<div dir="ltr"><div><div><br><br><br>On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 3:03 PM, Sandro "red" Mathys <<a href="mailto:red@fedoraproject.org">red@fedoraproject.org</a>> wrote:<br>><br>> On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 10:59 PM, Juerg Haefliger <<a href="mailto:juergh@gmail.com">juergh@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
> ><br>> ><br>> ><br>> > On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 2:46 PM, Matthew Miller <<a href="mailto:mattdm@fedoraproject.org">mattdm@fedoraproject.org</a>><br>> > wrote:<br>> >><br>> >> On Sat, Mar 08, 2014 at 08:51:51PM +0900, Sandro red Mathys wrote:<br>
> >> > than run away and hide in fear without even looking at it first. As<br>> >> > soon as I have some kind of access to some kind of cloud (without<br>> >> > charging my credit card), I'll play around with the various bits (and<br>
> >><br>> >> We should be able to get you access to Fedora's own openstack instance for<br>> >> working on this -- file a ticket with Fedora Infrastructure, I think.<br>><br>> Will do, thanks.<br>
><br>> > Or you can try my pet project: <a href="https://github.com/juergh/dwarf/">https://github.com/juergh/dwarf/</a> which adds<br>> > the OpenStack API (a subset of it, that is) ontop of your your locally<br>
> > running libvirt daemon. It'll allow you to use the standard OpenStack python<br>> > clients to manage VMs and cloud images on your local machine. I use it to<br>> > test images before uploading them to the (HP) cloud, so it's slightly biased<br>
> > towards our OpenStack implementation. It also provides an EC2 metadata<br>> > service to the instance to please cloud-init (but no OpenStack config<br>> > drive). Feedback, bug reports and patches are more than welcome.<br>
><br>> I did stumble over that before already and I do want to look into it,<br>> but I was kinda hoping...<br>><br>> > Sorry, no RPMs yet.<br>><br>> ...that RPMs would show up before I do ;)<br><br>
Maeh :-)<br><br><br>> At least on Copr? :)<br><br></div>Hmm... Ok. Just google'd copr. I'll see what I can do...<br><br></div>...Juerg<div><br></div></div>