Docker, cornerstone of an hybrid cloud?Adrien Blind
In this presentation, I propose to explore the orchestration & hybridation potential raised by Docker 1.12 Swarm Mode and the subsequent benefits.
I'll first remind why docker fits well the microservices paradigms, and how does this architecture engender new challenges : service discovery, app-centric security, scalability & resilience, and of course, orchestration.
I'll then discuss the opportunity to create your own docker CaaS platform hybridating simultaneously on various cloud vendors & traditional datacenters, better than just leveraging on vendors integrated offers.
Finally, I'll discuss the rise of new technologies (Windows containers, ARM architectures) in the docker landscape, and the opportunity of integrating them in a global docker composite orchestration, enabling to depict globally complex apps.
Docker: Redistributing DevOps cards, on the way to PaaSAdrien Blind
This talk first presents Docker through its key characteristics: being Portable, Disposable, Live, Social. It then discusses a new type of cloud, the CaaS (Container as a Service), and it potential benefits for PaaS (Platform as a Service).
The missing piece : when Docker networking and services finally unleashes so...Adrien Blind
Docker now provides several building blocks, combining engine, clustering, and componentization, while the new networking and service features enable many new usecases such as multi-tenancy. In this session, you will first discover the new experimental networking and service features expected soon, and then drift rapidly to software architecture, explaining how a complete Docker stack unleashes microservices paradigms.
The first part of the talk will introduce what SDNs and service registries are to the audience and will cover corresponding network & service experimental features of docker accordingly, with a technical focus. For instance, it explains how to create an overlay network of top of a swarm cluster or how to publish services.
The second part of the talk moves from infrastructure to application concerns, explaining that application architecture paradigms are shifting. In particular, we discuss the growing porosity of companies’s IS (especially due to massive use of cloud services) drifting security boundaries from the global IS perimeter, to the application shape. We also remind that traditional SOA patterns leveraging on buses (ie. ESBs & ETLs) are being replaced by microservices promoting more direct, full-mesh, interactions. To get the picture really complete, we’ll also rapidely remind other trends and shifts which are already covered by other docker components: scalability & resiliency to be supported by the apps themselves, fine-grained applications, or even infrastructure commoditization…
Most of all, the last part depicts a concrete, state-of-the-art application, applying all the properties discussed previously, and leveraging on a multi-tenant docker full stack using new networking and services features, in addition to traditional swarm, compose, and engine components. And just because we say it doesn’t mean it’s true, we’ll be happy to demonstrate this live !
Since many apps are not about just a single container, this talk discusses the ability and benefits of creating an hybrid Docker cluster capacity leveraging on Linux+Windows OS and x86+ARM architectures.
Moreover, the docker nodes composing this cloud will be hosted across several providers (local DC, cloud vendors such as Azure or AWS), in order to face various scenarios (cloud migration, elasticity...).
This presentation discusses how to achieve continuous delivery, leveraging on docker containers, here used as universal application artifacts. It has been presented at Voxxed '15 Bucharest.
Docker, cornerstone of cloud hybridation ? [Cloud Expo Europe 2016]Adrien Blind
The following talk discusses the opportunity to leverage on docker to create an hybrid logical cloud built simultaneously on top of traditionnal datacenters and public cloud vendors and enabling to manage new kind of containers (Windows, linux over ARM). It also discusses the value of such capacity for applications in a contexte of topology orchestrations and micro service oriented applications.
Docker Cap Gemini CloudXperience 2017 - la revolution des conteneurs logicielsPatrick Chanezon
Si vous avez raté le début : Patrick Chanezon, un des pionniers du Cloud chez Google, VMware, Microsoft et Docker, vous raconte la révolution des conteneurs logiciels en quelques films ; comment ils accélèrent l'adoption du Cloud en entreprise, avec des architectures hybride et multi, la mise en place de démarches agiles et DevOps pour moderniser les applications existantes et réduire les coûts d'infrastructure, et permettent de nouveaux cas d'utilisation dans l'internet des objets et l'intelligence artificielle.
En bref, comment expliquer la stratégie des opérateurs du Cloud avec des films de science- fiction ? C’est le défi que va relever Patrick Chanezon, évangéliste chez Docker.
