Skip to main content

A unified imaging interface supporting multiple cloud providers.

Project description

Chromogenic
====

A unified interface for imaging to/from multiple cloud providers.

Chromogenic Features:
=====================

Imaging:
- [X] Create snapshots from instance on Openstack
- [X] Create images from instance on Openstack
- [X] Create images from instance on Eucalyptus

Export:
- [~] Export cloud instance/image to double-click-to-start .ova (Virtualbox Appliance)
- [~] Export cloud instance/image to stand-alone bootable image
- [X] Export cloud instance/image to boot hard drive on VMWare (VMDK)
- [X] Export cloud instance/image to RAW or QCOW2

Migration:
- [X] Migrate image from Eucalyptus to Openstack
- [X] Migrate image between Openstack Providers
- [X] Migrate image between Eucalyptus Providers
- [ ] Migrate image from AWS to Openstack
- [ ] Migrate image from AWS to Eucalyptus

Cleaning:
- [X] Remove specific data created by deployment in ['Atmosphere'](https://github.com/iPlantCollaborativeOpenSource/atmosphere)
- [X] Remove users home directories and non-essential files
- [X] Empty logs without changing permissions or removing files

- [X] - Feature complete
- [~] - Feature in progress
- [ ] - Unsupported feature addressed in future releases

Why use chromogenic?
====================

Cloud computing is 'the next big thing' for IT. Whether you use private clouds on your own servers (Eucalyptus, Openstack) or your running instances on AWS, the idea is the same.
You click one button, wait a few minutes ( or less!) and voila, a computer is ready and waiting. Did you just 'rm -rf /' on your instance? No problem, just shut it down and startup a new instance and try it all over again.

Another great benefit to cloud computing is snapshots/imaging, which allows you to save your instance in it's current state and make it available as a new image that you can launch. However, imaging on any cloud provider can be a multi-step, intensive process.

Chromogenic takes all of the complexity out and allows you to run a single command that will do all the heavy lifting behind the scenes.

Creating An Image:
==================

```python
from chromogenic.drivers.openstack import ImageManager

credentials = {
'username': '',
'tenant_name': '',
'password': '',
'auth_url':'',
'region_name':''
}
manager = ImageManager(**credentials)

manager.create_image('75fdfca4-d49d-4b2d-b919-a3297bc6d7ae', 'my new name')

```

Here is whats happening behind the scenes:

What Happens When an Image is Created?:
======================================

* Image is cleaned (see service/imaging/clean.py)
* User data is removed
* Atmosphere specific data is removed
* Log files, history files, and one-time-use files are removed
* NOTE: These are a lot of system calls, most calls are inline-sed replacements, as well as other system level calls ( cp /dev/null \<File\> , rm \<File\> )
* Additional support available for converting from Xen -> KVM:
* Image is converted from a 'xen-based' image to a 'kvm-based' image
* Xen specific modules are removed, KVM specific modules are added in their place
* The ramdisk includes the required virtio modules to make the image boot on OStack.


ASSUMPTIONS:
================
* All commands should be run as root (Because of chroot and mount commands)
* You should have at least TWICE (2x) as much free space as the size of the image you are going to create, due to the process of Tarring, compressing, and parting the files.

* Some commands must be run 'within a chroot jail' (see [chroot](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chroot) for more information), this is what chroot jail looks like:
```bash
mount -t proc /proc /mnt/proc/
mount -t sysfs /sys /mnt/sys/
mount -o bind /dev /mnt/dev/
<chroot.. Commands run (Installing packages, rebuilding the ramdisk).. Exit>
umount /mnt/proc/
umount /mnt/sys/
umount /mnt/dev/
```

# How to Install
```bash
pip install git+git://github.com/iPlantCollaborativeOpenSource/chromogenic#egg=chromogenic
```

# License

Apache Software License

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

chromogenic-0.2.tar.gz (43.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

chromogenic-0.2-py2-none-any.whl (50.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2

File details

Details for the file chromogenic-0.2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: chromogenic-0.2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 43.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for chromogenic-0.2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 0cc0bbdbc75c34fe46063aad088d550b8e303660c7680c153fa3a8976f84b550
MD5 b0f89bca742e5f686c72bf95fda5a151
BLAKE2b-256 b93a27c2ac5cc4509feabb4579837f56db56d0bf2c33e622d1b4187444645ba9

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file chromogenic-0.2-py2-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for chromogenic-0.2-py2-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b224ac7f21884bb6b3ae24d2fda55e6a453b97a6f9af2d4b41c92bbc0d494012
MD5 2c443872a3eff0f0d8b91dcfaedf4dc0
BLAKE2b-256 ccfe544066acbe835f4f783c928bf8a72e1b7734545ad949e25a94876229ea5e

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page