This document discusses Chef for OpenStack, which uses Chef to automate the deployment and management of OpenStack. It provides concise summaries of key points:
- Chef for OpenStack includes cookbooks for common OpenStack components like Keystone, Glance, Nova, and Swift that can be used to programmatically deploy and manage OpenStack infrastructure.
- The Chef community contributes to OpenStack-related cookbooks that are open source and available on GitHub, helping reduce fragmentation and encourage collaboration around automating OpenStack.
- Chef allows OpenStack infrastructures to be treated like code, with configurations version controlled and deployments that can be automatically reconstructed from backups, improving supportability and portability across environments.
Achieving Infrastructure Portability with ChefMatt Ray
Deploying to the cloud has made it easy to run large numbers of servers, but users may become dissatisfied with their particular cloud platform for reasons such as price, support and performance. There are a number of vendor lock-ins to avoid, this talk discusses how to do so with the open source configuration management and infrastructure automation platform Chef. Chef makes it easy to deploy to nearly every public and private cloud platform as well as virtualized and physical servers. Chef may also be used to deploy cloud infrastructures such as OpenStack, Eucalyptus or CloudStack. By abstracting away the platform, infrastructure becomes portable and you are free to deploy wherever necessary.
TXLF: Chef- Software Defined Infrastructure Today & TomorrowMatt Ray
The open source configuration management and automation framework Chef is used to configure, deploy and manage infrastructure of every sort. In addition to managing Linux, Windows and many other operating systems; Chef may be used to manage network hardware and storage systems. This session will provide an overview of the concepts and capabilities of Chef and discuss upcoming projects and how they fit into the Chef ecosystem.
SCALE12X Build a Cloud Day: Chef: The Swiss Army Knife of Cloud InfrastructureMatt Ray
Chef is an open source configuration management and automation framework used to configure, deploy and manage infrastructure of every type. Deploying to the cloud has made it easy to run large numbers of
servers and Chef makes it even easier to deploy to nearly every public and private cloud platform as well as virtualized and physical servers. This talk will provide a quick introduction to Chef and is intended for sysadmins and developers familiar with the concepts behind managing applications and infrastructure in the cloud, without diving too deeply into technical specifics.
Chef is an open source configuration management and service integration automation tool that has been integral to a number of large successful OpenStack deployments. This talk will provide a brief introduction to Chef and why it frequently the configuration tool of choice for large deployments and discuss the use of Chef within the OpenStack ecosystem (development, testing, deploying and managing the installation). Chef also provides the ability to manage the instances running on top of Nova through the knife-openstack plugin.
Presentation from the Spring 2011 OpenStack Design Summit. Blueprint URL is https://blueprints.launchpad.net/openstack-devel/+spec/openstack-deployment-cookbooks
Achieving Infrastructure Portability with ChefMatt Ray
Deploying to the cloud has made it easy to run large numbers of servers, but users may become dissatisfied with their particular cloud platform for reasons such as price, support and performance. There are a number of vendor lock-ins to avoid, this talk discusses how to do so with the open source configuration management and infrastructure automation platform Chef. Chef makes it easy to deploy to nearly every public and private cloud platform as well as virtualized and physical servers. Chef may also be used to deploy cloud infrastructures such as OpenStack, Eucalyptus or CloudStack. By abstracting away the platform, infrastructure becomes portable and you are free to deploy wherever necessary.
TXLF: Chef- Software Defined Infrastructure Today & TomorrowMatt Ray
The open source configuration management and automation framework Chef is used to configure, deploy and manage infrastructure of every sort. In addition to managing Linux, Windows and many other operating systems; Chef may be used to manage network hardware and storage systems. This session will provide an overview of the concepts and capabilities of Chef and discuss upcoming projects and how they fit into the Chef ecosystem.
SCALE12X Build a Cloud Day: Chef: The Swiss Army Knife of Cloud InfrastructureMatt Ray
Chef is an open source configuration management and automation framework used to configure, deploy and manage infrastructure of every type. Deploying to the cloud has made it easy to run large numbers of
servers and Chef makes it even easier to deploy to nearly every public and private cloud platform as well as virtualized and physical servers. This talk will provide a quick introduction to Chef and is intended for sysadmins and developers familiar with the concepts behind managing applications and infrastructure in the cloud, without diving too deeply into technical specifics.
