Ruslan Kamaldinov wrote: > [...] > On top of those Murano provides the following features: > - allow users to combine various packages from catalog by using > capabilities and requirements of applications > - provide easy-to-use rich UI for end users who don’t necessarily have > understanding of the underlying cloud infrastructure > - Murano "knows" how to merge different packages and generates Heat > template to deploy the environment, which in terms of Murano is a > logical aggregation of multiple applications > - as an application catalog allows app publishers and cloud owners to > certify and license packages, provide additional partner information > - allow to define billing rules. Murano can generate events predefined > by app publisher to Ceilometer and integrate with 3rd party billing > systems to bill users based on Ceilometer statistics
Thanks Ruslan, that's really helpful. Asking a few more questions to make sure I got it right. So to take a practical example, Murano lets you pick (using UI or CLI) a wordpress package (which requires a DB) and compose it with a mysql package (which provides a DB), and will deploy that composition using Heat ? And additionally, it provides package-publisher-friendly features like certification, licensing and bulling ? > - third-party services plumbing to support integration with APIs, both > in stack, like Trove, and external Does that mean, to come back to my example above, that we could substitute a Trove resource to the mysql package ? or put a Neutron LBaaS load balancer on top ? or publish a DNS entry via Designate ? Regards, -- Thierry Carrez (ttx) _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev