If you have an Aire+ subscription, Aire will deploy your apps on a shared Corteza instance where you can:
Further configure the app
Use the app
Export the source code for the app
Configuring Your App
The shared instance give you access the admin panel related to the app, along with the page builder. This lets you:
Add, edit and configure modules, fields and relationships, including exporting the app source code (confg file)
Add, edit and configure charts, including adding additional chart types
Add, edit and configure pages, including adding additional page blocks
Add pre-built workflows to your app
To add and manage roles and permissions, connect your email client, create and manage messaging templates and messaging queues, create advanced reports, create custom workflows and connect to third-party data sources, either upgrade to a Aire+Corteza Cloud subscription or install Corteza on-premise, then export the app’s source code (config file) and import it into your self-hosted Corteza.
Using Your App
The shared instance is meant as a place to for you and your end-users to test your app. As such, you and your end-users will be able to use your app in production, however, with a limit of 200 records per module. If you’d like to use the shared instance with a higher record limit, please contact us. Otherwise, either upgrade to a Aire+Corteza Cloud subscription or install Corteza on-premise, then export the app’s source code (config file) and import it into your self-hosted Corteza.
Exporting Source Code
Since the shared instance is primarily meant as a place to test your app in production, if you want to use your app with the full power of the Corteza platform, you have two options available:
Upgrade to a Aire+Corteza Cloud subscription; or
Install Corteza on-premise, then export the app’s source code (config file) and import it into your self-hosted Corteza.
To export your source code (config file), click the “edit” icon next to the name of your app at the top of the side menu, then click “Export” at the top left. This will export your app as a .yaml file that you’ll be able to import into your self-hosted Corteza.