vm-builder 0.12.4+bzr471-0ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

vm-builder (0.12.4+bzr471-0ubuntu1) precise; urgency=low

  * add support for building precise VMs
 -- Michael Vogt <email address hidden>   Wed, 19 Oct 2011 21:13:13 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Michael Vogt
Uploaded to:
Precise
Original maintainer:
Soren Hansen
Architectures:
all
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Low Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Precise: [FULLYBUILT] i386

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
vm-builder_0.12.4+bzr471.orig.tar.gz 52.5 KiB c1c3b86811b5409a465892911c2d99ed0d3a7de8430d687840dc1cc22bfbc39c
vm-builder_0.12.4+bzr471-0ubuntu1.diff.gz 10.9 KiB 31c923673f312d58605c704b806ba9aa3ec894015d3c543641608fb5d64e5e85
vm-builder_0.12.4+bzr471-0ubuntu1.dsc 1.3 KiB 2e7d27ccafcae5fd9bb3bcdd0fec9f1b034b3281500a680eb2aa6f6f9508183b

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Binary packages built by this source

python-vm-builder: VM builder

 Script that automates the process of creating a ready to use Linux based VM.
 The currently supported hypervisors are:
 .
  * KVM
  * Xen
  * VMWare
 .
 The currently supported distros are:
 .
  * Ubuntu Dapper, Gutsy, Hardy, Intrepid, Jaunty, and Karmic.
 .
 You can pass command line options to add extra packages, remove packages,
 choose which version of Ubuntu, which mirror etc. On recent hardware
 with plenty of RAM, tmpdir in /dev/shm or using a tmpfs, and a local mirror,
 you can bootstrap a vm in less than a minute.

python-vm-builder-ec2: EC2 Ubuntu VM builder

 Ubuntu vmbuilder module that automates the process of create a ready to use
 EC2 image (AMI) based on Ubuntu. You can pass command line options to add
 extra packages, remove packages, choose which version of Ubuntu, which
 mirror to use etc.
 .
 VMBuilder module to build, upload and register EC2 images. You will
 need to have an Amazon EC2 account in order to use this package.

ubuntu-vm-builder: Ubuntu VM builder

 Script which automates the process of creating a ready to use VM based on
 Ubuntu. You can pass command line options to add extra packages, remove
 packages, choose which version of Ubuntu, which mirror to use etc.
 .
 On recent hardware with plenty of RAM, tmpdir in /dev/shm or using a tmpfs,
 and a local mirror, you can bootstrap a vm in less than a minute.