloud is a public cloud provisioning tool that integrates Salt with
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many cloud providers.
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:doc:`File Server <ref/file_server/index>`
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Salt can easily and quickly transfer files (in fact, that's how Salt
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states work). Even under heavy load, files are chunked and served.
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:doc:`Syndic <topics/topology/syndic>`
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Syndic is a tool to allow one master host to manage many masters, which
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in turn manage many minions. Scale Salt to tens of thousands of hosts or
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across many different networks.
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:doc:`Peer Communication <ref/peer>`
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Allow minions to communicate among themselves. For example, configure
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one minion by querying live data from all the others.
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:doc:`Reactor System <topics/reactor/index>`
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The reactor system allows for Salt to create a self aware environment
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by hooking infrastructure events into actions.
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:doc:`Firewall Settings and Salt <topics/tutorials/firewall>`
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This is a tutorial covering how to properly firewall a Salt Master server.
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:doc:`Scheduling Executions (like states)<topics/jobs/schedule>`
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The schedule system in Salt allows for executions to be run from the master
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or minion at automatic intervals.
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:doc:`Network topology <topics/topology/index>`
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At it's core, Salt is a highly scalable communication layer built on
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top of ZeroMQ, which enables remote execution and configuration
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management. The possibilities are endless and Salt's future looks
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bright.
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:doc:`Testing Salt <topics/development/tests/index>`
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This is a tutorial for writing unit tests and integration tests.
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:doc:`Salt Proxy Minions <topics/topology/proxyminion/index>`
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Proxy minions allow for the control of devices and machines which are
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unable to run a salt-minion.
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:ref:`Python API interface <python-api>`
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The Python API allows the developer to use Salt locally from scripts and
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programs easily via ``import salt``.
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:ref:`External API interfaces <netapi-introduction>`
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Expose a Salt API such as REST, XMPP, WebSockets, or others using netapi
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modules. Run these modules using the ``salt-api`` daemon.
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See the :ref:`full list of netapi modules <all-netapi-modules>`.
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:doc:`Automatic Updates and Frozen Binary Deployments <topics/tutorials/esky>`
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Use a frozen install to make deployments easier (even on Windows!). Or
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take advantage of automatic updates to keep minions running the latest
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builds.
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:doc:`Windows Software Manager / Package Repository <topics/windows/windows-package-manager>`
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Looking for an easy way to manage software on Windows machines?
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Search no more! Salt has an integrated software package manager for
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Windows machines! Install software hosted on the master, anywhere on the
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network, including any HTTP, HTTPS, or ftp server.
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Reference
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---------
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:doc:`Command-line interface <ref/cli/index>`
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Read the Salt manpages.
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:doc:`Full list of master settings <ref/configuration/master>`
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Read through the heavily-commented master configuration file.
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:doc:`Full list of minion settings <ref/configuration/minion>`
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Read through the heavily-commented minion configuration file.
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:doc:`Full table of contents </contents>`
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Read the table of contents of this document.
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FAQ
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===
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See :doc:`here <faq>` for a list of Frequently Asked Questions.
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More information about the project
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==================================
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:doc:`Release notes </topics/releases/index>`
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Living history of SaltStack.
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:doc:`Salt Development </topics/development/index>`
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Information for Hacking on Salt
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:doc:`Translate Documentation </topics/development/translating>`
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How to help out translating Salt to your language.
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:ref:`Security disclosures <disclosure>`
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The SaltStack security disclosure policy
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.. _`salt-contrib`: https://github.com/saltstack/salt-contrib
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.. _`salt-states`: https://github.com/saltstack/salt-states
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