A new release of Juju, 2.2-beta1 and conjure-up are here!

Rick Harding rick.harding at canonical.com
Fri Mar 24 20:28:59 UTC 2017


One heads up is that this beta includes a memory improvement from Tim that
cut memory consumption over 75% when you get into the hundreds of models
for a controller. Folks that really iterate on controllers should notice
considerable improvement. If you're hitting this at all make sure to test
the beta and look forward to 2.2 final release.

On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 4:21 PM Curtis Hovey-Canonical <curtis at canonical.com>
wrote:

> A new release of Juju, 2.2-beta1, and conjure-up, are here!
>
>
> ## What's new in 2.2-beta1
>
> - juju login updates
> - [conjure-up] Integrated JAAS support
> - [conjure-up] Steps now support handling actions that require sudo
>   (ie sudo snap install kubectl --classic --edge)
> - [conjure-up] macOS port (waiting on merge
>   https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/11488)
> - [conjure-up] Lots of step processing polishes
>
>
> ### juju login updates
>
> Juju login command now accepts the name or hostname of a public
> controller as a parameter.
>
>     juju login jaas
>
> This would add the jaas public controller to the list of the controllers
> you can use, it will also get cached in the controllers.yaml. Public
> controllers usually use external identity providers. JAAS uses Ubuntu
> SSO as an external provider, so in order to use this controller, you
> have to register at Ubuntu SSO. In order to get access to the JAAS
> public controller, please register through jujucharms.com or using this
> URL:
>
>     https://jujucharms.com/login
>
> The previous version of the command accepted the user name as a
> parameter. In order to login as a local user, you can specify a user
> name as the argument to the -u flag.
>
>     juju login -u bob
>
> Note that this release includes only the initial implementation of the
> juju login command changes. Polishing and improved UX will come with
> following releases.
>
>
> ## Resolved Issues
>
> Check the milestones for a detailed breakdown of Juju and conjure-up
> bugs corrected.
>
>     https://github.com/conjure-up/conjure-up/milestone/19?closed=1
>     https://launchpad.net/juju/+milestone/2.2-beta1
>
>
> ## How do I get it?
>
> If you are running Ubuntu, you can get Juju from the juju stable ppa:
>
>    sudo add-apt-repository ppa:juju/devel; sudo apt-get update
>
>    sudo apt-get install juju
>
> Or install Juju from the snap store:
>
>    snap install juju --classic --beta
>
> Install conjure-up from the snap store:
>
>    snap install conjure-up --classic --beta
>
> If you are on Trusty, you'll need to run a few extra commands:
>
>    sudo apt-get install snapd
>    sudo groupadd lxd && sudo usermod -a -G lxd $USER
>    sudo reboot
>
> Now you can install snaps, including conjure-up, as normal:
>
>    snap install conjure-up --classic --beta
>
> macOS users can install conjure-up with brew:
>
>    brew install conjure-up --devel
>
> Windows, CentOS, and MacOS users can get a corresponding Juju
> installer at:
>
>    https://launchpad.net/juju/+milestone/2.2-beta1
>
>
> ## Feedback Appreciated!
>
> We encourage everyone to let us know how you're using Juju. Send us a
> message on Twitter using #jujucharms, join us at #juju on freenode, and
> subscribe to the mailing list at juju at lists.ubuntu.com.
>
>
> ## More information
>
> To learn more about these great technologies please visit
> https://jujucharms.com and http://conjure-up.io.
>
> --
> Curtis Hovey
> Canonical Cloud Development and Operations
> http://launchpad.net/~sinzui
>
> --
> Juju-dev mailing list
> Juju-dev at lists.ubuntu.com
> Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/juju-dev
>
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