Chef is an open source configuration management and service integration automation tool that has been integral to a number of large successful OpenStack deployments. This talk will provide a brief introduction to Chef and why it frequently the configuration tool of choice for large deployments and discuss the use of Chef within the OpenStack ecosystem (development, testing, deploying and managing the installation). Chef also provides the ability to manage the instances running on top of Nova through the knife-openstack plugin.
Presentation from the Spring 2011 OpenStack Design Summit. Blueprint URL is https://blueprints.launchpad.net/openstack-devel/+spec/openstack-deployment-cookbooks
OpenStack Austin Meetup January 2014: Chef + OpenStackMatt Ray
Review of the ecosystem around Chef and OpenStack. Vagrant instructions are available here:
https://github.com/stackforge/openstack-chef-repo/blob/master/TESTING.md
These are the slides from the January 22 and 24, 2013 Chef for OpenStack Hack Days in Boston and New York City. The slides were slightly updated between the 2 days, so I've only uploaded the more recent set.
OSDC 2013 | Introduction into Chef by Andy HawkinsNETWAYS
This presentation will give an overview about what Chef is and how to access it. It will describe the typical use cases and architecture as well as Cookbooks, data bags and other concepts and will explain how to implement your CM solution. Finally it will show how to drive a successful Chef project.
Members of the Chef for OpenStack community had a meetup on the last day of the Spring 2013 OpenStack Summit to coordinate and plan further Grizzly work. These are our notes, we'll report back at the Fall 2013 OpenStack Summit what we accomplished.
Atlanta OpenStack 2014 Chef for OpenStack Deployment WorkshopMatt Ray
The session at the Atlanta 2014 OpenStack Summit is for those already familiar with Chef and interested in deploying and managing OpenStack. We cover the state of the deploying OpenStack with Chef and deploying infrastructure on top of OpenStack with Chef. The second half of the talk is a deep-dive walkthrough of the Vagrant deployment, the instructions are here: http://bit.ly/ATLChef
http://openstacksummitmay2014atlanta.sched.org/event/39587e0e47a20323c6389e136c954ecf
OpenStack Deployment with Chef Workshop at the 2013 Hong Kong OpenStack Summit. Co-presented with Justin Shepherd, a Private Cloud Architect from Rackspace.
Presentation at the combined Boston Chef and OpenStack Meetups on January 22, 2013. Overview of the new features and changes coming in the upcoming Chef 11 release, as well as a quick state of the union for Chef for OpenStack.
Austin OpenStack Meetup December 2012 presentation. The first part of the session was Chef for OpenStack, the second was Q&A about AT&T's OpenStack private cloud deployments to multiple data centers.
A brief introduction to YARN: how and why it came into existence and how it fits together with this thing called Hadoop.
Focus given to architecture, availability, resource management and scheduling, migration from MR1 to MR2, job history and logging, interfaces, and applications.
Overview of Chef - Fundamentals Webinar Series Part 1Chef
This is an Overview of Chef. After viewing this webinar you will be able to:
- Describe how Chef thinks about Infrastructure Automation
- Define the following terms:
- Resource
- Recipe
- Node
- Run List
- Search
- Login to Hosted Chef
- Run `knife` commands from your workstation
Video of this webinar can be found at the following URL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5lHUpzoCYo&list=PL11cZfNdwNyPnZA9D1MbVqldGuOWqbumZ
Cloud providers like Amazon or Goggle have great user experience to create and manage PaaS and IaaS services. But is it possible to reproduce same experience and flexibility locally, in on premise datacenter? This talk describes success story of creation private cloud based on DC/OS cluster. It is used to host and share different services like hadoop or kafka for development teams, dynamically manage services and resource pools with GKE integration.
