Kubeflow
- By Kubeflow Charmers | bundle
- Cloud
Channel | Revision | Published |
---|---|---|
latest/stable | 414 | 01 Dec 2023 |
latest/candidate | 294 | 24 Jan 2022 |
latest/beta | 430 | 30 Aug 2024 |
latest/edge | 423 | 26 Jul 2024 |
1.9/stable | 426 | 31 Jul 2024 |
1.9/beta | 420 | 19 Jul 2024 |
1.9/edge | 425 | 31 Jul 2024 |
1.8/stable | 414 | 22 Nov 2023 |
1.8/beta | 411 | 22 Nov 2023 |
1.8/edge | 413 | 22 Nov 2023 |
1.7/stable | 409 | 27 Oct 2023 |
1.7/beta | 408 | 27 Oct 2023 |
1.7/edge | 407 | 27 Oct 2023 |
1.6/stable | 329 | 07 Sep 2022 |
1.6/beta | 326 | 23 Aug 2022 |
1.6/edge | 328 | 07 Sep 2022 |
1.4/stable | 321 | 30 Jun 2022 |
1.4/edge | 320 | 30 Jun 2022 |
juju deploy kubeflow --channel 1.9/stable
Deploy Kubernetes operators easily with Juju, the Universal Operator Lifecycle Manager. Need a Kubernetes cluster? Install MicroK8s to create a full CNCF-certified Kubernetes system in under 60 seconds.
Platform:
See also: How to manage profiles
In Charmed Kubeflow, as in upstream Kubeflow, a profile is an abstraction that denotes a collection of resources, roles, and credentials.
Anything a user does within Kubeflow is associated with a profile. Every profile is owned by at least one user; a profile can be for individual use or shared with multiple users; and one user can even have multiple profiles.
The name of the profile is what shows in the header of the Kubeflow dashboard – if you have access to multiple profiles, you can switch between them there.
For each profile, Kubeflow creates a namespace of the same name that encapsulates the resources specific to that profile.
See more: upstream Kubeflow | Getting started with multi-user isolation