Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Ellen Arnold
on 21 September 2016

Leostream joins Canonical’s Charm partner programme


Leostream Corporation, a leading developer of hosted desktop connection management software, has joined the Charm partner programme to facilitate the deployment of virtual desktops on Ubuntu OpenStack. The partner program helps solution providers make best use of Canonical’s model driven operations system, Juju; enabling instant workload deployment, integration, and scaling on any public or private cloud, as well as bare metal with just a click of a button. The Juju Charm Store has a rapidly growing number of charms available to DevOps teams, with hundreds of cloud-based applications available.

“OpenStack has long been a solution for controlling large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources and has recently turned heads as a solution for virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI),” comments Karen Gondoly CEO of Leostream. “As the world’s most popular operating system for OpenStack, Ubuntu provides a reliable way to build out a manageable cloud.  By making the Leostream Connection Broker available from Canonical’s Charm store, DevOps teams have a fast path to delivering desktops and remote sessions in a cloud-based environment.”

A pioneer in the evolving desktop virtualization space, Leostream will be “charming” its flagship connection broker software, which has quickly become an essential tool for enterprise-grade OpenStack VDI.  Coined the “ultimate connection broker” and the “one broker to rule them all”, the software provides a single management console to integrate a variety of systems and platforms including physical and virtual infrastructures, Windows and Linux Operating Systems, and any number of high-performance display protocols.

To overcome the technical barriers of building and managing OpenStack VDI, Leostream configuration and setup is included in the Canonical BootStack solution. BootStack is an end-to-end service that includes the design, implementation, and ongoing management of an OpenStack cloud on Ubuntu. Combined with Leostream, organizations can get up and running with hosted desktops faster, easier, and in a more cost-predictable way.

“Together, Leostream and Canonical simplify the deployment and migration of virtual desktop workloads into an OpenStack cloud, eliminating legacy, expensive VDI stacks and providing cloud-based, on-demand desktops to users across an organization,” says Stefan Johansson, Global Software Alliances Director, Canonical’s Cloud Division. “We are excited to welcome Leostream to our catalogue to accelerate the adoption of OpenStack VDI.”

The Leostream Connection Broker will be available directly from the Charm store in the fall of 2016. In the meantime, the latest version of the connection broker is available for download from the: Leostream website. For more information on Canonical’s Charm Partner Programme, go to http://partners.ubuntu.com/programmes/charm.

Related posts


Canonical
16 March 2026

Meet Canonical at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA and NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS

Ubuntu Article

Previewing at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS, NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 architecture support in Ubuntu 26.04, Canonical’s official Ubuntu image for NVIDIA Jetson Thor, upcoming support for NVIDIA DGX Station and NVIDIA DOCA-OFED, and NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 support. NVIDIA GTC 2026 is here, bringing together the techno ...


Luci Stanescu
12 March 2026

AppArmor vulnerability fixes available

Ubuntu Article

Qualys discovered several vulnerabilities in the AppArmor code of the Linux kernel. These are being referred to as CrackArmor, while CVE IDs have not been assigned yet. All of the vulnerabilities require unprivileged local user access. The impact of these vulnerabilities ranges from denial of service to kernel memory information leak, rem ...


David Beamonte
11 March 2026

The bare metal problem in AI Factories

MAAS MAAS

As AI platforms grow into large-scale “AI Factories,” the real bottleneck shifts from model design to operational complexity. With expensive GPU accelerators, hardware failures and inconsistent configurations lead directly to lost throughput and reduced return on investment. While Kubernetes orchestrates workloads, it cannot fix broken ph ...