Hi Ganesh, There are no issues here - the instances you create are just virtual servers - log into them as you would any server and treat them as any server. Be mindful of what ports are required to operate your middleware (commonly port 8080 for JBoss or 8009 for the tomcat-connector, between web servers or other forms of proxy servers, say) - by default nothing gets through. You'd typically create a new security group and open up port 8080, 8009 between your web servers and your middleware hosts then reference that security group when launching your instance. That will then open up those ports required to access your services running on the instances. The details you need are referenced here: http://docs.openstack.org/trunk/openstack-compute/admin/content/part-ii-getting-virtual-machines.html To realise a benefit of cloud computing though you'd take these manual steps and automate them - but see how you get on with that to help with your understanding of how best to use OpenStack for your use. Regards, Kev On 21 February 2013 14:10, Ganesh Hariharan <ghariharan at gmail.com> wrote: > Hi All, > > Please let me know if there are any constraints to deploy Jboss, Websphere > on Guest OS in Openstack... > > Please provide any howto specifics to env setup for Middleware deployment > > thanks > GHH > > _______________________________________________ > Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack > Post to : openstack at lists.launchpad.net > Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack > More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp > > -- Kevin Jackson http://about.me/kevjackson @itarchitectkev -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack/attachments/20130221/39d5462a/attachment.html>