mom 0.6.4-0.1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

mom (0.6.4-0.1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Non-maintainer upload.
  * New upstream release. (Closes: #1014781)
  * Fix watchfile for new GitHub API
  * Remove obsolete build dependencies:
    * python3-mock
    * python3-nose (Closes: #1018413)
  * Use new dh-sequence-python3
  * janitor:
    * Add upstream metadata
    * Set upstream metadata fields: Repository.
    * Update standards version to 4.6.2, no changes needed.
    * Bump debhelper from old 12 to 13.

 -- Alexandre Detiste <email address hidden>  Sat, 30 Mar 2024 13:34:45 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Dmitry Smirnov
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Dmitry Smirnov
Architectures:
all
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Oracular release universe misc

Builds

Oracular: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
mom_0.6.4-0.1.dsc 1.9 KiB 8b7e22e0cd930ad5b49b5f1646724fa1642a87a7d07e699012d1ee7d8574cadc
mom_0.6.4.orig.tar.xz 59.7 KiB 0181692fb57d54a2261a6184c975e8ec345ab0b389afc9a9532bcab0226a8d01
mom_0.6.4-0.1.debian.tar.xz 5.9 KiB da9a5b526d92624715e678e44c36114d54aa85ef27ffa31b0b2d0f79a076601f

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

mom: Dynamically manage system resources on virtualization hosts

 MOM is a policy-driven tool that can be used to manage overcommitment on KVM
 hosts. Using libvirt, MOM keeps track of active virtual machines on a host. At
 a regular collection interval, data is gathered about the host and guests. Data
 can come from multiple sources (eg. the /proc interface, libvirt API calls, a
 client program connected to a guest, etc). Once collected, the data is
 organized for use by the policy evaluation engine. When started, MOM accepts a
 user-supplied overcommitment policy. This policy is regularly evaluated using
 the latest collected data. In response to certain conditions, the policy may
 trigger reconfiguration of the system’s overcommitment mechanisms. Currently
 MOM supports control of memory ballooning and KSM but the architecture is
 designed to accommodate new mechanisms such as cgroups.