Spark Summit Europe: Building a REST Job Server for interactive Spark as a se...gethue
Livy is a new open source Spark REST Server for submitting and interacting with your Spark jobs from anywhere. Livy is conceptually based on the incredibly popular IPython/Jupyter, but implemented to better integrate into the Hadoop ecosystem with multi users. Spark can now be offered as a service to anyone in a simple way: Spark shells in Python or Scala can be ran by Livy in the cluster while the end user is manipulating them at his own convenience through a REST api. Regular non-interactive applications can also be submitted. The output of the jobs can be introspected and returned in a tabular format, which makes it visualizable in charts. Livy can point to a unique Spark cluster and create several contexts by users. With YARN impersonation, jobs will be executed with the actual permissions of the users submitting them. Livy also enables the development of Spark Notebook applications. Those are ideal for quickly doing interactive Spark visualizations and collaboration from a Web browser! This talk is technical and details the architecture and design decisions taken for developing this server, as well as its internals. It also describes the alternatives we tried and the challenges that were faced. The capabilities of Livy will then be lived demo in Hue’s Notebook Application through a real life scenario.
https://spark-summit.org/eu-2015/events/building-a-rest-job-server-for-interactive-spark-as-a-service/
The Foundation marketing team put together a high level overview of 2H 2015 plans in order to get input from the marketing community and provide more information on how marketers can take advantage of the work, as well as get involved and contribute.
OpenStack Austin Meetup January 2014: Chef + OpenStackMatt Ray
Review of the ecosystem around Chef and OpenStack. Vagrant instructions are available here:
https://github.com/stackforge/openstack-chef-repo/blob/master/TESTING.md
These are the slides from the January 22 and 24, 2013 Chef for OpenStack Hack Days in Boston and New York City. The slides were slightly updated between the 2 days, so I've only uploaded the more recent set.
OSDC 2013 | Introduction into Chef by Andy HawkinsNETWAYS
This presentation will give an overview about what Chef is and how to access it. It will describe the typical use cases and architecture as well as Cookbooks, data bags and other concepts and will explain how to implement your CM solution. Finally it will show how to drive a successful Chef project.
Members of the Chef for OpenStack community had a meetup on the last day of the Spring 2013 OpenStack Summit to coordinate and plan further Grizzly work. These are our notes, we'll report back at the Fall 2013 OpenStack Summit what we accomplished.
Atlanta OpenStack 2014 Chef for OpenStack Deployment WorkshopMatt Ray
The session at the Atlanta 2014 OpenStack Summit is for those already familiar with Chef and interested in deploying and managing OpenStack. We cover the state of the deploying OpenStack with Chef and deploying infrastructure on top of OpenStack with Chef. The second half of the talk is a deep-dive walkthrough of the Vagrant deployment, the instructions are here: http://bit.ly/ATLChef
http://openstacksummitmay2014atlanta.sched.org/event/39587e0e47a20323c6389e136c954ecf
OpenStack Deployment with Chef Workshop at the 2013 Hong Kong OpenStack Summit. Co-presented with Justin Shepherd, a Private Cloud Architect from Rackspace.
Presentation at the combined Boston Chef and OpenStack Meetups on January 22, 2013. Overview of the new features and changes coming in the upcoming Chef 11 release, as well as a quick state of the union for Chef for OpenStack.
Austin OpenStack Meetup December 2012 presentation. The first part of the session was Chef for OpenStack, the second was Q&A about AT&T's OpenStack private cloud deployments to multiple data centers.
A brief introduction to YARN: how and why it came into existence and how it fits together with this thing called Hadoop.
Focus given to architecture, availability, resource management and scheduling, migration from MR1 to MR2, job history and logging, interfaces, and applications.
Overview of Chef - Fundamentals Webinar Series Part 1Chef
This is an Overview of Chef. After viewing this webinar you will be able to:
- Describe how Chef thinks about Infrastructure Automation
- Define the following terms:
- Resource
- Recipe
- Node
- Run List
- Search
- Login to Hosted Chef
- Run `knife` commands from your workstation
Video of this webinar can be found at the following URL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5lHUpzoCYo&list=PL11cZfNdwNyPnZA9D1MbVqldGuOWqbumZ
Cloud providers like Amazon or Goggle have great user experience to create and manage PaaS and IaaS services. But is it possible to reproduce same experience and flexibility locally, in on premise datacenter? This talk describes success story of creation private cloud based on DC/OS cluster. It is used to host and share different services like hadoop or kafka for development teams, dynamically manage services and resource pools with GKE integration.
