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Hybrid Cloud Management with Red Hat CloudForms

You're reading from   Hybrid Cloud Management with Red Hat CloudForms Build, manage, and control an open hybrid cloud infrastructure using Red Hat CloudForms

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785283574
Length 174 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sangram Rath Sangram Rath
Author Profile Icon Sangram Rath
Sangram Rath
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Red Hat CloudForms Internals FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing Red Hat CloudForms on Red Hat OpenStack 3. Building a Hybrid Cloud Environment Using Red Hat CloudForms 4. Provisioning Instances Using Red Hat CloudForms 5. Life Cycle Management Using Red Hat CloudForms 6. Automation Using Red Hat CloudForms 7. Managing Red Hat CloudForms 8. Monitoring a Hybrid Cloud Infrastructure Using Red Hat CloudForms 9. Optimizing Using Red Hat CloudForms 10. APIs for Red Hat CloudForms Index

Modifying a state machine


We saw earlier how certain state machines play an important part in the provisioning request approval phase. But these are the default state machines available in the ManageIQ locked domain. In a real-world scenario, the state machine parameters and values will be different as per the level of automation required.

CloudForms lets you modify these default state machines or create your own states in a state machine. However, since you cannot modify them in the default locked domains, you must create a user-defined domain, copy the state machine class to the new domain, and then modify them as per the requirements.

Let's take an example to see how this works. Here, we will consider the ProvisionRequestApproval state machine again.

Creating a new domain

The first step in modifying the state machine is to create a new user-defined domain. More details about domains are covered in later chapters of this book.

From the Automate menu item, select Explorer. Click on Configuration...

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