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You're reading from  OpenStack Essentials. - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2016
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781786462664
Edition2nd Edition
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Author (1)
Dan Radez
Dan Radez
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Dan Radez

Dan Radez joined the OpenStack community in 2012 in an operator role. His experience is focused on installing, maintaining, and integrating OpenStack clusters. He has been given the opportunity to internationally present OpenStack content to a range of audiences of varying expertise. In January 2015, Dan joined the OPNFV community and has been working to integrate RDO Manager with SDN controllers and the networking features necessary for NFV. Dan's experience includes web application programming, systems release engineering, and virtualization product development. Most of these roles have had an open source community focus to them. In his spare time, Dan enjoys spending time with his wife and three boys, training for and racing triathlons, and tinkering with electronics projects.
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Summary


In this chapter, we looked at adding images to the Glance image registry for you to learn how to get a pre-baked Glance image and how to build your own Glance image. With a disk image stored in Glance, there is now a disk that the instances can copy and use to boot from the time they are spawned. Now that we have created users and stored disk images to launch with, the final resource that needs to be created before we launch an OpenStack instance is a virtual network. In the next chapter, we will use Neutron to create a virtual network fabric for an instance to be connected to.

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OpenStack Essentials. - Second Edition
Published in: Aug 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781786462664

Author (1)

author image
Dan Radez

Dan Radez joined the OpenStack community in 2012 in an operator role. His experience is focused on installing, maintaining, and integrating OpenStack clusters. He has been given the opportunity to internationally present OpenStack content to a range of audiences of varying expertise. In January 2015, Dan joined the OPNFV community and has been working to integrate RDO Manager with SDN controllers and the networking features necessary for NFV. Dan's experience includes web application programming, systems release engineering, and virtualization product development. Most of these roles have had an open source community focus to them. In his spare time, Dan enjoys spending time with his wife and three boys, training for and racing triathlons, and tinkering with electronics projects.
Read more about Dan Radez