RETIRED, Fuel Library
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Matthew Mosesohn eab7b68399 Create auxiliary repo with fuel version
Fuel 7.0 auxiliary repo should be created
as /etc/yum.repos.d/7.0_auxiliary

This helps with upgrade/rollback process for
Fuel Master.

The configuration for auxiliary repository on
deployed Fuel nodes is unchanged.

Change-Id: Iec2645ddbee6b1b6b9e5c2816707b275542ef51b
Partial-Bug: #1480282
2015-08-11 16:14:30 +03:00
debian Add new tasks for configure and deploy vms 2015-07-14 14:54:41 +02:00
deployment Create auxiliary repo with fuel version 2015-08-11 16:14:30 +03:00
files Add plugins dir to backup snapshot 2015-08-06 13:17:38 +00:00
specs Initial librarian-puppet-simple configuration 2015-07-31 10:43:59 -05:00
tests set public_endpoint keystone.conf value 2015-08-10 15:01:12 +03:00
utils Take fuel-task-validator AKA fuel-tasklib from git 2015-08-03 12:54:41 +02:00
.gitignore Add the task graph plotting tool 2015-03-02 17:32:04 +03:00
.gitreview Setup git-review 2013-12-11 14:31:13 +04:00
CHANGELOG Edit Changelog 2013-05-23 13:38:03 +03:00
LICENSE LICENCE added 2014-06-05 20:00:54 +00:00
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.