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- Cockpit Project — Cockpit Project
Introducing Cockpit Cockpit is a web-based graphical interface for servers, intended for everyone, especially those who are: new to Linux (including Windows admins) familiar with Linux and want an easy, graphical way to administer servers expert admins who mainly use other tools but want an overview on individual systems Thanks to Cockpit intentionally using system APIs and commands, a whole
- Applications — Cockpit Project
Applications The Cockpit Web Console is extendable The Cockpit team and others have built applications that are easy to install Often, these applications are available to install with a click of a button on the “Applications” page, but command-line installation is also possible using the package name Help us expand this list! Also consider developing your own application with the
- Running Cockpit — Cockpit Project
Running Cockpit If you already have Cockpit on your server, point your web browser to: https: ip-address-of-machine:9090 Use your system user account and password to log in See the guide for more info After installing Cockpit itself, consider installing additional applications in Cockpit Recommended client browsers Cockpit is developed with and has automated tests for: Mozilla Firefox
- Cockpit documentation
The cockpit-ws program is the web service component used for communication between the browser application and various configuration tools and services like cockpit-bridge (1)
- Cockpit documentation - Cockpit Project
Cockpit Guide The Cockpit guide contains: Deployment guide with everything you need to know about deployment beyond what’s covered on the installation page Feature internals cover the parts of the system Cockpit communicates with Developer guide contains topics such as embedding and integrating Cockpit, packages, and the Cockpit API
- Cockpit 337 — Cockpit Project
Cockpit is the modern Linux admin interface We release regularly Here are the release notes from Cockpit 337, cockpit-podman 104, cockpit-files 19, cockpit-machines 330, and cockpit-ostree 208: A fresh new style, upgraded to PatternFly 6 Cockpit features a refreshed style, thanks to the latest major version of PatternFly This update replaces the previous “industrial” look with a more
- Workflow — Cockpit Project
Workflow These are the rules we try to follow when working on Cockpit Review Criteria Each commit should be easy to read Commits are for people to read, so try to tell the story of a new feature clearly For example, refactor the code in a preparatory commit to make the actual change in the next commit easier to understand Try to separate changes to separate pieces of the code base
- Starter Kit - the turn-key template for your own pages - Cockpit Project
The bare minimum Cockpit’s API makes it easy to create your own pages (or “extensions” if you will) that appear in Cockpit’s menu and interact with your system in any way you like Our pet example is the Pinger which is just the bare minimum: a HTML file with a form to enter an IP, a small piece of JavaScript to call the ping Linux command through Cockpit spawn () and capture its
- SELinux Policy - Cockpit Project
SELinux Policy If present on the system Cockpit can set the SELinux mode to enforcing or permissive It can also use setroubleshootd to show audit issues and apply suggested fixes
- Creating Plugins for the Cockpit User Interface
The manifest above has a "tools" subsection, which means that it will appear in the lower section of the menu (see the manifest documentation for details) Each tool is listed in the menu by Cockpit The "path" is the name of the HTML file that implements the tool, and the "label" is the text to show in the menu
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