Apache Brooklyn

Distributed computing management software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Apache Brooklyn is a framework that is used for modeling, deploying, and managing distributed applications defined using declarative YAML blueprints.[3] The design is influenced by autonomic computing and promise theory, and implements the OASIS Cloud Application Management for Platforms (CAMP).[4] It is free and open-source software released under an Apache 2.0 license.

Initial releaseApril 2012; 13 years ago (2012-04)[1]
Stable release1.0.0 (March 2, 2020; 6 years ago (2020-03-02)[2]) [±]
Written inJava, JavaScript, Groovy
Quick facts Developers, Initial release ...
Apache Brooklyn
DevelopersApache Software Foundation, Cloudsoft
Initial releaseApril 2012; 13 years ago (2012-04)[1]
Stable release1.0.0 (March 2, 2020; 6 years ago (2020-03-02)[2]) [±]
Written inJava, JavaScript, Groovy
Operating systemLinux, macOS, Windows
TypeCloud computing, Orchestration
LicenseApache 2.0
Websitebrooklyn.apache.org
Repositorygithub.com/apache/brooklyn
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Apache Brooklyn blueprint

Brooklyn blueprint can define application topology, application topology component and cloud or non-cloud location.

Cloudsoft AMP expands on Apache Brooklyn and allows writing application blueprints in Topology and Orchestration Specification for Cloud Applications (TOSCA), and in CAMP.

References

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