Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 18 November 2015

Charm Partner Programme welcomes Opencell


Canonical is excited to announce that Opencell has joined the Charm Partner Programme (CPP). Canonical’s CPP helps solution providers make best use of Canonical’s universal service modeling tool, Juju; enabling instant workload deployment, integration, and scaling with a click of a mouse. The Juju Charm Store has over 300 cloud based applications ready to be used on most public and private clouds, as well as bare metal servers.

Opencell is a carrier grade open source billing solution, which includes mediation, prepaid and postpaid rating, invoicing, AR management and reporting. They will initially be charming their enterprise edition for inclusion in the Juju Charm Store.  An early version of  the Juju enabled Opencell will be shown at TAD Summit in Lisbon this week.

“Joining CPP and providing a Juju enabled version of the Opencell billing solution is a great step forward in our strategy to make it easier for our clients to integrate our open source billing application and provide true scalability on public, private and bare metal clouds,” commented David Meyer, Opencell’s CEO.

“Opencell is a robust and comprehensive billing solution, and we are excited to welcome them to our Cloud Ecosystem. As the first open source billing solution to be made available on Microsoft Azure, they further extend the flexibility and freedom from vendor lock in, offered to Juju users,” said Stefan Johannson, Global Director of Software Alliances at Canonical.

To learn more about Canonical’s partner programmes, including the Charm Partner Programme,please visit http://partners.ubuntu.com/.

Related posts


Miha Purg
15 May 2026

Finding the blind spot: How Canonical hunts logic flaws with AI

AI Article

AI is accelerating and improving how security engineers find and fix vulnerabilities. A new tool developed and used at Canonical, called Redhound, has already uncovered three critical logic vunerabilites, paving the way for a more secure software landscape. ...


Luci Stanescu
14 May 2026

Fragnesia Linux kernel local privilege escalation vulnerability mitigations

Ubuntu Article

A local privilege escalation (LPE) vulnerability affecting the Linux kernel has been publicly disclosed on May 13, 2026. The vulnerability does not have a CVE ID published, but is referred to as “Fragnesia.”  The vulnerability affects multiple Linux distributions, including all Ubuntu releases. The affected components are the Linux kernel ...


Bertrand Boisseau
13 May 2026

Rethinking BYOD security: protecting data without trusting devices

Ubuntu Article

BYOD (bring your own device) has always looked better on paper than it does in real life. The promise is clear: let people use the gadgets they already own. Less friction, lower costs, and more freedom. But when security and privacy are non-negotiable, the conversation around BYOD usually ends quickly. Not because BYOD is a ...