Unleash software architecture leveraging on dockerAdrien Blind
The following talk first comes back on key aspects of microservices architectures. It then shifts to Docker, to explain in this context the benefits of containers and especially the new orchestration features appeared with version 1.12.
Docker, cornerstone of an hybrid cloud?Adrien Blind
In this presentation, I propose to explore the orchestration & hybridation potential raised by Docker 1.12 Swarm Mode and the subsequent benefits.
I'll first remind why docker fits well the microservices paradigms, and how does this architecture engender new challenges : service discovery, app-centric security, scalability & resilience, and of course, orchestration.
I'll then discuss the opportunity to create your own docker CaaS platform hybridating simultaneously on various cloud vendors & traditional datacenters, better than just leveraging on vendors integrated offers.
Finally, I'll discuss the rise of new technologies (Windows containers, ARM architectures) in the docker landscape, and the opportunity of integrating them in a global docker composite orchestration, enabling to depict globally complex apps.
Docker: Redistributing DevOps cards, on the way to PaaSAdrien Blind
This talk first presents Docker through its key characteristics: being Portable, Disposable, Live, Social. It then discusses a new type of cloud, the CaaS (Container as a Service), and it potential benefits for PaaS (Platform as a Service).
The missing piece : when Docker networking and services finally unleashes so...Adrien Blind
Docker now provides several building blocks, combining engine, clustering, and componentization, while the new networking and service features enable many new usecases such as multi-tenancy. In this session, you will first discover the new experimental networking and service features expected soon, and then drift rapidly to software architecture, explaining how a complete Docker stack unleashes microservices paradigms.
The first part of the talk will introduce what SDNs and service registries are to the audience and will cover corresponding network & service experimental features of docker accordingly, with a technical focus. For instance, it explains how to create an overlay network of top of a swarm cluster or how to publish services.
The second part of the talk moves from infrastructure to application concerns, explaining that application architecture paradigms are shifting. In particular, we discuss the growing porosity of companies’s IS (especially due to massive use of cloud services) drifting security boundaries from the global IS perimeter, to the application shape. We also remind that traditional SOA patterns leveraging on buses (ie. ESBs & ETLs) are being replaced by microservices promoting more direct, full-mesh, interactions. To get the picture really complete, we’ll also rapidely remind other trends and shifts which are already covered by other docker components: scalability & resiliency to be supported by the apps themselves, fine-grained applications, or even infrastructure commoditization…
Most of all, the last part depicts a concrete, state-of-the-art application, applying all the properties discussed previously, and leveraging on a multi-tenant docker full stack using new networking and services features, in addition to traditional swarm, compose, and engine components. And just because we say it doesn’t mean it’s true, we’ll be happy to demonstrate this live !
Since many apps are not about just a single container, this talk discusses the ability and benefits of creating an hybrid Docker cluster capacity leveraging on Linux+Windows OS and x86+ARM architectures.
Moreover, the docker nodes composing this cloud will be hosted across several providers (local DC, cloud vendors such as Azure or AWS), in order to face various scenarios (cloud migration, elasticity...).
This presentation discusses how to achieve continuous delivery, leveraging on docker containers, here used as universal application artifacts. It has been presented at Voxxed '15 Bucharest.
Docker, cornerstone of cloud hybridation ? [Cloud Expo Europe 2016]Adrien Blind
The following talk discusses the opportunity to leverage on docker to create an hybrid logical cloud built simultaneously on top of traditionnal datacenters and public cloud vendors and enabling to manage new kind of containers (Windows, linux over ARM). It also discusses the value of such capacity for applications in a contexte of topology orchestrations and micro service oriented applications.
Docker Cap Gemini CloudXperience 2017 - la revolution des conteneurs logicielsPatrick Chanezon
Si vous avez raté le début : Patrick Chanezon, un des pionniers du Cloud chez Google, VMware, Microsoft et Docker, vous raconte la révolution des conteneurs logiciels en quelques films ; comment ils accélèrent l'adoption du Cloud en entreprise, avec des architectures hybride et multi, la mise en place de démarches agiles et DevOps pour moderniser les applications existantes et réduire les coûts d'infrastructure, et permettent de nouveaux cas d'utilisation dans l'internet des objets et l'intelligence artificielle.
En bref, comment expliquer la stratégie des opérateurs du Cloud avec des films de science- fiction ? C’est le défi que va relever Patrick Chanezon, évangéliste chez Docker.
