
Added information about python-muranoclient Added information about Murano Repository Updated package creation section to expain how 'Require' section and 'images.lst' file work. Minor style/typo fixes Change-Id: I378a92252f824fc89c6a6dffb34949ffb8d1fb27
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Murano package repository
Murano client and dashboard are both capable of installing packages
and bundles of packages from murano repository. To do so you should set
MURANO_REPO_URL
settings in murano dashboard or
MURANO_REPO_URL
env variable for the CLI client and use the
respective command for package import. These commands would then
automatically import all the prerequisites for the app being installed
along with any images, mentioned in said apps.
For more info about importing from repository see client
.
Setting up your own repository
It's fairly easy to set up your own murano package repository. To do so you need a web server, that would serve 3 directories: * /apps/ * /bundles/ * /images/
When importing an app by name client would append any version info,
if present to the app name, .zip
file extension and search
for that file in the apps
directory.
When importing a bundle by name client would append
.bundle
file extension to the bundle name and search it in
the bundles
directory. Bundle file is a json or a yaml file
with the following structure:
{"Packages":
[
{"Name": "io.murano.apps.ApacheHttpServer"},
{"Version": "", "Name": "io.murano.apps.Nginx"},
{"Version": "0.0.1", "Name": "io.murano.apps.Lighttpd"}
]
}
Glance images can be auto-imported by client, when mentioned in
images.lst
inside the package. Please see app_pkg
for more info about
pakcage composition. When importing images from image.lst
file client simply searches for a file with the same name as the
Name
attribute of the image in the images
directory of the repository.