So far, we have looked at how easy it is to perform Git-based deployments with OpenShift, where you perform a git push
command, and OpenShift builds and deploys the application. This is ideal if you want to perform source-based deployments. It may be that you want OpenShift to also manage your source code using Git. But there are cases when developers do not want to push their source code to OpenShift servers. In those cases, you can use binary deployments to deploy your binary artifact. This is ideal when you want to deploy binary artifacts, such as a .war
file, as Git is not an efficient means for storing binaries.
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