The document provides an overview of the Cloud Foundry technical platform. It describes how Cloud Foundry simplifies application deployment by allowing developers to push applications to the cloud with simple commands. It then summarizes the key components of Cloud Foundry, including the router, cloud controller, health manager, DEAs, buildpacks, messaging, service brokers, and BOSH. BOSH allows Cloud Foundry to be deployed and managed on an IaaS through the use of stemcells, agents, and a cloud provider interface.
Part 4: Custom Buildpacks and Data Services (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Custom Buildpacks & Data Services
The primary goals of this session are to:
Give an overview of the extension points available to Cloud Foundry users.
Provide a buildpack overview with a deep focus on the Java buildpack (my target audience has been Java conferences)
Provide an overview of service options, from user-provided to managed services, including an overview of the V2 Service Broker API.
Provide two hands-on lab experiences:
Java Buildpack Extension
via customization (add a new framework component)
via configuration (upgrade to Java 8)
Service Broker Development/Management
deploy a service broker for “HashMap as a Service (HaaSh).”
Register the broker, make the plan public.
create an instance of the HaaSh service
deploy a client app, bind to the service, and test it
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Part 2: Architecture and the Operator Experience (Pivotal Cloud Platform Road...VMware Tanzu
The primary goals of this session are to:
Do a deep dive into the CF architecture via animated slides illustrating push, stage, deploy, scale, and health management.
Also do a brief dive into BOSH, including why BOSH, what it is, and animations of how it works. It’s not an operations focused workshop, so we keep the treatment light.
Discuss the value adds to CF BOSH OSS that Pivotal brings through the Pivotal Ops Manager product and our associated ecosystem of data and mobile services.
Quickly prove that I can push an app to a Pivotal CF environment running on vCHS in the same exact way I can push an app to PWS.
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Pivotal Cf, the most advanced Enterpise PaaS Platform in the world. this presentations explains how PCF helps developers and operators and boost their operational agility and enhance their IT capabilities.
Cloud Foundry Introduction (w Demo) at Silicon Valley Code Campcornelia davis
Silicon Valley Code Camp, The Self-healing Elastic Runtime that is Cloud Foundry.
While we did mostly demo in this session, these slides set a bit of context first. Also includes the four levels of HA in Cloud Foundry.
Part 4: Custom Buildpacks and Data Services (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Custom Buildpacks & Data Services
The primary goals of this session are to:
Give an overview of the extension points available to Cloud Foundry users.
Provide a buildpack overview with a deep focus on the Java buildpack (my target audience has been Java conferences)
Provide an overview of service options, from user-provided to managed services, including an overview of the V2 Service Broker API.
Provide two hands-on lab experiences:
Java Buildpack Extension
via customization (add a new framework component)
via configuration (upgrade to Java 8)
Service Broker Development/Management
deploy a service broker for “HashMap as a Service (HaaSh).”
Register the broker, make the plan public.
create an instance of the HaaSh service
deploy a client app, bind to the service, and test it
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Part 2: Architecture and the Operator Experience (Pivotal Cloud Platform Road...VMware Tanzu
The primary goals of this session are to:
Do a deep dive into the CF architecture via animated slides illustrating push, stage, deploy, scale, and health management.
Also do a brief dive into BOSH, including why BOSH, what it is, and animations of how it works. It’s not an operations focused workshop, so we keep the treatment light.
Discuss the value adds to CF BOSH OSS that Pivotal brings through the Pivotal Ops Manager product and our associated ecosystem of data and mobile services.
Quickly prove that I can push an app to a Pivotal CF environment running on vCHS in the same exact way I can push an app to PWS.
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Pivotal Cf, the most advanced Enterpise PaaS Platform in the world. this presentations explains how PCF helps developers and operators and boost their operational agility and enhance their IT capabilities.
Cloud Foundry Introduction (w Demo) at Silicon Valley Code Campcornelia davis
Silicon Valley Code Camp, The Self-healing Elastic Runtime that is Cloud Foundry.
While we did mostly demo in this session, these slides set a bit of context first. Also includes the four levels of HA in Cloud Foundry.
