(bring everything up one level) |
(→Quick Links: expand words) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
'''Fedora Cloud SIG''' | '''Fedora Cloud SIG''' | ||
= Quick Links = | |||
* fedora in ec2 | |||
* other cloud images | |||
* fedora cloud docs | |||
* participate (below) | |||
= Our Goals = | = Our Goals = | ||
(mission) | (mission) | ||
= What Do We Mean by "Cloud"? = | = What Do We Mean by "Cloud"? = | ||
Line 26: | Line 28: | ||
- other public cloud providers | - other public cloud providers | ||
- images for private or hybrid clouds | - images for private or hybrid clouds | ||
- cloud-init documentation | |||
Constituents: anyone interested in development and production use of Fedora as a server platform | Constituents: anyone interested in development and production use of Fedora as a server platform |
Revision as of 18:30, 17 December 2012
This is a draft for an updated Cloud SIG web site. Please see the current page at Cloud SIG, which has actual useful information.
Fedora Cloud SIG
Quick Links
- fedora in ec2
- other cloud images
- fedora cloud docs
- participate (below)
Our Goals
(mission)
What Do We Mean by "Cloud"?
(this should probably be a short paragraph and a link for more)
Areas of Activity
Fedora in the Cloud
Cloud guest images and cloud guest issues.
- ec2 images - other public cloud providers - images for private or hybrid clouds - cloud-init documentation
Constituents: anyone interested in development and production use of Fedora as a server platform
The Cloud on Fedora
Cloud platforms packaged for and running on Fedora.
- openstack / eucalyptus / cloudstack / opennebula - openshift origin - owncloud / sparkleshare
Constituents: upstream cloud infrastructure projects, downstream distros using Fedora, Fedora as tech preview, Fedora as testbed, Fedora as part of real infrastructure (ovirt-node). Special note for EPEL.
The Cloud for Fedora
The Fedora Project as a user of cloud technologies.
- Fedora Infrastructure private cloud - connections with openshift? - other ways we can use cloud tech to benefit Fedora development
Constituents: Fedora contributors
Fedora as Cloud End-Point
Desktop and mobile devices running Fedora connect to cloud services.
- connecting with cloud accounts - software-as-a-service for fedora users - possible service offerings
Constituents: users of Fedora as a desktop or mobile operating system. Special note for privacy and data-control concerns.
Participating in the Cloud SIG
(nothing fancy required to join... ways of participating below...)
Mailing List
IRC
Virtual Meetings
Conferences
(note packaging and documentation as activities...)