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Re: ceilometer and heat tutorial

 

On 04/28/2013 07:35 PM, Michaël Van de Borne wrote:
> Le 26/04/2013 20:28, Steven Hardy a écrit :
>> On Fri, Apr 26, 2013 at 05:02:54PM +0200, Michaël Van de Borne wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I'm looking for install and usage tutorials for ceilometer and heat.
>>> The best I could find so far are these:
>>> - ceilometer: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/ceilometer/install.html
>>> - heat: https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Heat/GettingStartedUsingMasterOnUbuntu
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, they seem to be intended for developers. Still have
>>> to git clone the softwares.
>>>
>>> I'm looking for tutorials like this one:
>>> http://docs.openstack.org/trunk/basic-install/content/
>>> (using apt-get, telling how to configure everything on every node,
>>> and finishing with a simple use case to validate the installation).
>>>
>>> Does anyone have something like this?
>> For Heat, the we don't yet have this sort of package-orientated
>> documentation, for Ubuntu this is because heat is not yet packaged for
>> Ubuntu, it is now in Debian Experimental though:
>>
>> https://launchpad.net/debian/experimental/+source/heat/2013.1-1
>>
>> Heat is packaged for Fedora, there are some instructions here:
>>
>> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Day:2012-09-18_OpenStack

> thank you steve. Would you please keep posted as soon as a tutorial is available. I'm looking forward to test Heat.
>
> Anybody has a good tutorial about ceilometer?

Note there was a newer Grizzly test day for Fedora which included
Ceilometer notes as well as the previously mentioned heat notes:

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Day:2013-04-02_OpenStack#Heat_basic_functionality
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Day:2013-04-02_OpenStack#Ceilometer_functionality

Note also that both heat and ceilometer are packaged for RHEL and derivatives,
which you can try quickly in a VM or on baremetal by following the simple process at
http://openstack.redhat.com/Quickstart and then following the Ceilometer instructions
at the URL above.

thanks,
Pádraig.


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