Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Tom Callway
on 1 December 2015

Test-drive the OpenStack Autopilot with a virtual appliance


Thanks for your interest in Ubuntu OpenStack. Canonical has sunsetted OpenStack Autopilot and replaced it with conjure-up. We welcome you to visit our OpenStack product page to find an Ubuntu OpenStack solution that meets your needs.

 

Canonical today published a virtual appliance to help organisations experience first-hand the easiest way to install and operate an OpenStack cloud. Canonical’s OpenStack Autopilot is a fully automated deployment and operations management tool for OpenStack, managing small or large clouds across multiple availability zones. The virtual appliance simulates a bare metal OpenStack install with the Autopilot using an existing VMware vSphere cluster.

“Evaluating OpenStack is complex and requires a rack of spare servers” said Mark Baker, product manager for OpenStack at Canonical. “Now you can evaluate the OpenStack Autopilot experience using your existing VMware cluster, requiring no dedicated physical servers.”

The Autopilot virtual appliance enables people with an existing vSphere cluster to evaluate the Autopilot and OpenStack itself, deploying an OpenStack cloud on top of their existing vSphere infrastructure. The resulting cloud uses virtual servers so is not intended to validate raw performance, but it enables the organisation to evaluate OpenStack cost-effectively. The intention is to make it easy for enterprises invested in VMware’s legacy virtualization products to experience modern, scale-out, OpenStack cloud technology in a familiar environment without having to allocate new hardware.

Ubuntu is the leading platform for OpenStack deployments, with 65% of the largest OpenStack clouds selecting Canonical’s operating system according to the latest OpenStack Foundation Survey.

“The OpenStack Autopilot demonstrates the maturity of Canonical’s OpenStack ecosystem, offering a range of software defined networking and software defined storage options” said Shawn Madden, Product Manager for Canonical’s Landscape Management Server which provides the OpenStack Autopilot. “The Autopilot appliance will demonstrate the superior scale and economics of OpenStack to enterprises evaluating open, scalable cloud architectures.”

To download the try the OpenStack Autopilot appliance for VMware visit ubuntu.com/download/cloud

Related posts


Marina Khachatryan
15 August 2024

Meet our Public Sector team at Technet Augusta 2024

Ubuntu Article

We’re excited to announce our participation in Technet Augusta 2024 from 19 to 22 August. ...


Rajan Patel
11 July 2024

How often do you apply security patches on Linux?

Security Article

Understanding Canonical’s release schedules for software updates and knowing security patching coverage windows are essential pieces of information when defining a security patching strategy. ...


Gabriel Aguiar Noury
4 June 2024

A look into Ubuntu Core 24: Device management with Landscape

Internet of Things Article

Welcome to this blog series which explores innovative uses of Ubuntu Core. Throughout this series, Canonical’s Engineers will show what you can build with this Core 24 release, highlighting the features and tools available to you.  In this first blog, Michael Croft-White, Telemetry Engineer Director, will show you how Landscape integratio ...