There are several ways of importing an application package into murano:
Perform the following steps to import an application package from a .zip file:
In OpenStack dashboard, navigate to Murano > Manage > Package Definitions.
Click the Import Package button on the top right of the page.
From the Package source drop-down list choose File, then click Browse to select a .zip file you want to import, and then click Next.
At this step, the package is already uploaded. Choose a category from the Application Category menu. You can select multiple categories while holding down the Ctrl key. If necessary, verify and update the information about the package, then click the Create button.
Note
Though specifying a category is optional, we recommend that you specify at least one. It helps to filter applications in the catalog.
Perform the following steps to import an application package from murano applications repository:
Note
To import an application package from a repository, you need to know the full name of the package. For the packages names, go to http://apps.openstack.org/#tab=murano-apps and click on the desired package to see its full name.
In dashboard, navigate to Murano > Manage > Package Definitions.
Click the Import Package button on the top right of the page.
From the Package source drop-down list, choose Repository, enter the package name, and then click Next. Note that you may also specify the version of the package.
At this step, the package is already uploaded. Choose a category from the Application Category menu. You can select multiple categories while holding down the Ctrl key. If necessary, verify and update the information about the package, then click the Create button.
Perform the following steps to import a bundle of applications:
Note
To import an application bundle from a repository, you need to know the full name of the package bundle. To find it out, go to http://apps.openstack.org/#tab=murano-apps and click on the desired bundle to see its full name.
When you have imported many applications and want to quickly find a required one, you can filter them by category, tags and words that the application name or description contains:
In dashboard, navigate to Murano > Application Catalog > Applications.
The page is divided into two sections:
To view all the applications of a specific category, select it from the App Category drop-down list:
To filter applications by tags or words from the application name or description, use the rightmost filter:
Note
Tags can be specified during the import of an application package.
For example, there is an application that has the word community-developed in description. Let’s find it with the filter. The following screenshot shows you the result.
To delete an application package from the catalog, please perform the following steps:
After uploading an application, the second step is to add it to an environment. You can do this:
Use of Drop Components here field
On the Environment Components page, drag and drop a desired application into the Drop Components here field under the Application Components section.
Configure the application. Note that the settings may vary from app to app and are predefined by the application author. When done, click Next, then click Create.
Now the application appears in the Component List section on the Environment Components page.
Use of Add Component button
On the Environment Components page, click Add Component.
Find the application you want to add and click Add to Env.
Configure the application and click Next. Note that the settings may vary from app to app and are predefined by the application author.
To add more applications, check Add more applications to the environment, then click Create and repeat the steps above. Otherwise, just click Create.
Now the application appears in the Component List section on the Environment Components page.
Quick Deploy button
Find the application you want to add and click Quick Deploy. Let’s add Apache Tomcat, for example.
Configure the application. Note that the settings may vary from app to app and are predefined by the application author. When done, click Next, then click Create. In the example below we assign a floating IP address.
Now the Apache Tomcat application is successfully added to an automatically created quick-env-1 environment.
Add to Env button
From the Environment drop-down list, select the required environment.
Find the application you want to add and click Add to Env. Let’s add Apache Tomcat, for example.
Configure the application and click Next. Note that the settings may vary from app to app and are predefined by the application author. In the example below we assign a floating IP address.
To add more applications, check Add more applications to the environment, then click Create and repeat the steps above. Otherwise, just click Create.
To delete an application that belongs to the environment:
In OpenStack dashboard, navigate to Murano > Application Catalog > Environments.
Click on the name of the environment you want to delete an application from.
In the Component List section, click the Delete Component button next to the application you want to delete. Then confirm the deletion.
Note
If the application that you are deleting has already been deployed, you should redeploy the environment to apply the recent changes. If the environment has not been deployed with this component, the changes are applied immediately on receiving the confirmation.
Warning
Due to a known bug in murano as of Kilo release, the OS resources allocated by a deleted application might not be reclaimed until you delete the environment. See the Deallocating stack resources blueprint for details.