Sure, but you also need to configure each part
(zookeeper, typically IP addresses, HA master config etc). A CM tool
can really help there.

The GCE + Mesosphere install is pretty good in my experience, but it
doesn't help
you on bare metal installs that some clients need.

On 10 December 2014 at 08:59, Billy Bones <[email protected]> wrote:
> Or you can just grabe the lastest Fedora release and made a yum install -y
> mesos-master or yum install -y mesos-slave depending the node purpose.
>
> If you absolutly want to run a mesos cluster in the cloud, what about
> mesosphere and their mesos's simple installation relying on Digital Ocean or
> Google Compute Engine?
>
> 2014-12-10 8:54 GMT+01:00 Dick Davies <[email protected]>:
>>
>> I've got an Ansible playbook to spin up mesos with docker support on
>> CentOS 6:
>>
>> https://github.com/rasputnik/mesos-centos
>>
>> there's a sample Vagrantfile there, but it just needs a different
>> inventory
>> folder to do VMs or physical servers.
>>
>>
>> On 9 December 2014 at 23:44, Gary Malouf <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > I'm trying to figure out the optimal approach for setting up a new Mesos
>> > cluster for a client.  Some of the options I see:
>> >
>> > 1) Rely on Apache EC2 deployment scripts that pull the latest Mesos AMI
>> >
>> > Open Question: What are the security settings like for this setup?
>> >
>> > 2) CloudFormation Template
>> >
>> > 3) Create/Find Docker containers to run Mesos in (saw on mailing list
>> > today)
>> >
>> > 4) Manual install (add yum repos and probably script via Ansible) - this
>> > is
>> > what I've done in the past but found it a bit painful.
>> >
>> > I wanted to get an idea for what others are using for their production
>> > clusters?  We want something quick, secure and easy to maintain/update
>> > down
>> > the line.
>> >
>> >
>
>

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