Thank you so much for your proposal, Zhiguo!

The lack of user-friendly UI has been a barrier for new and/or light
users considering adopting Bigtop. Ambari might be a solution, but IMO
it has a maintainability problem caused from its legacy architecture
and outdated software stack, and it seems difficult to improve them
gradually.
Bigtop Manager is created by Zhiguo and his collaborators from scratch
to tackle this problem. In my understanding, it's easier to maintain
since it's built with modern frameworks such as Spring Boot 3 and
Vue.js 3, and supports recent LTS versions of JDK (17 and 21). I also
believe his technical skill and sense of responsibility for
maintaining it, so I'll submit my +1 for accepting it into the Bigtop
codebase, though it may be required to check if its functionality and
quality is enough before including it into our release.

Kengo Seki <sek...@apache.org>

On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 2:32 PM 吴治国 <wzg547228...@163.com> wrote:
>
> Hello everyone,
>
>
> Due to the fact that Bigtop's native deployment solution (Puppet script) is 
> difficult for general users to configure and fully utilize, many of them 
> install the components manually or use them in combination with other 
> frameworks. To address this, I have developed a project called Bigtop 
> Manager, which is inspired by Apache Ambari and Cloudera Manager.
>
> The project's repository is hosted on Github[1] and has been developed for 
> more than a year, and has also been incubated in OpenEuler community for 
> about a half year, while this project has not yet met the standards for 
> production-level use, I believe that promoting it as a subproject of Bigtop 
> now could bring more benefits to the project and accelerate its development 
> progress.
>
> I would like to know your opinion about this, thanks.
>
> Best Regards,
> Zhiguo Wu
>
> [1]: https://github.com/kevinw66/bigtop-manager

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