Hi Kurt, Great to hear about that the next level cloud/low-code integration initiative targeting 2.0. I'll tried an earlier version on Fedora and MacOS, so I'm curious to see the progress.
>From the quick-start: " Integrations are deployed as Spring Boot applications inside a container onto OpenShift" I have some questions on this: 1) Is the integration designer (Syndysis itself) also a Spring Boot application? 2) As the integrations are Spring boot applications can they deployed on any JVM directly? Must they be on MiniShift/Openshift or can I do without and deploy directly on Windows, Docker, Azure etc? 3) Is there any official Docker Image? (For example including Fedora, OpenJDK, MiniShift and Syndysis, Some examples etc). That would make a quick start quicker. Regards, Raymond Op wo 2 okt. 2019 om 07:44 schreef Kurt Stam <[email protected]>: > Syndesis is an Apache 2.0 Licensed Open Source IPaaS (Integration as a > Service) based on Camel (https://github.com/syndesisio/syndesis). The > project is a little over a year old and we are starting to have some > critical mass. Syndesis makes it really easy to create and manage Camel > based integrations deployed on a public or private cloud. > > If you'd like to see it in action I can recommend some of the Quick Start > Demos: > https://github.com/syndesisio/syndesis-quickstarts#syndesis-quickstarts > > We're current planning what features go into Syndesis 2.0, and one of the > efforts is to align ourselves more with the Camel Community. We will to > brief announcement of our releases, make sure our Camel patches make it > upstream and we'd like to be invite you try out Syndesis and give us some > feedback or better help us with our planning for 2.0. For more info on this > see https://github.com/syndesisio/syndesis/wiki/Meeting-Notes. > > Thanks and hope seeing you! > > Cheers, > --Kurt > > -- > Kurt T. Stam > > twitter: @KurtStam > google+: [email protected] >