Cloud Foundry Diego, Lattice, Docker and morecornelia davis
Colorado Cloud Foundry Meetup
May 19, 2015
Lattice and Docker with Cornelia Davis
Starting with a comparison of the current core runtime of the Cloud Foundry Elastic Runtime, to the new Diego rewrite, we take a tour through how linux containers can run a variety of image formats, including Docker. We talk about one way that you can get the Diego functionality in Lattice, a container scheduler that runs on a laptop or as a cluster in the cloud. We talk about ways of creating container images including Cloud Rocker and we draw it all together with a bunch of demos.
Abstract from the meetup:
What is Lattice (www.lattice.cf)?
Lattice is an open source project for running containerized workloads on a cluster. A Lattice cluster is comprised of a number of Lattice Cells (VMs that run containers) and a Lattice Coordinator that monitors the Cells.
Lattice includes built-in http load-balancing, a cluster scheduler, log aggregation with log streaming and health management.
Lattice containers are described as long-running processes or temporary tasks. Lattice includes support for Linux Containers expressed either as Docker Images or by composing applications as binary code on top of a root file system. Lattice's container pluggability will enable other backends such as Windows or Rocket in the future.
Cloud Foundry and Microservices: A Mutualistic Symbiotic RelationshipMatt Stine
As delivered to the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014 in San Francisco, CA:
With businesses built around software now disrupting multiple industries that appeared to have stable leaders, the need has emerged for enterprises to create "software factories" built around the following principles:
* Streaming customer feedback directly into rapid, iterative cycles of application development
* Horizontally scaling applications to meet user demand
* Compatibility with an enormous diversity of clients, with mobility (smartphones, tablets, etc.) taking the lead
* Continuous delivery of value, shrinking the cycle time from concept to cash
Infrastructure has taken the lead in adapting to meet these needs with the move to the cloud, and Platform as a Service (PaaS) has raised the level of abstraction to a focus on an ecosystem of applications and services. However, most applications are still developed as if we're living in the previous generation of both business and infrastructure: the monolithic application. Microservices - small, loosely coupled applications that follow the Unix philosophy of "doing one thing well" - represent the application development side of enabling rapid, iterative development, horizontal scale, polyglot clients, and continuous delivery. They also enable us to scale application development and eliminate long term commitments to a single technology stack.
While microservices are simple, they are certainly not easy. It's recently been said that "microservices are not a free lunch". Interestingly enough, if you look at the concerns expressed here about microservices, you'll find that they are exactly the challenges that a PaaS is intended to address. So while microservices do not necessarily imply cloud (and vice versa), there is in fact a symbiotic relationship between the two, with each approach somehow compensating for the limitations of the other, much like the practices of eXtreme Programming.
Part 1: The Developer Experience (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Part 1: The Developer Experience
This workshop introduces the business “why” of Cloud Foundry with a nod to Microservices architectures. It then takes the developer through a hands-on “day in the life” experience of interacting with Pivotal Web Services:
Target My Cloud Foundry Provider - walkthrough of PWS registration, download Cloud Foundry CLI, target/login
Push My App - push the Spring Music application, high-level talk through of app push/stage/deploy
Bind My App to Backing Services - bind Spring Music to an ElephantSQL PostgreSQL database, high-level talk through of service creation/binding, explain VCAP_SERVICES, point to Spring Cloud
Scale My App - push cf-scale-boot application, scale up, scale down, high-level talk through of dynamic routing
Monitor My App’s Logs - tail cf-scale-boot logs, high-level discussion of loggregator
Monitor My App’s Health - hit the “kill switch” in cf-scale-boot, watch the events in the logs, show cf events, watch the app restart, high-level talk through of health manager
Monitor My App’s Performance - bind to New Relic service, re-push application, high-level discussion of NR agent fetching via BP, poke around in NR interface
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
The primary goals of this presentation are to:
- Show how to easily deploy Pivotal Cloud Foundry to CenturyLink Cloud with CenturyLink’s Blueprint technology
- Do a deep dive into the CF architecture via animated slides illustrating push, stage, deploy, scale and health management.
- Discuss in depth how Pivotal Cloud Foundry simplifies many traditional operator concerns such as managing application updates, availability, user/quota management and monitoring.
- Provide a brief introduction to BOSH, including why BOSH, what it is and animations of how it works.
