From 9c98652535775f5034710612f6c3a0e25485d86a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Gitea Actions Date: Wed, 4 Feb 2026 08:21:10 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Auto-update blog content from Obsidian: 2026-02-04 08:21:10 --- content/post/semaphore-ui-interface-ansible-terraform.md | 7 +++++-- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/post/semaphore-ui-interface-ansible-terraform.md b/content/post/semaphore-ui-interface-ansible-terraform.md index 51a3486..6f0f9fd 100644 --- a/content/post/semaphore-ui-interface-ansible-terraform.md +++ b/content/post/semaphore-ui-interface-ansible-terraform.md @@ -11,12 +11,15 @@ categories: In my homelab, I like to play around with tools like Ansible and Terraform. But the principal way to interact with those tools is the CLI. I love the CLI, but sometime a fancy web interface is great. -After having setup my OPNsense cluster, I wanted a way to keep it up to date. Of course I wanted it to be automated, so I thought about creating an Ansible playbook. - +After having setup my OPNsense cluster, I wanted a way to keep it up to date. Of course I wanted it to be automated, so I thought about creating an Ansible playbook. But how to automate and schedule an Ansible playbook? +In my work environment, I'm using the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform, which is great, but not suitable in my lab environment. That's how I found Semaphore UI. Let's see what this can do! +--- ## What is Semaphore UI + + ## Installation ## Discovery