Unleash software architecture leveraging on dockerAdrien Blind
The following talk first comes back on key aspects of microservices architectures. It then shifts to Docker, to explain in this context the benefits of containers and especially the new orchestration features appeared with version 1.12.
Docker moves very fast, with an edge channel released every month and a stable release every 3 months. Patrick will talk about how Docker introduced Docker EE and a certification program for containers and plugins with Docker CE and EE 17.03 (from March), the announcements from DockerCon (April), and the many new features planned for Docker CE 17.05 in May.
This talk will be about what's new in Docker and what's next on the roadmap
Oscon 2017: Build your own container-based system with the Moby projectPatrick Chanezon
Build your own container-based system
with the Moby project
Docker Community Edition—an open source product that lets you build, ship, and run containers—is an assembly of modular components built from an upstream open source project called Moby. Moby provides a “Lego set” of dozens of components, the framework for assembling them into specialized container-based systems, and a place for all container enthusiasts to experiment and exchange ideas.
Patrick Chanezon and Mindy Preston explain how you can leverage the Moby project to assemble your own specialized container-based system, whether for IoT, cloud, or bare-metal scenarios. Patrick and Mindy explore Moby’s framework, components, and tooling, focusing on two components: LinuxKit, a toolkit to build container-based Linux subsystems that are secure, lean, and portable, and InfraKit, a toolkit for creating and managing declarative, self-healing infrastructure. Along the way, they demo how to use Moby, LinuxKit, InfraKit, and other components to quickly assemble full-blown container-based systems for several use cases and deploy them on various infrastructures.
Docker Engine laid the foundation for a paradigm shift in software development with containers. Come and learn about the history of Docker Engine, current architecture, evolution of containerd and future direction of Docker Engine. This talk will explore the following: • Latest features of Docker Engine including enhancements around Build • Relationship between Docker Engine and containerd and the common building blocks across them, with a deep dive into the Engine Architecture • Differences between the Community and Enterprise Engines • Highlight areas of innovation and future direction
Presented at DockerCon 2018 EU, I go through using Docker and the Swarm Orchestrator (a simpler Kuberentes) to stack different tools up from the base OS to a full-featured production server cluster. Also, Sci-Fi. The Video to this deck will be at https://www.bretfisher.com/docker once they are posted.
DevOps Days Boston 2017: Developer first workflows for KubernetesAmbassador Labs
Kubernetes is a powerful, operational platform for containerized applications. However, the developer workflow on Kubernetes – how you code, deploy, update, and monitor your services – is much less mature.
How should you lay out your Git repo? How do you create loosely coupled services? How do you support deploying your service at any time?
In this talk, we’ll talk about these questions and more. We’ll discuss the journey towards a rapid development workflow, discuss best practices, and, talk about the process we followed to get to a rapid development workflow.
DevOps Days Boston 2017
Singularity happened. Machines have risen. Skynet, the massively distributed AI will soon expand its grip and its army of robots will spread across the whole planet. Fortunately, a great ape army is standing across their way to put an end to this supremacy of steel.
The battle will be epic!
On one side we have Skynet, an automated, self-healed, hybrid Docker platform and skynet application that has become indestructible. Playing the army of Apes, is a dedicated platform hosting Netflix's Simian Army and other flavors.
Will Skynet resists the relentless assaults of the great ape army?
Through this fantasy, we'll first cover all the technologies concretely used to set up the platforms and run the battle (linuxkit, infrakit, & swarm mode, and even raspberry devices among others), while we'll step back in the second part to address the subsequent architecture stakes involved: reliability, scalability, edge computing, immutability, microservices, hybridization, distributed storage. Most of all, you'll understand the importance of the synergies implied between the platforms and the app's design to achieve such a result.
How to build an event-driven, polyglot serverless microservices framework on ...Animesh Singh
Serverless cloud platforms are a major trend in 2016. Following on from Amazon’s Lambda service, released last year, this year has seen Google, IBM and Microsoft all launch their own solutions. Serverless microservices are executed on-demand, in milliseconds, rather than having to sit idle waiting. Users pay only for the raw computation time used.
In this talk detail how to build a distributed serverless, event-driven, microservices framework on OpenStack
Docker provides PODA (Package Once Deploy Anywhere) and complements WORA (Write Once Run Anywhere) provided by Java. It also helps you reduce the impedance mismatch between dev, test, and production environment and simplifies Java application deployment.