- Discuss the value adds to CF BOSH OSS that Pivotal brings through the Pivotal Ops Manager product and our associated ecosystem of data and mobile services.
This presentation covers both the Cloud Foundry Elastic Runtime (known by many as just "Cloud Foundry") as well as the Operations Manager (known by many as BOSH). For each, the main components are covered with interactions between them.
At this joint NYC Cloud Foundry and NY PHP meetup, we'll discuss the shift to Platform-as-a-Service and what it means for PHP development on the cloud.
First, we'll take a look at the "traditional" cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (virtual servers and disks) model and describe how Platform-as-a-Service builds upon it to provide the runtimes and data services for hosting PHP applications.
We'll then demonstrate how a PHP developer can use buildpacks and services within a Cloud Foundry PaaS to deploy scalable and resilient apps to his or her cloud of choice.
Along the way we'll compare the variety of buildpacks available to PHP developers, show techniques for binding to services, and highlight best practices for creating born-on-the-cloud apps based on a microservices architecture.
Special thanks to Dan Mikusa for helping with the buildpack comparison.
PHP developers: Please give all three build packs a try. Provide your feedback and submit pull requests on GitHub.
Declarative Infrastructure with Cloud Foundry BOSHcornelia davis
Initially built to deploy and manage the Cloud Foundry “Elastic Runtime”, the platform that allows application developers and operators to easily deploy and manage applications and services through the entire app lifecycle (including production!), Cloud Foundry BOSH is a system that manages any virtual machine clusters of arbitrarily complex, distributed systems. You define your release through packages (what gets installed on the VMs), jobs (what is run on the VMs) and a deployment manifest (declaration of the cluster) and BOSH will first deploy and then continue to maintain your cluster to match that desired state. The result is a self-healing, eventually consistent system that markedly reduces the operational burdens and supports a great number of other Devops functions such as canary, zero-downtime upgrades, autoscaling, built in high availability and more. In this session we’ll show you how to create, deploy and manage a BOSH release, and we’ll watch what BOSH does when bad things happen.
Heard about Cloud Foundry? Already a Spring, Grails, Ruby, Node.js, Scala, or generalist programmer looking to understand what Cloud Foundry, the open source PaaS from VMware, means to you? Are you an architect trying to understand where PaaS fits it, and what it brings to the table? If you answered "yes" to any of those questions, then join the experts in this bootcamp to Cloud Foundry.
Slides from Workshop 'Cloud Foundry: Hands-on Deployment Workshop'
http://www.meetup.com/CloudFoundry/events/150601282/
In this workshop you will learn Cloud Foundry fundamental concepts, setup, deployment and operations. We’ll cover a couple of alternatives to deploy CF in a local environment for learning and testing purposes as well as deploying Cloud Foundry atop IaaS production level environment, being able to manage hundreds of components and thousands of applications.
If you did not have a chance to work with Cloud Foundry, it may be useful to test its features locally at first. Deploying this environment on a local machine allows you to get hands-on experience in the solution and, in case you are a contributor, to test some features before you commit them to a production environment.
Cloudfoundry is the open platform as a service providing a faster and easier way to build, test, deploy and scale applications.Deploy & Scale in seconds on your choice of clouds.
As a Service: Cloud Foundry on OpenStack - Lessons LearntAnimesh Singh
According to OpenStack users survey, Cloud Foundry is the 2nd most popular workload on OpenStack. You want to deploy Cloud Foundry on OpenStack or already have. What's next?
Cloud Foundry continues to evolve with revolutionary changes, e.g move from bosh-micro to bosh-init, using the new eCPI, move to Diego etc.
Same with OpenStack, e.g changes from Keystone v2 to v3, from Liberty to Mitaka, network plugins changes etc. Both IaaS and PaaS layers are changing frequently. How do you do in-place updates/upgrades/operational tasks without impacting user experience at both the layers?
In this talk will discuss our lessons learnt operating hybrid Cloud Foundry deployments on top of OpenStack over the last two years and how we used underlying technologies to seamlessly operate them
Part 3: Enabling Continuous Delivery (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Enabling Continuous Delivery
The primary goals of this session are to:
Give a brief, platform-agnostic overview of the “why” and “what” of Continuous Delivery. The purpose is to simply educate the student and bring everyone to the same level.
