Managed Projects

Crowbar

  No analysis available

An openly licensed framework to build complete, easy to use operational deployments. It allows for groups of physical nodes to be transformed from bare-metal into a ready state production cluster within hours. Originally founded in 2011 by Dell, since 2014 primarily maintained by SUSE ... [More] (https://www.suse.com/products/suse-cloud/) for OpenStack (https://www.openstack.org/) deployments. The code and documentation is distributed under the Apache 2 license (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). Contributions back to the source are encouraged. [Less]

0 lines of code

52 current contributors

0 since last commit

9 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: apache_2

DigitalRebar

  No analysis available

Digital Rebar is an open infrastructure automation project that focuses on a composable design that provides management abstractions. The platform runs as a collection of microservices and can provide (or use external) all key data center services including DHCP, PXE, DNS. It's also designed to ... [More] work with other tools like Ansible, Chef, Puppet or Salt. The platform is fully RESTful with event driven, secure and multi-tenant access. [Less]

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: No declared licenses

OpenCrowbar

  Analyzed about 9 hours ago

OpenCrowbar Framework and Core Infrastructure Components Crowbar (see Oholo crowbar-v1) started in 2011 and has been primarily developed by the Dell and SUSE as a OpenStack installer (http://OpenStack.org) but has evolved as a much broader function tool. It is a wrapper for Opscode Chef Server ... [More] (http://opscode.com) In January 2014, the v2 of the project was forked into the OpenCrowbar project. Both versions are still in active development. Much of the design information about Crowbar v1 and v2 has been published on Rob Hirschfeld's Blog (http://robhirschfeld.com). The code and documentation is distributed under the Apache 2 license (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). Contributions back to the source are encouraged. [Less]

255K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 8 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Inactive
5.0
 
I Use This