JClouds is working on adding joyent support, I believe. I don't know anything about the zones thing, but I'd suggest emailing the jclouds list ( https://groups.google.com/group/jclouds-dev) to see if they have anything in the works there. If at all possible, I'd highly recommend using jclouds as your underlying library, even if you don't use the jclouds plugin itself - it's really, really useful.
A. On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 6:53 AM, Nigel Magnay <[email protected]>wrote: > I'm wondering if anyone has gone down this route before, and has any > experiences that they can share. > > We're looking to possibly creating a new build server. It seems (to me) > that SmartOS would make an ideal host OS for running builds. (SmartOS is a > Joyent-derived Illumos(Solaris) derivative focussed on "the cloud"), which > has some nice features: > > - Native ZFS support (copy-on-write filesystems) > - Solaris 'Zones' (light-weight containers -- virtualization without so > much of the overhead) > - KVM (so 'foreign' OS' can be virtualized) > > The mechanism I'm thinking of is that for every build triggered, a new > zone (akin to a VM) is created (this is essentially very cheap, as it's > just a ZFS clone of a filesystem), the build is run in that zone, and on > completion the zone is stopped. If someone wanted access to that build, all > they would have to do is spin the zone back up. > > Now, it seems like there are several 'cloudy' plugins that might be good > candidates for this - each of which relies on different underlying libraries > > libvirt plugin (libvirt) > vSphere Cloud, Lab Manager (VMWare) > Delta Cloud (Apache DeltaCloud) > JClouds (JClouds) > VirtualBox plugin (Virtualbox) > Amazon EC2 plugin > Cloudformation (AWS) > > Now I could probably roll my own (probably amounting to SSHing to the > server and executing shell commands) or adapt an existing one, if it had > support for SmartOS / Zones; most likely is probably Delta Cloud, JClouds > or libvirt - but none of those seem to explicitly mention solaris zones. > And that's before I begin to look at the zillion other APIs out there. > > Anyone have any experiences to share? > >
