Ops I think I missed [3]: https://github.com/jclouds/jclouds-examples/tree/master/blobstore-scala-filesystem
On 10 December 2015 at 10:06, Andrea Turli <andrea.tu...@cloudsoftcorp.com> wrote: > Hi Abni, > > I think you could take a look at [1], which implements the jclouds' > BlobStore abstraction using your local filesystem. > > Hopefully, [2] and [3] may be useful for getting the idea of that `api` > and see if it is useful for you. > > Best, > Andrea > > [1]: > https://github.com/jclouds/jclouds/tree/f832ad00a72ac8442e25686d14f55d0e310475c4/apis/filesystem > [2]: > https://github.com/jclouds/jclouds-examples/tree/master/blobstore-basics > > On 10 December 2015 at 03:00, Abhishek Sharma <abhisharm...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hey folks, >> >> *Context:* >> After having used brooklyn extensively and also reading the persistence >> documentation, I see that based on brooklyn.properties or CLI parameters >> brooklyn can either persist its state to localhost or to the cloud (using >> jclouds). >> >> *Question:* >> I want to emulate the same behavior is my application (which is built on >> brooklyn). >> Implying that I want my app to either persist my custom state either on >> localhost or on the cloud based on config. This would avoid me from having >> to write a bunch of if....else against the configuration. I want my app's >> custom state management to be exactly similar to brooklyn's. Can someone >> point me to the code or guide me to find out how brooklyn does this ? >> >> To re-phrase my question: What I want is almost like if jclouds supported >> a >> provider called "localhost" and did all the persistence locally. >> >> Thanks in advance, >> Abhi >> > >