Spark Summit Europe: Building a REST Job Server for interactive Spark as a se...gethue
Livy is a new open source Spark REST Server for submitting and interacting with your Spark jobs from anywhere. Livy is conceptually based on the incredibly popular IPython/Jupyter, but implemented to better integrate into the Hadoop ecosystem with multi users. Spark can now be offered as a service to anyone in a simple way: Spark shells in Python or Scala can be ran by Livy in the cluster while the end user is manipulating them at his own convenience through a REST api. Regular non-interactive applications can also be submitted. The output of the jobs can be introspected and returned in a tabular format, which makes it visualizable in charts. Livy can point to a unique Spark cluster and create several contexts by users. With YARN impersonation, jobs will be executed with the actual permissions of the users submitting them. Livy also enables the development of Spark Notebook applications. Those are ideal for quickly doing interactive Spark visualizations and collaboration from a Web browser! This talk is technical and details the architecture and design decisions taken for developing this server, as well as its internals. It also describes the alternatives we tried and the challenges that were faced. The capabilities of Livy will then be lived demo in Hue’s Notebook Application through a real life scenario.
https://spark-summit.org/eu-2015/events/building-a-rest-job-server-for-interactive-spark-as-a-service/
The Foundation marketing team put together a high level overview of 2H 2015 plans in order to get input from the marketing community and provide more information on how marketers can take advantage of the work, as well as get involved and contribute.
An overview of the 1H2016 OpenStack Marketing Plan shared with the marketing community during our regular calls. Learn more at https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Governance/Foundation/Marketing#Open_Marketing_Meetings_2016
A few quick points for those who may be attending an OpenStack Summit for the first time. We are excited to see you in Barcelona, Spain October 25-28, 2016.
The open source configuration management and automation framework Chef is used to configure, deploy and manage many large public and private installations of OpenStack and supports a wide variety of integration opportunities. Chef for OpenStack is a project based on the healthy exchange of code, ideas and documentation for deploying and operating OpenStack with Chef.
There is a tremendous amount of Chef-related activity in the OpenStack ecosystem. With involvement from AT&T, IBM, Rackspace, SUSE and many others there is an active community of collaboration between users, developers and operators. In addition to operating OpenStack, Chef provides integrations for deploying applications on top of OpenStack (and other cloud) deployments, including specialized tooling for testing and continuous integration environments.
OpenStack is a large and complex ecosystem, this session will highlight the resources available for operators, as well as the evolution and layout of the project and the roadmap going forward.
Why Kubernetes as a container orchestrator is a right choice for running spar...DataWorks Summit
Building and deploying an analytic service on Cloud is a challenge. A bigger challenge is to maintain the service. In a world where users are gravitating towards a model where cluster instances are to be provisioned on the fly, in order for these to be used for analytics or other purposes, and then to have these cluster instances shut down when the jobs get done, the relevance of containers and container orchestration is more important than ever.
Container orchestrators like Kubernetes can be used to deploy and distribute modules quickly, easily, and reliably. The intent of this talk is to share the experience of building such a service and deploying it on a Kubernetes cluster. In this talk, we will discuss all the requirements which an enterprise grade Hadoop/Spark cluster running on containers bring in for a container orchestrator.
This talk will cover in details how Kubernetes orchestrator can be used to meet all our needs of resource management, scheduling, networking, and network isolation, volume management, etc. We will discuss how we have replaced our home grown container orchestrator with Kubernetes which used to manage the container lifecycle and manage resources in accordance to our requirements. We will also discuss the feature list as container orchestrator which is helping us deploy and patch 1000s of containers and also a list which we believe need improvement or can be enhanced in a container orchestrator.
Speaker
Rachit Arora, SSE, IBM
Leonid Vasilyev "Building, deploying and running production code at Dropbox"IT Event
Reproducible builds, fast and safe deployment process together with self-healing services form the basis of stable and maintainable infrastructure. In this talk I’d like to cover, from the Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) perspective, how Dropbox addresses above challenges, what technologies are used and what lessons were learnt during implementation process.
Introduction to node js - From "hello world" to deploying on azureColin Mackay
Slide deck from my talk on Node.js.
More information is available here: http://colinmackay.scot/2014/11/29/dunddd-2014-introduction-to-node-jsfrom-hello-world-to-deploying-on-azure/
Apache Spark on Kubernetes Anirudh Ramanathan and Tim ChenDatabricks
Kubernetes is a fast growing open-source platform which provides container-centric infrastructure. Conceived by Google in 2014, and leveraging over a decade of experience running containers at scale internally, it is one of the fastest moving projects on GitHub with 1000+ contributors and 40,000+ commits. Kubernetes has first class support on Google Cloud Platform, Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft Azure.
