Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 18 August 2017

MAAS Development Summary – August 21, 2017


Hello MAASters! This is the development summary for the past couple of weeks:

MAAS 2.3 (current development release)

The team is preparing and testing the next official release, MAAS 2.3 alpha2. It is currently undergoing a heavy round of testing and will be announced separately the beginning of the upcoming week. In the past three weeks, the team has:

  • Support for CentOS Network configuration
    We have completed the work to support CentOS Advanced Networking, which provides the ability for users to configure VLAN, bond and bridge interfaces, bringing it feature parity with Ubuntu. This will be available in MAAS 2.3 alpha 2.
  • Support for Windows Network configuration
    MAAS can now configure NIC teaming (bonding) and VLAN interfaces for Windows deployments. This uses the native NetLBFO in Windows 2008+. Contact us for more information [1].
  • Hardware Testing Phase 2
    • Testing scripts now define a type field that informs MAAS for which component will be tested and where the resulting metrics will apply. This may be node, cpu, memory, or storage, defaults to node.
    • Completed work to support the definition and parsing of a YAML based description for custom test scripts. This allows the user to defined the test’s title, description, and the metrics the test will output, which allows MAAS to parse and eventually display over the UI/API.
  • Network beaconing & better network discovery
    • Beaconing is now fully functional for controller registration and interface updates!
    • When registering or updating a new controller (either the first standalone controller, or a secondary/HA controller), new interfaces that have been determined to be on an existing VLAN will not cause a new fabric to be created in MAAS.
  • Switch modeling
    • The basic database model for the new switching model has been implemented.
    • On-going progress of presenting switches in the node listing is under way.
    • Work is in-progress to allow MAAS to deploy a rack controller which will be utilized when deploying a new switch with MAAS.
  • Minor UI improvements
    • Renamed “Device Discovery” to “Network Discovery”.
    • Discovered devices where MAAS cannot determine the hostname now just show the hostname as “unknown” and grayed out instead of using the MAC address manufacturer as the hostname.
  • Bug fixes:
    • LP: #1704444 – MAAS API returns 500 internal server error instead of raising actual error.
    • LP: #1705501 – django warning on install
    • LP: #1707971 – MAAS becomes unstable after rack controller restarts
    • LP: #1708052 – Quick erase doesn’t remove md superblock
    • LP: #1710681 – Cannot delete an Ubuntu image, “Update Selection” is disabled

MAAS 2.2.2 Released in the Ubuntu Archive!

MAAS 2.2.2 has now also been released in the Ubuntu Archive. For more details on MAAS 2.2.2, please see [2].

[1]: https://maas.io/contact-us

[2]: https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/maas-devel/2017-August/002663.html

Related posts


Mohamed Wadie Nsiri
4 February 2026

AI meets SQL Server 2025 on Ubuntu

Ubuntu Article

Partnership between Microsoft and Canonical Since 2016, when Microsoft announced its intention to make Linux a first class citizen in its ecosystem, Canonical and Microsoft have been working hand in hand to make that vision a reality. Ubuntu was among the first distributions to support the preview of SQL Server on Linux. Ubuntu was the ...


Canonical
3 February 2026

AWS IoT Greengrass comes to Ubuntu Core

Ubuntu Article

AWS’s open source edge run time meets Canonical’s fully containerized OS for devices delivering a supported and robust end-to-end answer for enterprises looking to develop their own IoT hardware and solutions. London, February 3, 2026 — Canonical and AWS are pleased to announce the release of the new snap for AWS IoT Greengrass, making th ...


Canonical
3 February 2026

Tutorial: getting started with AWS IoT Greengrass on Ubuntu Core

Ubuntu Article

We recently announced that you can now benefit from the combined power of Ubuntu Core and AWS IoT Greengrass to bring the computation, storage, and AI capabilities of the cloud closer to the edge. AWS IoT Greengrass is an open source edge runtime and cloud service that extends Amazon Web Services (AWS) capabilities to physical ...