Right! You could use the manual provider, and deploy specifying lxc:# to deploy on LXC containers. Then, you can use something like sshuttle to get to them.
-- José Antonio Rey On Dec 14, 2014 9:25 PM, "Marco Ceppi" <ma...@ondina.co> wrote: > Not if you place everything in containers :) > > On Sun, Dec 14, 2014, 9:25 PM José Antonio Rey <j...@ubuntu.com> wrote: > >> Bare in mind, if you use manual you will have to reinstall to have a >> clean install - most charms do not clean-up after stop. >> >> -- >> José Antonio Rey >> On Dec 14, 2014 8:29 PM, "Andrew Wilkins" <andrew.wilk...@canonical.com> >> wrote: >> >>> On Sat, Dec 13, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Danial Behzadi <dani.be...@ubuntu.com> >>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hi there, >>>> I recently got an Ubuntu VPS and want to setup some services like >>>> Open-VPN and remotely use them via juju charms to learn more about juju. >>>> I'm in doubt which environment type I should choose, local(lxc) or Maas? >>>> Sorry for being such a noob :D >>>> >>> >>> This is one use case that "manual provisioning" was made for: >>> https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/config-manual.html >>> Using this method, you can use the juju CLI from your laptop/desktop to >>> communicate with Juju installed on your VPS. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Andrew >>> >>> -- >>> Juju mailing list >>> Juju@lists.ubuntu.com >>> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: >>> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/juju >>> >>> -- >> Juju mailing list >> Juju@lists.ubuntu.com >> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/ >> mailman/listinfo/juju >> >
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