This session will explain how to:
* Run your first Java application with Docker
* Package your Java application with Docker
* Share your Java application using Docker Hub
* Deploy your Java application using Maven
* Deploy your application using Docker for AWS
* Scale Java services with Docker Engine swarm mode
* Package your multi-container application and use service discovery
* Monitor your Docker + Java applications
* Build a deployment pipeline using common tools
DCEU 18: How To Build Your Containerization StrategyDocker, Inc.
Lee Namba - EMEA Professional Services Manager, Docker
The Docker Enterprise container platform helps organizations deploy and manage applications faster and it secures the application pipeline at a lower cost than traditional application delivery models. But it takes more than just great technology to achieve the desired results. The organization and culture of your enterprise directly impacts what you transform, how it’s done, and who does it. Success requires a strategy for how you will govern the container platform environment, how to assess your application estate, what your delivery pipeline will look like, and how to ensure developers, operators, security teams and others play nicely together. In this talk I will cover topics such as different types of workloads (legacy, microservices, FaaS, big data and more), how your org chart can influence whether you deploy CaaS (Containers as a Service) vs CLaaS (Clusters as a Service), how "shifting left" can determine if you can outsource, centralized vs distributed CI/CD and how containers play a role, transforming your pets into cattle, how giant whale balloons are used for onboarding, and a prescriptive and comprehensive methodology for successfully deploying containers into your enterprise.
Docker Orchestration: Welcome to the Jungle! Devoxx & Docker Meetup Tour Nov ...Patrick Chanezon
In two years, Docker hit the sweet spot for devs and ops, with tools for building, shipping, and running distributed apps architected as a set of collaborating microservices packaged as Linux containers. One area of the Docker ecosystem that saw a lot of innovation in the past year is container orchestration systems. This session compares and contrasts various Docker orchestration systems (Swarm, Machine, and Compose), the batteries included with Docker itself, Mesos, Kubernetes, CoreOS/Fleet, Deis, Cloud Foundry, and Tutum. It includes a demo of how to deploy a Java 8 app with MongoDB on several of these systems. The goal of the session is to give you a framework to help evaluate how these systems can meet your particular requirements.
Demo code at https://github.com/chanezon/docker-tips/blob/master/orchestration-networking/README.md
Docker Bday #5, SF Edition: Introduction to DockerDocker, Inc.
In celebration of Docker's 5th birthday in March, user groups all around the world hosted birthday events with an introduction to Docker presentation and hands-on-labs. We invited Docker users to recognize where they were on their Docker journey and the goal was to help them take the next step of their journey with the help of mentors. This presentation was done at the beginning of the events (this one is from the San Francisco event in HQ) and gives a run down of the birthday event series, Docker's momentum, a basic explanation of containers, the benefits of using the Docker platform, Docker + Kubernetes and more.
AtlanTEC 2017: Containers! Why Docker, Why NOW?Phil Estes
A talk given at the AtlanTEC festival/conference (http://atlantec.ie/#atlantec-conference) in Galway, Ireland on Thursday, May 25th, 2017. This talk provides the background of how container popularity exploded in the past few years, the impact of Docker to this ecosystem, and why containers are interesting for developers and the enterprise in 2017.
It’s the first breakout after the keynote and you need to know more about all the latest and greatest Docker announcements. We've got you covered! In this session, the Docker team will go deeper, looking into what's new with Docker, demoing the latest features and answering your questions.
Immutable Awesomeness by John Willis and Josh CormanDocker, Inc.
This presentation will show the combination of two ideas that can create 2 to 3 order of magnitude efficiencies in service delivery. We will discuss an example used in an insurance company that has experienced these efficiencies. Josh Corman will present the concept of using Open Source and Toyota Supply Chain principles as a weapon for eliminating operational costs of service delivery. By applying first order principles like fewer suppliers (e.g, less logging frameworks) and image manifests (i.e., bill of materials) he will show how an organization can cut down on bugs and issue resolution times. John Willis will then cover how these principles fit like peanut butter and chocolate when used in an immutable delivery model based on Docker. This presentation was the third highest rated session at the 2015 Devops Enterprise Summit.
