I work at a company who's primary business is making large-scale private
cloud storage systems, supporting both Amazon's S3 and OpenStack
interfaces. While OpenStack has the advantage of being more open, Amazon's
S3 protocol seems to have a larger mind share, and more traction as far as
becoming a de facto standard. If you are developing client-side
applications against cloud APIs, I think you will find the S3 API more
powerful and better designed and thought out than the Openstack API, but
for simpler use cases that just involve read, write, delete, etc. there's
very little difference between them.

I think Chris's comment below is particularly good advice. You ought to
build an abstraction layer that sits between your application logic and the
storage layer such that in the future you can more easily transition to
other APIs should the need or desire arise.

Jason


On Mon, Apr 28, 2014 at 8:03 PM, 'Chris de Morsella <[email protected]>'
via Everything List <[email protected]> wrote:

> I looked at it a while back and of the various open source cloud
> initiatives it looks like the one best positioned to succeed also because
> it is heavily backed by Rackspace -- a large hosting, col-location service
> based out of Texas.
> My advice though, whatever cloud solution you go with would be to try as
> much as possible to abstract the specific bridge code behind an opaque
> interface that cleanly separates it from bleeding out into other code.
> This will help to isolate this layer from other layers in your code. In
> general an extra layer of indirection is almost always worth it if it can
> decouple responsibilities and functions. Clean separation is one of the
> keys to managing mushrooming complexity as code grows and evolves over time.
>
>   ------------------------------
>  *From:* "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Sent:* Monday, April 28, 2014 8:09 PM
> *Subject:* Re: anyone super-geek here?
>
>
> On Monday, April 28, 2014 3:43:35 PM UTC+1, [email protected] wrote:
>
> Hi, off topic, but I need to throw a few things onto the cloud, and it's
> important to get package right. So can anyone answer...is it OpenStack ? No
> need to answer unless you feel you have serious amounts of exposure
>
>
> That could have conveyed a message I didn't intend. All I meant was I've
> got engineers..it just occurred to me the list might have super-genius
> experts. I don't want to end up with an infrastructure that isn't going to
> keep up,. OpenStack looks good though.
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