Yes.  Very yes.

On Apr 23, 2012, at 10:15 AM, Justin Santa Barbara wrote:

What's the advantage of replacing the native EC2 compatibility layer with 
AWSOME from a user / operator point of view?

Although I wasn't able to attend the design summit session, right now we have 
two "native" APIs, which means we have two paths into the system.  That is poor 
software engineering, because we must code and debug everything twice.  Some 
developers will naturally favor one API over the other, and so disparities 
happen.  Today, both APIs are effectively using an undocumented private API, 
which is problematic.  We also can't really extend the EC2 API, so it is 
holding us back as we extend OpenStack's capabilities past those of the legacy 
clouds.

With one native API, we can focus all our energies on making sure that API 
works.  Then, knowing that the native API works, we can build other APIs on top 
through simple translation layers, and they will work also.  Other APIs can be 
built on top in the same way (e.g. OCCI)

Which is a long way of saying the external approach will result in _all_ APIs 
(OpenStack, EC2, OCCI etc) becoming more reliable, more secure and just more 
AWSOME.

Justin

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Monsyne M. Dragon
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