<font size=2 face="sans-serif">Hi Gosha,<br>
</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Thank you very much for your message.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Before I can answer your question I
would need to better understand how Murano handles life-cycle operations
that you mentioned.</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">I hope you can bear with me with these
questions or point me to documents that I need to read.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">When I deploy an environment in Murano
I see that a Heat stack is created and deployed.</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">If later I add a new component to the
environment and redeploy I see a second stack added to stack list which
seems to include only the resources associated with the new component;
as if the old components in the environment are not touched.</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Also, in the scenario you mentioned
you referred to adding applications to a running stack. It seems to me
that any such update to the stack would not require modifying the existing
stack resources (except for delete).</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Is this a correct observation?</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Is there a scenario where an environment
update would require updates to existing components? If so how does Murano
handle that case?</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Thank you in advance for your insights.</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif"><br>
Regards,</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">-------------------------------------------------------------------</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Vahid Hashemian</font>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Advisory Software Engineer, IBM Cloud
Labs</font>
<br>