01-16-2024 01:58 PM - last edited on 01-16-2024 05:24 PM by JackLacava
Hi,
I didn't see anything in the Install/Config guide or in the Onestream Community search, so I figured I'd just ask.
Is there documentation regarding installing a self-hosted OneStream setup into a cloud environment?
Particularly regarding the registration/addition of new server instances (consolidation,staging, web, etc) into the config files:
-- Web Server Configuration file\Application Servers
-- Application Server Configuration file\Server Sets
Between server lifecycle events and lambdas calls, I'm sure something can be hacked together, but just thought I'd confirm what is/isn't available.
Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
01-17-2024 04:28 AM
The only "cloud features" you can have are related to Azure. There is nothing AWS-specific, as far as OneStream is concerned it will be just another Windows Server on-premises environment.
From your post, I guess you're looking for some sort of instance-scaling integration. At the moment, I'm not aware of any such feature available for on-premises setups. Happy hacking 👾
01-16-2024 05:46 PM
I'm not an infra guy but isn't a self hosted cloud env the same as a self-hosted non cloud env except you don't own the hardware?
01-16-2024 10:45 PM - edited 01-16-2024 10:46 PM
Agree with @DanielWillis . We use Google Compute Engine (Google Cloud-based VMs). Same install & setup as on-prem. You'll want to use FQDNs so the usual added DNS records for that is an extra step.
01-17-2024 04:28 AM
The only "cloud features" you can have are related to Azure. There is nothing AWS-specific, as far as OneStream is concerned it will be just another Windows Server on-premises environment.
From your post, I guess you're looking for some sort of instance-scaling integration. At the moment, I'm not aware of any such feature available for on-premises setups. Happy hacking 👾
01-17-2024 08:34 AM
Yep, I was definitely referring to an Auto Scaling environment based off of dynamically set CPU & memory limits being surpassed to spin up a new instance, and then register that new server within the environment. It seems like it only becomes an issue during closing, at which point having a new instance spin up might help.
But no worries, you've all confirmed what we thought. A "hacking" we will go 🙂
Thanks much!