Explain how Cloud Foundry benefits Continuous Delivery.
Provide a hands-on lab experience where the student takes a Spring Boot microservice application and builds a continuous delivery pipeline for it using Jenkins, Artifactory, and Cloud Foundry. This is all done using free trial SaaS versions of the software.
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Moving at the speed of startup with Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11VMware Tanzu
Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11 is now generally available. Join Jared Ruckle and Pieter Humphrey for a deeper look at new capabilities, along with a Q&A about many of the new product features, including:
CredHub Bootstrapping
- A new way to manage and secure credentials for Pivotal Cloud Foundry
Container Networking
- Create app-level security policies and run modern apps in a "zero trust" environment
Volume Services
- Bring stateful apps to Pivotal Cloud Foundry
New Spring Boot Actuator
- Integrations with Apps Manager to ease troubleshooting
PCF Metrics 1.4
- New custom metrics tracking as a result of a tighter integration with Spring Boot
Attend this webinar and learn how to get the most from the enhancements to Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11, the leading multi-cloud app development platform.
Presenter : Jared Ruckle, Mukesh Gadiya and Pieter Humphrey, Pivotal
https://content.pivotal.io/webinars/jul-19-pivotal-cloud-foundry-1-11-credhub-container-networking-spring-boot-actuator-webinar
Cloud Foundry Diego, Lattice, Docker and morecornelia davis
Colorado Cloud Foundry Meetup
May 19, 2015
Lattice and Docker with Cornelia Davis
Starting with a comparison of the current core runtime of the Cloud Foundry Elastic Runtime, to the new Diego rewrite, we take a tour through how linux containers can run a variety of image formats, including Docker. We talk about one way that you can get the Diego functionality in Lattice, a container scheduler that runs on a laptop or as a cluster in the cloud. We talk about ways of creating container images including Cloud Rocker and we draw it all together with a bunch of demos.
Abstract from the meetup:
What is Lattice (www.lattice.cf)?
Lattice is an open source project for running containerized workloads on a cluster. A Lattice cluster is comprised of a number of Lattice Cells (VMs that run containers) and a Lattice Coordinator that monitors the Cells.
Lattice includes built-in http load-balancing, a cluster scheduler, log aggregation with log streaming and health management.
Lattice containers are described as long-running processes or temporary tasks. Lattice includes support for Linux Containers expressed either as Docker Images or by composing applications as binary code on top of a root file system. Lattice's container pluggability will enable other backends such as Windows or Rocket in the future.
Cloud Foundry and Microservices: A Mutualistic Symbiotic RelationshipMatt Stine
As delivered to the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014 in San Francisco, CA:
With businesses built around software now disrupting multiple industries that appeared to have stable leaders, the need has emerged for enterprises to create "software factories" built around the following principles:
* Streaming customer feedback directly into rapid, iterative cycles of application development
* Horizontally scaling applications to meet user demand
* Compatibility with an enormous diversity of clients, with mobility (smartphones, tablets, etc.) taking the lead
* Continuous delivery of value, shrinking the cycle time from concept to cash
Infrastructure has taken the lead in adapting to meet these needs with the move to the cloud, and Platform as a Service (PaaS) has raised the level of abstraction to a focus on an ecosystem of applications and services. However, most applications are still developed as if we're living in the previous generation of both business and infrastructure: the monolithic application. Microservices - small, loosely coupled applications that follow the Unix philosophy of "doing one thing well" - represent the application development side of enabling rapid, iterative development, horizontal scale, polyglot clients, and continuous delivery. They also enable us to scale application development and eliminate long term commitments to a single technology stack.
While microservices are simple, they are certainly not easy. It's recently been said that "microservices are not a free lunch". Interestingly enough, if you look at the concerns expressed here about microservices, you'll find that they are exactly the challenges that a PaaS is intended to address. So while microservices do not necessarily imply cloud (and vice versa), there is in fact a symbiotic relationship between the two, with each approach somehow compensating for the limitations of the other, much like the practices of eXtreme Programming.