Unlike YARN, Kubernetes started as a general purpose orchestration framework with a focus on serving jobs. Support for long-running, data intensive batch workloads required some careful design decisions. Engineers across several organizations have been working on Kubernetes support as a cluster scheduler backend within Spark. During this process, we encountered several challenges in translating Spark considerations into idiomatic Kubernetes constructs. In this talk, we describe the challenges and the ways in which we solved them. This talk will be technical and is aimed at people who are looking to run Spark effectively on their clusters. The talk assumes basic familiarity with cluster orchestration and containers.
In this webinar, we will review all important information for sponsors packages, add-ons, venue details, and how to become a sponsor.
Webinar recording: https://youtu.be/kUjMTNoX6yM
This is a content overview of the important information and details for sponsors of the upcoming OpenStack Summit in Tokyo, Japan taking place October 27 - 30.
You can watch a recording of the webinar here: https://openstack.webex.com/openstack/ldr.php?RCID=d48605b7ca9fdccd990ab20eb9334be8
OpenStack celebrates its fifth birthday, July 19, 2015, and this presentation provides an update on the community momentum, as well as what's next. #openstack5bday
At OpenStack Day CEE 2015, we discuss the latest user survey results, some real-world OpenStack case studies and how new users and cloud operators can get involved with the community.
Designing an OpenStack Summit Session Submission for SuccessOpenStack Foundation
Niki Acosta, Anne Gentle and Diane Mueller share tips on creating a successful CFP for an OpenStack Summit
Here is a link to the webinar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxFYNZ4jqik&feature=youtu.be
You can access the recording of this webinar here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yp_bKzhMaT0&feature=youtu.be
You can download the sponsorship prospectus here: https://www.openstack.org/assets/vancouver-summit/openstack-vancouver-prospectus-draft-12-19-2014.pdf
15. And it Continues to Evolve
Tell me about
Chef!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16339684@N00/2681435235/
16. Chef is Infrastructure as Code
• Programmatically
provision and configure
• Treat like any other code
base
• Reconstruct business from
code repository, data
backup, and bare metal
resources.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/louisb/4555295187/
17. Nodes
• Chef-Client generates
configurations directly
on nodes from their
run list
• Reduce management
complexity through
abstraction
• Store the configuration
of your programs in
version control
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ssoosay/5126146763/
19. Declarative Interface to Resources
• Define policy
• Say what, not how
• Pull not Push
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bixentro/2591838509/
20. Recipes and Cookbooks
• Recipes are collections of
Resources
• Cookbooks contain
recipes, templates, files,
custom resources, etc
• Code re-use and
modularity
• Hundreds already on
Community.opscode.com
http://www.flickr.com/photos/shutterhacks/4474421855/
21. Ruby!
extra_packages = case node['platform']
when "ubuntu","debian"
%w{
ruby1.8
ruby1.8-dev
rdoc1.8
ri1.8
libopenssl-ruby
}
end
extra_packages.each do |pkg|
package pkg do
action :install
end
end
22. Search
• Search for nodes
with Roles
• Find configuration
data
• IP addresses
• Hostnames
• FQDNs
http://www.flickr.com/photos/kathycsus/2686772625
23. Pass Results to Templates
pool_members = search("node","role:webserver”)
template "/etc/haproxy/haproxy.cfg" do
source "haproxy-app_lb.cfg.erb"
owner "root"
group "root"
mode 0644
variables :pool_members => pool_members.uniq
notifies :restart, "service[haproxy]"
