From theRegister

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    11 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Canonical hosted an amusingly failure-filled demo of its new easy-to-install, Ubuntu-powered tool for building small-to-medium scale, on-premises high-availability clusters, Microcloud, at an event in London yesterday.

    The presentation was as buzzword-heavy as one might expect, and it’s also extensively based on Canonical’s in-house tech, such as the LXD containervisor, Snap packaging, and, optionally, the Ubuntu Core snap-based immutable distro.

    Microcloud combines several existing bits of off-the-shelf FOSS tech in order to make it easy to link from three to 50 Ubuntu machines into an in-house, private high-availability cluster, with live migration and automatic failover.

    Multiple vendors have tools for easily building Kubernetes clusters; for instance, in a prior role, this vulture wrote the original installation guide for SUSE’s CaaSP, now discontinued and replaced by its Rancher acquisition.

    Even so, Flatpak remains poor at handling command-line tools and can’t be used to build a distro, for which you need to tackle OStree head-on.

    Snap works by keeping each app in a single, compressed file, making transactionality easy without COW or anything resembling Git.


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