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Online Chef Training — Led by DevOps Experts

Online Chef Training — Led by DevOps Experts

Chef is an infrastructure as code DevOps automation tool. Chef allows you to build reusable recipes to deploy in your environment. These recipes are known as tasks and are assigned to put your environment in a specific state. We use these tasks to install packages, update configuration files, and lots more!

Agenda of the training

DevOps Concept & Process - DAY1
  • Need for DevOps
  • DevOps Culture
  • DevOps Tools
Configuration Management - DAY1
  • What Is Configuration Management?
  • Why You Need a Configuration Management Tool to Automate IT
  • What Is Chef?
  • Why Chef Might Be a Good Tool for Your Enterprise?
  • Chef Development Tools
Virtualization Essentials - Amazon AWS - DAY1
  • AWS Essentials
  • Amazon EC2
  • Chef Provisioning using AWS
Virtualization Essentials - Vagrant - DAY1
  • Provisioning Using Vagrant and Chef
  • Providers and Provisioners
  • Installing Vagrant
  • Configuring Vagrant
  • Vagrant Provisioning Using Chef
Become a Chef Programmer - DAY1
  • Writing First Chef Recipe
  • Chef and Its Terminology
  • Chef Syntax and Examples
  • Chef Resources, Actions and properties
Cookbooks - DAY2
  • Using Cookbooks
  • Developing Your First Cookbook
  • Creating the Index File
  • Changing the Metadata
  • Uploading the Cookbook
  • Running the Cookbook
  • Documentation in Chef
  • Meta info in Chef
Chef Server - DAY2
  • Setup Chef Server in Centos
  • Chef Organization
  • Config Chef Manage
  • Working with Knife and configuration
Using Chef Server - DAY2
  • Uploading the Cookbook
  • Bootstraping Linux Nodes
  • Bootstraping Windows Nodes
  • Running the Cookbook
Advance Chef Part 1 - DAY2
  • Chef Attributes
  • Chef Environments
  • Chef roles
  • Chef Solo
Advance Chef Part 2 - DAY3
  • Notifications
  • Cookbook Dependencies
  • Recipe Inclusion
  • Data Bags
  • Push Jobs
Chef Code Analysis in Chef - DAY3
  • Foodcritic Essentials
Chef Unit Testing - DAY3
  • ChefSpec Essentials
Chef Integration Testing - DAY4
  • TestKitchen Essentials
Chef Supermarket - DAY4
  • Public Supermarket Essentials
  • Private Supermarket Essentials
Fundamental of Ruby - DAY5

Chef in Windows - DAY5
  • POSHChef
  • Windows - Configuring Services like IIS
Other useful tools and plugins - DAY5
  • gsh
  • dsh
Some other chef & Knife tools - DAY5
  • knife-lastrun
  • knife-preflight
  • Chef-handlers
  • knife-flip
  • knife-bulkchangeenvironment
  • knife-env-diff
  • knife spork
Super Chef Advance Topics - DAY6
  • Chef Automate Essentails
  • Chef Compliance
  • Chef Backend
  • Push Jobs Server
  • InSpec
For more info contact us
Email:- info@scmGalaxy.com
Call:- +91 773 977 4984 
           +91 993 927 2785

Comments

  1. Thanks for sharing this online Chef training opportunity — it’s really encouraging to see programs that focus on practical, hands-on automation skills rather than just theory. I especially appreciate that the training seems designed around real workflows and real tools, because understanding how Chef fits into infrastructure automation and configuration management in a DevOps environment makes the learning much more valuable. The online format also makes it more accessible for professionals juggling projects, work, or other commitments, which is something many learners struggle with when trying to upskill. One suggestion for future posts could be a brief snapshot of the specific topics or exercises covered in the course, so readers can quickly grasp what skills they’ll walk away with. Overall, this feels like a thoughtful and useful resource for anyone looking to deepen their automation expertise — thanks again for posting!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This post is useful because it frames Chef training in the way enterprises actually use it: not just writing recipes, but building a controlled, testable, and scalable automation practice for infrastructure. A strong Chef learning path should cover cookbook structure and reusability, attributes and data separation, idempotent design, environments/Policyfiles for safe promotion, and testing with tools like Test Kitchen so changes are validated before they reach production. What really matters in real projects is governance and reliability—versioning your cookbooks, running Chef in CI, enforcing standards, and using compliance checks (like InSpec) to keep systems secure and audit-ready. For anyone working with large fleets or complex deployments, Chef skills like these directly reduce configuration drift and speed up consistent delivery across environments.

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