Canonical announced the launch of a "Metal-as-a-service" (MAAS) tool that provides the ability to deploy and manage cloud servers.
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Mark Shuttleworth
Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth said on his blog that Maas would be able to provide a large scale (Hyper-scale) deployment service. Although today's server performance is already strong, its strength in the hyper-scale era is more of a cluster deployment from more nodes than a more powerful node.
Maas screenshot
Shuttleworth said that the cost of each node was relatively low in a very large age. A single node is difficult to qualify for critical business technologies, but deploying them in a cluster allows for powerful computing power. As a result, deployment and management costs become particularly important. This is also the inevitable trend that Maas appears. It simplifies the cloud or other services that users want to deploy, and enables easy, dynamic scaling. Make sure that the deployment of the server is more flexible and dynamic, just as adding the entire new physical node to the cloud.
In addition, the formula also plans to combine Maas and juju--next Generation cloud business process framework tools to promote efficient management of large scale data centers.
(Responsible editor: The good of the Legacy)