Part 1: The Developer Experience (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Part 1: The Developer Experience
This workshop introduces the business “why” of Cloud Foundry with a nod to Microservices architectures. It then takes the developer through a hands-on “day in the life” experience of interacting with Pivotal Web Services:
Target My Cloud Foundry Provider - walkthrough of PWS registration, download Cloud Foundry CLI, target/login
Push My App - push the Spring Music application, high-level talk through of app push/stage/deploy
Bind My App to Backing Services - bind Spring Music to an ElephantSQL PostgreSQL database, high-level talk through of service creation/binding, explain VCAP_SERVICES, point to Spring Cloud
Scale My App - push cf-scale-boot application, scale up, scale down, high-level talk through of dynamic routing
Monitor My App’s Logs - tail cf-scale-boot logs, high-level discussion of loggregator
Monitor My App’s Health - hit the “kill switch” in cf-scale-boot, watch the events in the logs, show cf events, watch the app restart, high-level talk through of health manager
Monitor My App’s Performance - bind to New Relic service, re-push application, high-level discussion of NR agent fetching via BP, poke around in NR interface
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
The primary goals of this presentation are to:
- Show how to easily deploy Pivotal Cloud Foundry to CenturyLink Cloud with CenturyLink’s Blueprint technology
- Do a deep dive into the CF architecture via animated slides illustrating push, stage, deploy, scale and health management.
- Discuss in depth how Pivotal Cloud Foundry simplifies many traditional operator concerns such as managing application updates, availability, user/quota management and monitoring.
- Provide a brief introduction to BOSH, including why BOSH, what it is and animations of how it works.
- Discuss the value adds to CF BOSH OSS that Pivotal brings through the Pivotal Ops Manager product and our associated ecosystem of data and mobile services.
This presentation covers both the Cloud Foundry Elastic Runtime (known by many as just "Cloud Foundry") as well as the Operations Manager (known by many as BOSH). For each, the main components are covered with interactions between them.
At this joint NYC Cloud Foundry and NY PHP meetup, we'll discuss the shift to Platform-as-a-Service and what it means for PHP development on the cloud.
First, we'll take a look at the "traditional" cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (virtual servers and disks) model and describe how Platform-as-a-Service builds upon it to provide the runtimes and data services for hosting PHP applications.
We'll then demonstrate how a PHP developer can use buildpacks and services within a Cloud Foundry PaaS to deploy scalable and resilient apps to his or her cloud of choice.
Along the way we'll compare the variety of buildpacks available to PHP developers, show techniques for binding to services, and highlight best practices for creating born-on-the-cloud apps based on a microservices architecture.
Special thanks to Dan Mikusa for helping with the buildpack comparison.
PHP developers: Please give all three build packs a try. Provide your feedback and submit pull requests on GitHub.
Declarative Infrastructure with Cloud Foundry BOSHcornelia davis
Initially built to deploy and manage the Cloud Foundry “Elastic Runtime”, the platform that allows application developers and operators to easily deploy and manage applications and services through the entire app lifecycle (including production!), Cloud Foundry BOSH is a system that manages any virtual machine clusters of arbitrarily complex, distributed systems. You define your release through packages (what gets installed on the VMs), jobs (what is run on the VMs) and a deployment manifest (declaration of the cluster) and BOSH will first deploy and then continue to maintain your cluster to match that desired state. The result is a self-healing, eventually consistent system that markedly reduces the operational burdens and supports a great number of other Devops functions such as canary, zero-downtime upgrades, autoscaling, built in high availability and more. In this session we’ll show you how to create, deploy and manage a BOSH release, and we’ll watch what BOSH does when bad things happen.
Heard about Cloud Foundry? Already a Spring, Grails, Ruby, Node.js, Scala, or generalist programmer looking to understand what Cloud Foundry, the open source PaaS from VMware, means to you? Are you an architect trying to understand where PaaS fits it, and what it brings to the table? If you answered "yes" to any of those questions, then join the experts in this bootcamp to Cloud Foundry.
Slides from Workshop 'Cloud Foundry: Hands-on Deployment Workshop'
http://www.meetup.com/CloudFoundry/events/150601282/
In this workshop you will learn Cloud Foundry fundamental concepts, setup, deployment and operations. We’ll cover a couple of alternatives to deploy CF in a local environment for learning and testing purposes as well as deploying Cloud Foundry atop IaaS production level environment, being able to manage hundreds of components and thousands of applications.
