Will do.
----------------------------------------
From: Gary Mazz
I'm fine with closing issue 13 then. I think the material is covered in 2.2 Getting Started and in table 4. It may be good to replace /compute/123 in other parts of the specification with /node123 to avoid confusion. Thanks.
Gary Mazz wrote:
Sam,
Are you saying you are changing the concepts of buckets ? for an ambiguous URL path ? where the management of the path is out of scope and control of occi api ? . So in the case of this configuration from the same provider: http://node01/web01: OCCI-STUFF http://node03/web02 : OCCI-STUFF http://node04/web03 : OCCI-STUFF http://node02/web04 : OCCI-STUFF
We do not have a way of aggregating those "nodes" in the occi interface. The reason for the buckets following the domain name and socket number was to eliminate the requirement for this type of additional management complexity, at least for the first draft of the occi spec. I was an advocate of a more flexible scheme from the beginning, I'm not sure if its wise to change this without a management api.
-gary
Sam Johnston wrote:
Ok so to further explain this requirement, early versions of the spec talked about dumping similar resources into buckets or "collections" - e.g. /compute, /storage, /network. The problem is that the web today doesn't tell you that images need to live in /images (even if they often do). Once you add the type of resource to its metadata you no longer need to encode it into the URL (which is fugly btw, and not particularly RESTful) and the result is that users have much more freedom as to how they lay out their resources.
Unfortunately many APIs restrict you to certain (generally legacy) terminology like "virtual data centers" and "virtual racks" which is something I very much wanted to avoid - even if only to be able to cater for the various perspectives on this issue rather than (unsuccessfully) trying to force our view down everyone's throats.
That is to say that said URLs are informative rather than normative, and perhaps even belong in the walkthrough. I was thinking more along the lines of:
http://cloud.example.com/us-east/webapp/web02
For a burnt-in hypervisor this might be simply:
Sam
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 5:33 AM, Michael Behrens
wrote:
For paragraph 2.2 Basics, under the URL Namespace paragraph, is this the sort of table desired/accurate?
The following table is a list of recommended URLs and their purpose: http://example.com/ Define and configure machines http://example.com/myresource/network Network configuration http://example.com/myresource/storage Storage services (SANs, etc) http://example.com/myresource/application Application control
-- Michael Behrens
_______________________________________________ occi-wg mailing list occi-wg@ogf.org http://www.ogf.org/mailman/listinfo/occi-wg
------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________ occi-wg mailing list occi-wg@ogf.org http://www.ogf.org/mailman/listinfo/occi-wg
participants (1)
-
Michael Behrens