I would think that your definition of 'cloud' is the most important aspect
here, not whether or not the term 'Red Hat' is associated with it.

The virtualization technology powering RHEV is kvm, which is fully
compliant with libvirt (http://libvirt.org/). If you didn't want to use
RHEV or Ovirt you could interact direclty with the libvirt API. The
business logic that those products provide isn't there, of course, but you
could build that out yourself if you were so inclined. It just takes time &
talent.

Is that what you're talking about wanting?

-jduncan


On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 12:52 PM, Yasha Karant <[email protected]> wrote:

> Does SL (i.e., TUV EL) have a standard enterprise-quality production REST
> API that will interoperate with non-EL "clouds"?
>
> The most I could find on a short search is:
>
> http://developerblog.redhat.com/2013/12/12/advanced_
> integration_rhevm-part1/
>
> Advanced integration with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Manager
> (RHEV-M) – Part 1 of 2
>
> and
>
> https://fedorahosted.org/rhevm-api/
>
> This is an effort to define an official REST API for Red Hat Enterprise
> Virtualization <http://www.redhat.com/virtualization/rhev/>.
>
> but that the fedorahosted project above is obsolete, replaced by:
>
> http://www.ovirt.org/Subprojects
>
> in which any mention of TUV by name is in the title of each reference.
>
> Yasha Karant
>



-- 
Thanks,

Jamie Duncan
@jamieeduncan

Reply via email to