If you did not have a chance to work with Cloud Foundry, it may be useful to test its features locally at first. Deploying this environment on a local machine allows you to get hands-on experience in the solution and, in case you are a contributor, to test some features before you commit them to a production environment.
Cloudfoundry is the open platform as a service providing a faster and easier way to build, test, deploy and scale applications.Deploy & Scale in seconds on your choice of clouds.
As a Service: Cloud Foundry on OpenStack - Lessons LearntAnimesh Singh
According to OpenStack users survey, Cloud Foundry is the 2nd most popular workload on OpenStack. You want to deploy Cloud Foundry on OpenStack or already have. What's next?
Cloud Foundry continues to evolve with revolutionary changes, e.g move from bosh-micro to bosh-init, using the new eCPI, move to Diego etc.
Same with OpenStack, e.g changes from Keystone v2 to v3, from Liberty to Mitaka, network plugins changes etc. Both IaaS and PaaS layers are changing frequently. How do you do in-place updates/upgrades/operational tasks without impacting user experience at both the layers?
In this talk will discuss our lessons learnt operating hybrid Cloud Foundry deployments on top of OpenStack over the last two years and how we used underlying technologies to seamlessly operate them
Part 3: Enabling Continuous Delivery (Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow)VMware Tanzu
Enabling Continuous Delivery
The primary goals of this session are to:
Give a brief, platform-agnostic overview of the “why” and “what” of Continuous Delivery. The purpose is to simply educate the student and bring everyone to the same level.
Explain how Cloud Foundry benefits Continuous Delivery.
Provide a hands-on lab experience where the student takes a Spring Boot microservice application and builds a continuous delivery pipeline for it using Jenkins, Artifactory, and Cloud Foundry. This is all done using free trial SaaS versions of the software.
Pivotal Cloud Platform Roadshow is coming to a city near you!
Join Pivotal technologists and learn how to build and deploy great software on a modern cloud platform. Find your city and register now http://bit.ly/1poA6PG
Moving at the speed of startup with Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11VMware Tanzu
Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11 is now generally available. Join Jared Ruckle and Pieter Humphrey for a deeper look at new capabilities, along with a Q&A about many of the new product features, including:
CredHub Bootstrapping
- A new way to manage and secure credentials for Pivotal Cloud Foundry
Container Networking
- Create app-level security policies and run modern apps in a "zero trust" environment
Volume Services
- Bring stateful apps to Pivotal Cloud Foundry
New Spring Boot Actuator
- Integrations with Apps Manager to ease troubleshooting
PCF Metrics 1.4
- New custom metrics tracking as a result of a tighter integration with Spring Boot
Attend this webinar and learn how to get the most from the enhancements to Pivotal Cloud Foundry 1.11, the leading multi-cloud app development platform.
Presenter : Jared Ruckle, Mukesh Gadiya and Pieter Humphrey, Pivotal
https://content.pivotal.io/webinars/jul-19-pivotal-cloud-foundry-1-11-credhub-container-networking-spring-boot-actuator-webinar
Service Discovery and Registration in a Microservices ArchitecturePLUMgrid
Microservices, Service Discovery and Registration have been heading towards the peak of inflated expectations on the Gartner Hype cycle for over the last year or so, but there has often been a lack of clarity as to what these are, why are they needed or how to implement them well.
Service discovery and registration are key components of most distributed systems and service oriented architectures. In this session we will talk about what, why and how of service registration and discovery in distributed systems in general and OpenStack in particular.
We will talk about some of the technologies that address this challenge like Zookeeper, Etcd, Consul, Mesos-DNS, Minuteman, SkyDNS, SmartStack or Eureka. We will also address how these technologies as well as existing OpenStack projects can be used to solve this problem inside OpenStack environments.
A proper Microservice is designed for fast failure.
Like other architectural style, microservices bring costs and benefits. Some development teams have found microservices architectural style to be a superior approach to a monolithic architecture. Other teams have found them to be a productivity-sapping burden.
This material start with the basic what and why microservice, follow with the Felix example and the the successful strategies to develop microservice application.
