Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Eduardo Aguilar Pelaez
on 24 June 2020


What’s new?

This new release of MAAS brings three key new benefits:

  1. Virtual machines with LXD (Beta)
  2. Tighter, more responsive UX
  3. External/remote PostgreSQL database

If you know what you want, go to maas.io/install, otherwise let’s dive in and explore these further.

Virtual machines (VMs) with LXD (Beta)

MAAS 2.8 can set up L XD-based VM hosts and virtual machines. This is an additional option to the existing libvirt-based VM hosts/VMs functionality. 

LXD VMs are manageable without requiring SSH access to the VM host, unlike libvirt KVMs.

As a system administrator, using LXD VMs for other staff members means that you don’t have to give them SSH access to the bare metal servers meaning better permission control of the estate. 

Finally, LXD has a clear API making it easy to deploy and manage. 

Tighter, more responsive UX


Machine listings have been improved, some of the most visible changes involve the way that long lists are presented within categories, as shown below.

Among those other changes are 

  • persisting UI state for grouping
  • new grouping options
  • bookmarkable URLs with filter and search parameters, and many other performance improvements

This was achieved by building the interface from the ground up in React and Redux. If you’re interested in more details, see these blogs on the framework used and speed improvements.

External/remote PostgreSQL database


The MAAS 2.8 snap now has a separate database to allow for scalability. This means that the MAAS database can be located outside the snap either on localhost, or on a remote server altogether. 

This will be the approach going forward so we have prepared guides covering set up, management and configuration. If you are testing MAAS we provide a test DB configuration that embeds the database in a separate snap that can easily be connected to MAAS. To learn more please go to maas.io/docs/install-from-a-snap

Other improvements

This release also includes many fixes to ensure a high quality user experience and operations. If you’d like to read more you can read more here.


Related posts


Nicholas Morris
26 August 2025

Generating allow-lists with DNS monitoring on LXD

DevOps Article

Allow-listing web traffic – blocking all web traffic that has not been pre-approved – is a common practice in highly sensitive environments. It is also a challenge for developers and system administrators working in those environments. In this blog, we’ll cover an easy way to mitigate this challenge by using LXD to generate allow-lists.  ...


Benjamin Ryzman
24 February 2026

Building quantum-safe telecom infrastructure for 5G and beyond

private mobile network Article

coRAN Labs and Canonical at MWC Barcelona 2026 At MWC Barcelona 2026, coRAN Labs and Canonical are presenting a working demonstration of a cloud-native, quantum-safe telecom platform for 5G and beyond 5G networks. This is not a conceptual exercise. It is a full 5G System (5GS) deployment with post-quantum cryptography embedded across the ...


Lidia Luna Puerta
14 January 2026

How to build DORA-ready infrastructure with verifiable provenance and reliable support

Ubuntu Article

DORA requires organizations to know what they run, where it came from, and how it’s maintained. Learn how to build infrastructure with verifiable provenance. ...