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Matthew Mosesohn 03149c5538 Added base host only manifest with docker
host.pp added, which assumes the base host
roles for all cases of deployment. This
includes SSH key generation and iptables.

cobbler::iptables calls were modified to
allow the class to be included in two
places in the manifests to meet both
deployment styles.

nailgun::iptables is now called from
nailgun::host class.

Change-Id: Idb016dda6ec64213a7175826de7aae60d3a95158
blueprint fuel-containerization-of-services
2014-04-15 10:42:02 +03:00
deployment/puppet Added base host only manifest with docker 2014-04-15 10:42:02 +03:00
docs merge with fuel-777 (22053e4e5f) branch 2013-07-30 20:35:42 +04:00
utils Finish configuring a service before adding it to HAProxy 2014-02-12 11:54:23 -08:00
.gitignore Make rdoc script 2013-09-16 15:59:43 +04:00
.gitreview Setup git-review 2013-12-11 14:31:13 +04:00
CHANGELOG Edit Changelog 2013-05-23 13:38:03 +03:00
README.md RabbitMQ FAQ notes prettified 2013-05-08 23:19:41 +04:00

Fuel is the Ultimate Do-it-Yourself Kit for OpenStack

Purpose built to assimilate the hard-won experience of our services team, it contains the tooling, information, and support you need to accelerate time to production with OpenStack cloud.

OpenStack is a very versatile and flexible cloud management platform. By exposing its portfolio of cloud infrastructure services compute, storage, networking and other core resources — through ReST APIs, it enables a wide range of control over these services, both from the perspective of an integrated Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) controlled by applications, as well as automated manipulation of the infrastructure itself.

This architectural flexibility doesnt set itself up magically; it asks you, the user and cloud administrator, to organize and manage a large array of configuration options. Consequently, getting the most out of your OpenStack cloud over time in terms of flexibility, scalability, and manageability requires a thoughtful combination of automation and configuration choices.

Mirantis Fuel for OpenStack was created to solve exactly this problem.