Its Finally Here! Building Complex Streaming Analytics Apps in under 10 min w...DataWorks Summit
Imagine if you could build and deploy an end to end complex streaming analytics app on a streaming engine like Storm or Flink that did the following:
1. Joining Streams
2. Aggregations over Windows (Time or Count based)
3. Complex Event Processing
4. Pattern Matching
5. Model scoring.
Now imagine implementing and deploying this without writing a single line of code in under 10 mins.
Imagine no more; it is indeed here. In this talk, we will discuss an exciting open source project led by Hortonworks on building and deploying streaming applications using a drag and drop paradigm.
Unvired Digital Enterprise Platform- WhitepaperUnvired Inc.
Unvired Digital Enterprise Platform (UDEP) is a mobility, offline, digitization and integration platform to create the Digital Enterprise easily and affordably. Mobilize business processes and data from various enterprise backend systems to all leading mobile devices (smartphones and tablets) and Web. Unvired Digital Enterprise Platform (UDEP) helps Digitize Business Dashboards, Sales, Distribution, Plant Maintenance, Retail, Production, Customer Relationship Management, Finance, HR and other processes using UDEP. Build rich HTML5 apps once and deploy them online (web) and offline (mobile), true build once deploy anywhere!
Unvired understands that customers would like to minimize the number of platforms that are run in their enterprises. Our customers have demanded a single platform that can meet all their digital, mobility and integration needs. We are proud to announce that we have achieved all these in UDEP:
Mobile Application Development Platform
Mobile Backend As A Service (MBaaS)
Offline and Conflict Resolution Framework
Internet of Things Platform
Digital Platform
Fundamental and Practice.
Explain about microservices characters and pattern. And also how to be good build microservices. And also additional the scale cube and CAP theory.
Pivotal Cloud Foundry 2.3: A First LookVMware Tanzu
Join us for a look at the capabilities of Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF) 2.3. In addition to demos and expert Q&A, we’ll review the latest features of Pivotal’s flagship app platform, including the following:
- Polyglot service discovery
- Service instance sharing
- Operations manager improvements
- New pathways protected by TLS
- Spring Cloud Services 2.0
- Improvements to PAS for Windows and Steeltoe.io
We’ll also review PKS updates for Pivotal’s Kubernetes service. Attend this session with Jared Ruckle and Pieter Humphrey to learn how PCF helps your peers build better software.
Presenters : Pieter Humphrey & Jared Ruckle, Pivotal
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
Let's dive deeper into the world of ODC! Ricardo Alves (OutSystems) will join us to tell all about the new Data Fabric. After that, Sezen de Bruijn (OutSystems) will get into the details on how to best design a sturdy architecture within ODC.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
Slack (or Teams) Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Soluti...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on the notifications, alerts, and approval requests using Slack for Bonterra Impact Management. The solutions covered in this webinar can also be deployed for Microsoft Teams.
Interested in deploying notification automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Search and Society: Reimagining Information Access for Radical FuturesBhaskar Mitra
The field of Information retrieval (IR) is currently undergoing a transformative shift, at least partly due to the emerging applications of generative AI to information access. In this talk, we will deliberate on the sociotechnical implications of generative AI for information access. We will argue that there is both a critical necessity and an exciting opportunity for the IR community to re-center our research agendas on societal needs while dismantling the artificial separation between the work on fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics in IR and the rest of IR research. Instead of adopting a reactionary strategy of trying to mitigate potential social harms from emerging technologies, the community should aim to proactively set the research agenda for the kinds of systems we should build inspired by diverse explicitly stated sociotechnical imaginaries. The sociotechnical imaginaries that underpin the design and development of information access technologies needs to be explicitly articulated, and we need to develop theories of change in context of these diverse perspectives. Our guiding future imaginaries must be informed by other academic fields, such as democratic theory and critical theory, and should be co-developed with social science scholars, legal scholars, civil rights and social justice activists, and artists, among others.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.
Cloud Foundry PaaSAn application runs in a DEA, which is a droplet execution agent. The Cloud Controller orchestrates the routing and lifecycle of all DEAs in the pool. Routers manage application traffic. Health Manager reports mismatched application states to the CC. A servicegateway provides an interface for services (native or external). A messaging bus manages all system communication. Apps are accessed directly through the router while web and CLI clients (e.g., vmc, STS) access Cloud Controller via RESTful services.