Has anyone used juju (ensemble) to deploy softwares on Eucalyptus' instances successfully ?
Although the official FAQ says that juju is only support EC2 ( currently ),
but I've found someone (ex.) got OpenStack setting in juju's environment.yaml
But when I tried the similar settings in my file, juju will throw HTTP 500 ERROR or still
connect to AWS and complained that the access keys is not in r
It is clear from this post that Juju sits at a different layer than Chef Server. Juju sits at the orchestration or service layer, while Chef sits more at the individual server or configuration layer.
At one of Canonical's main Juju pages, it states that Juju is designed to "co-exist" with tools like Chef and Puppet, taking the process "one step further".
I'm interested in juju before starting with it i would like to ask a few questions.
Can juju be only be used with ubuntu? is it possible to use it with CentOS?
I have my own application server which i wrote, can i wrap it in a charm and deploy it on my local juju cloud?
Canonical Delves Deeper into the Cloud – Launches Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud Services
Partners with Eucalyptus to offer 'private cloud' assessment, proof-of-concept and support services
Ubuntu has taken the Linux world by storm on the desktop, but, for the enterprise market, it is still an up-and-comer. The open-source operating system is evolving to meet the requirements of this market as well and has proven especially popular for cloud applications. The Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud version is an interesting option...
Canonical Systems Management and Monitoring Tool
Adds Dedicated Server
‘Landscape Dedicated Server’ Now Available For Pre-Order
I have seen this question: What is a Juju Charm?
I have more questions.
Which services can be deployed using juju charm?
Can lxc-containers be deployed using juju charm?
Are juju charms like SMF (Service Management Facility like in Solaris)?
(So, a charm tells juju how to manage a service) @Sergey Answer)
Canonical is promoting these days their new product, Ubuntu Cloud Jumpstart, a service that promises to deploy a private cloud infrastructure on the client's hardware. How it works? Simple! During five days, a Canonical services engineer and a Canonical engagement manager will build your private cloud on your own servers."Canoni... (read more)
Canonical isn’t just the company behind the popular Linux distribution Ubuntu, but with Ubuntu One, it also offers a cloud storage service with 5GB of free storage space, as well as a music locker, and support for Android, iOS, Windows and, starting today, OS X.
The Mac version is officially in beta, but already includes all of the standard Ubuntu One features, though users of other cloud st