Suppose I were to set up an ubuntu machine and install some services and software on it. Further suppose I were to set up another stock ubuntu machine, this time without the additional services and software. I know there are ways of creating installation/setup scripts or taking disk images and such to build large numbers of identical machines, but if I were to programmatically take a file-based diff between the installations and migrate all file additions/changes/removals/etc from the fully configured system to the stock system, would I then have two identical, working systems (i.e. a full realization of the 'everything is a file' linux philosophy), or would the newly configured system be left in an inconsistent state because simply transferring files isn't enough? I am excluding hostname references and such in my definitions of identical and inconsistent.
I ask this because I need to create a virtual machine, install a bunch of software, and add a bunch of content to tools like redmine, and in the near future I'm going to have to mirror that onto another vm. I cannot simply take a disk image because the source I receive the second vm from does not give me that sort of access and the vm will have different specs. I also cannot go with an installation script based approach at this point because that will require a lot of overhead, will not account for the added user content, and I won't know everything that is going to be needed on the first vm until it our environment is stable. The approach I asked about above seems to be a roundabout but reasonable way to get things done so long as it its assumptions are theoretically accurate.
Thanks.