cfg2html is a little utility to collect the necessary system configuration files and system set-up to an ASCII file and HTML file. Simple to use and very helpful in disaster recovery situations. cfg2html is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the cfg2html scripts to make it work for their particular cases.
cfg2html collects the system configuration into a HTML and a text file. cfg2html is the “Swiss army knife” for the sysadmins. It was written to get the necessary information to plan an update, to perform basic trouble shooting or performance analysis. As a bonus cfg2html creates a nice HTML and plain ASCII documentation from your System.
This include the collection of Cron and At, installed Hardware, installed Software, Filesystems, Dump- and Swap-configuration, LVM, Network Settings, Kernel, System enhancements and Applications, Subsystems.
The first versions of cfg2html were written for HP-UX. Meanwhile the cfg2html HP-UX stream was ported to all major *NIX platforms and small embedded systems. cfg2html works on Linux, HP-UX, SunOS, AIX etc.
See our GitHub Source development tree https://github.com/cfg2html/cfg2html and clone it to your system via:
git clone [email protected]:cfg2html/cfg2html.git
cd cfg2html
make help
If you do not want to build cfg2html by your own, we have pre-build installations you can download from http://www.cfg2html.com
If you find a problem, a bug, want to discuss feature requests or have some bright new ideas please create a new issue at our GitHub project pages https://github.com/cfg2html/cfg2html/issues. When using it, please ensure that any criticism you provide is constructive. Please do not use the issue tracker for general help and support on how to use cfg2html.
To contribute to a project that is hosted on GitHub you can fork the project on github.com, then clone your fork locally, make a change, push back to GitHub and then send us a pull request, which will email the maintainer.
Fork project on github:
git clone https://github.com/my-user/project
cd project
repeat (edit files),(testing) until OK
git add (modified files)
git commit -m 'Explain what I changed'
git push origin master
Then go to github and click the ‘pull request’ button!
NOTE: This is only a suggestion!
- Semantic Versioning http://semver.org/ e.g. 1.0.19
- For ChangeLog use ruby.gem.releasor or something like https://keepachangelog.com or https://pypi.python.org/pypi/gitchangelog
- Use Annotated tags (-a)!
- Don't use hash signs (#) in the git commit message, they might get headlines with MarkDown in the ChangeLog.md
- See also https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/
- If possible use this git commit format: {new|chg|fix}: [{dev|use?r|pkg|test|doc}:] COMMIT_MESSAGE [!{minor|refactor} ... ] To see a full documentation of such commit message convention, please look up the reference file gitchangelog.rc.reference, see https://github.com/vaab/gitchangelog/blob/master/src/gitchangelog/gitchangelog.rc.reference
$Id: README.md,v 6.10 2019/08/30 05:39:09 ralph Exp $