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Preparing for the Certified OpenStack Administrator Exam

Preparing for the Certified OpenStack Administrator Exam

By : Matt Dorn
4.5 (11)
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Preparing for the Certified OpenStack Administrator Exam

Preparing for the Certified OpenStack Administrator Exam

4.5 (11)
By: Matt Dorn

Overview of this book

This book provides you with a specific strategy to pass the OpenStack Foundation’s first professional certification: the Certified OpenStack Administrator. In a recent survey, 78% of respondents said the OpenStack skills shortage had deterred them from adopting OpenStack. Consider this an opportunity to increase employer and customer confidence by proving you have the skills required to administrate real-world OpenStack clouds. You will begin your journey by getting well-versed with the OpenStack environment, understanding the benefits of taking the exam, and installing an included OpenStack All-in-One Virtual Appliance to work through objectives covered throughout the book. After exploring the basics of the individual services, you will be introduced to strategies to accomplish the exam objectives relevant to Keystone, Glance, Nova, Neutron, Cinder, Swift, Heat, and troubleshooting. Finally, you’ll benefit from the special tips section and a practice exam to put your knowledge to the test. By the end of the journey, you will be ready to become a Certified OpenStack Administrator!
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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About Heat

In Chapter 1, we discussed the various ways OpenStack users can create resources with OpenStack. Up until this point in our COA exam prep journey, we've utilized the Horizon dashboard and CLI. Although these have been fun to use, working with them to deploy OpenStack resources can be pretty tedious. In fact, between 2007 and 2010, Amazon users primarily relied on the AWS console, CLI, or SDK to provision virtual resources for their applications. Many users began creating bash scripts with the CLI to automate the creation of entire environments for their applications.

This worked great for a while, but users began to run into problems if they accidentally ran the script again, wanted to delete the resources, or add just one additional change. Users then had to build the logic into their bash scripts in order to make them idempotent and add additional scripts to...

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