Thanks for the links to those projects! I wasn't aware of either one. Hopefully your employer will open source your solution, because it sounds interesting. Good Luck!
On 9/26/13 7:12 PM, "Daniel Ellison" <[email protected]> wrote: >On 2013-09-26, at 6:35 PM, Douglas Mendizabal ><[email protected]> wrote: >> I was working on that same idea, getting OpenStack running in Docker >> containers, for a hackathon a few weeks ago. It was a one day event, so >> we only got as far as you did, except we're using postgres as the >>backend >> for Keystone. We put up our work on GitHub if you're interested in >> collaborating, let me know. > >Today I got RabbitMQ working in a container and got a good way into >Glance as well. I'm breaking up the standard OpenStack "control node" >into its component parts and running each in a Docker container. This way >the control node can be spread across several physical machines if need >be. It also allows isolation of technologies such as Erlang (RabbitMQ's >language), avoiding "pollution" of a common environment. > >I'm using Pipework (https://github.com/jpetazzo/pipework) to set up a >private network between the components once they're running. Once I have >all of the pieces in place I'm going to use Maestro >(https://github.com/toscanini/maestro) to orchestrate the startup of all >containers, making sure the database and message queue are available >before any of the OpenStack components need them. > >Looking at what you've put together, we're taking fairly different paths >in our implementations. The work I'm doing is being paid for by my >company so I can't simply post the work on a public site without >permission. I will, however, ask about releasing everything into the >public domain once it's working. > >+Daniel _______________________________________________ Mailing list: http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