end
24. Pass Results to Templates
# Set up application listeners here.
listen application 0.0.0.0:80
balance roundrobin
<% @pool_members.each do |member| -%>
server <%= member[:hostname] %> <%= member[:ipaddress] %>:> weight 1 maxconn 1 check
<% end -%>
<% if node["haproxy"]["enable_admin"] -%>
listen admin 0.0.0.0:22002
mode http
stats uri /
<% end -%>
29. Build anything
• Simple internal applications
• Complex external applications
• Workstations
• Hadoop clusters
• IaaS infrastructure
• PaaS infrastructure
• SaaS applications
• Storage systems
• You name it
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hyku/245010680/
30. And manage it simply
• Automatically
reconfigure
everything
• Linux, Windows,
Unixes, BSDs
• Load balancers
• Metrics collection
systems
• Monitoring systems
• Cloud migrations
become trivial
http://www.flickr.com/photos/helico/404640681/
31. The Chef Community
• Apache License, Version 2.0
• 900+ Individual contributors
• 160+ Corporate contributors
• HP, Dell, Rackspace, VMware, Calxeda,
SUSE and many more
• 600+ cookbooks
• http://community.opscode.com
33. Chef for OpenStack: Why
• Community for the automated deployment
and management of OpenStack
• Reduce fragmentation and encourage
collaboration
• Deploying OpenStack is not "secret sauce"
• Project not a product
• Apache 2 license
34. Chef for OpenStack: What
• Chef Repository for Deploying OpenStack
• Documentation for Chef for OpenStack
• Cookbooks
• Keystone
• Glance
• Nova
• Horizon
• Swift
• Knife OpenStack
35. Chef for OpenStack: Where
• opscode.com/openstack
• groups.google.com/group/opscode-chef-
openstack
• #openstack-chef on irc.freenode.net
• github.com/opscode/openstack-chef-repo
• github.com/mattray/openstack-chef-docs
• github.com/opscode-cookbooks/
• keystone, glance, nova, horizon, swift
• github.com/opscode/knife-openstack
40. Deploying OpenStack
• Chef ties it all together automatically
• Scaling changes how we deploy
• Interchangeable components
• Configurations shared, supported &
documented
• Licensing makes it available to everyone
44. knife openstack image list
$ knife openstack image list
ID Name
13 natty-server-cloudimg-amd64
12 natty-server-cloudimg-amd64-kernel
15 oneiric-server-cloudimg-amd64
14 oneiric-server-cloudimg-amd64-kernel
45. knife openstack server create
knife openstack server create --node-name ko1 --flavor 1 --image 13 -S trystack
46.
47. $ ssh -i ~/.ssh/trystack.pem ubuntu@8.21.28.24
The authenticity of host '8.21.28.24 (8.21.28.24)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is 0c:d8:3e:34:d1:de:c4:ee:5f:bc:b5:89:11:0d:73:e0.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '8.21.28.24' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
Welcome to Ubuntu 11.04 (GNU/Linux 2.6.38-13-virtual x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/
System information as of Thu Feb 16 23:43:29 UTC 2012
System load: 0.08 Processes: 63
Usage of /: 40.8% of 1.35GB Users logged in: 0
Memory usage: 6% IP address for eth0: 8.21.28.24
Swap usage: 0%
---------------------------------------------------------------------
<snip>
Get cloud support with Ubuntu Advantage Cloud Guest
http://www.ubuntu.com/business/services/cloud
The programs included with the Ubuntu system are free software;
the exact distribution terms for each program are described in the
individual files in /usr/share/doc/*/copyright.
Ubuntu comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by
applicable law.
To run a command as administrator (user "root"), use "sudo <command>".
See "man sudo_root" for details.
ubuntu@ko1:~$
48. Chef for Infrastructure Portability
• knife openstack
• knife hp
• knife rackspace
• knife ec2
• ... and many others
49. Chef for OpenStack Roadmap
• Documentation
• Hypervisors (LXC, Hyper-V)
• Databases (PostgreSQL)
• Operating Systems (RHEL, Debian, SUSE)
• HA Configurations
• Quantum (pluggable)
• Cinder (pluggable)
• Community Events (NYC Nov 13)
50. Chef for OpenStack Ecosystem
• Cookbooks reusable outside of OpenStack
• TestKitchen
• Librarian
• Spiceweasel
• pxe_dust
• knife-rackspace/hp/dreamhost
• Crowbar
51. Chef for OpenStack TL;DL
• Opscode.com/openstack
• Project, not a product
• Lots of contributors with real
deployments
• Essex works, Folsom started
• Features driven by demand
(show up for what you want)
• Documentation with examples
52. Thanks!
Matt Ray
matt@opscode.com
IRC/Twitter/GitHub: mattray
www.opscode.com/openstack