A domain represents a unique name for each user within which each user application must exist. OpenShift users cannot create an application until they have a valid domain. The domain name becomes a part of the application URL. For example, if your domain name is foo
and your application name is bar
, the application URL will be http://bar-foo.rhcloud.com
. Every OpenShift account must have at least one domain associated with it. The OpenShift Online free tier does not allow a user to create more than one domain, but you can create more than one domain in paid tiers. The domains make it possible for users to choose any valid name for their application. They allow two or more users to have the same name for their applications. For example, user A can have an application named bar
in domain foo
, and similarly, user B can also have an application named bar
in domain test
. Once a user has a valid domain, he/she can use any valid name for their application.
OpenShift Cookbook
By :
OpenShift Cookbook
By:
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
OpenShift Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Getting Started with OpenShift
Managing Domains
Creating and Managing Applications
Using MySQL with OpenShift Applications
Using PostgreSQL with OpenShift Applications
Using MongoDB and Third-party Database Cartridges with OpenShift Applications
OpenShift for Java Developers
OpenShift for Python Developers
OpenShift for Node.js Developers
Continuous Integration for OpenShift Applications
Logging and Scaling Your OpenShift Applications
Running OpenShift on a Virtual Machine
Index
Customer Reviews