Your developers just walked into your cube and said: "Here's the new app, I built it with Docker, and it's ready to go live." What do you do next? In this session, we'll talk about what containers are and what they are not. And we'll step through a series of considerations that need to be examined when deploying containerized workloads - VMs or Container? Bare Metal or Cloud? What about capacity planning? Security? Disaster Recovery? How do I even get started?
When Docker Engine 1.12 features unleashes software architectureAdrien Blind
This slidedeck deals with new features delivered with Docker Engine 1.12, in a larger context of application architecture & security. It has been presented at Voxxed Days Luxembourg 2016
Docker moves very fast, with an edge channel released every month and a stable release every 3 months. Patrick will talk about how Docker introduced Docker EE and a certification program for containers and plugins with Docker CE and EE 17.03 (from March), the announcements from DockerCon (April), and the many new features planned for Docker CE 17.05 in May.
This talk will be about what's new in Docker and what's next on the roadmap
Oscon 2017: Build your own container-based system with the Moby projectPatrick Chanezon
Build your own container-based system
with the Moby project
Docker Community Edition—an open source product that lets you build, ship, and run containers—is an assembly of modular components built from an upstream open source project called Moby. Moby provides a “Lego set” of dozens of components, the framework for assembling them into specialized container-based systems, and a place for all container enthusiasts to experiment and exchange ideas.
Patrick Chanezon and Mindy Preston explain how you can leverage the Moby project to assemble your own specialized container-based system, whether for IoT, cloud, or bare-metal scenarios. Patrick and Mindy explore Moby’s framework, components, and tooling, focusing on two components: LinuxKit, a toolkit to build container-based Linux subsystems that are secure, lean, and portable, and InfraKit, a toolkit for creating and managing declarative, self-healing infrastructure. Along the way, they demo how to use Moby, LinuxKit, InfraKit, and other components to quickly assemble full-blown container-based systems for several use cases and deploy them on various infrastructures.
Docker Engine laid the foundation for a paradigm shift in software development with containers. Come and learn about the history of Docker Engine, current architecture, evolution of containerd and future direction of Docker Engine. This talk will explore the following: • Latest features of Docker Engine including enhancements around Build • Relationship between Docker Engine and containerd and the common building blocks across them, with a deep dive into the Engine Architecture • Differences between the Community and Enterprise Engines • Highlight areas of innovation and future direction
Presented at DockerCon 2018 EU, I go through using Docker and the Swarm Orchestrator (a simpler Kuberentes) to stack different tools up from the base OS to a full-featured production server cluster. Also, Sci-Fi. The Video to this deck will be at https://www.bretfisher.com/docker once they are posted.
DevOps Days Boston 2017: Developer first workflows for KubernetesAmbassador Labs
Kubernetes is a powerful, operational platform for containerized applications. However, the developer workflow on Kubernetes – how you code, deploy, update, and monitor your services – is much less mature.
How should you lay out your Git repo? How do you create loosely coupled services? How do you support deploying your service at any time?
In this talk, we’ll talk about these questions and more. We’ll discuss the journey towards a rapid development workflow, discuss best practices, and, talk about the process we followed to get to a rapid development workflow.
DevOps Days Boston 2017
Singularity happened. Machines have risen. Skynet, the massively distributed AI will soon expand its grip and its army of robots will spread across the whole planet. Fortunately, a great ape army is standing across their way to put an end to this supremacy of steel.
The battle will be epic!
On one side we have Skynet, an automated, self-healed, hybrid Docker platform and skynet application that has become indestructible. Playing the army of Apes, is a dedicated platform hosting Netflix's Simian Army and other flavors.
Will Skynet resists the relentless assaults of the great ape army?
Through this fantasy, we'll first cover all the technologies concretely used to set up the platforms and run the battle (linuxkit, infrakit, & swarm mode, and even raspberry devices among others), while we'll step back in the second part to address the subsequent architecture stakes involved: reliability, scalability, edge computing, immutability, microservices, hybridization, distributed storage. Most of all, you'll understand the importance of the synergies implied between the platforms and the app's design to achieve such a result.
How to build an event-driven, polyglot serverless microservices framework on ...Animesh Singh
Serverless cloud platforms are a major trend in 2016. Following on from Amazon’s Lambda service, released last year, this year has seen Google, IBM and Microsoft all launch their own solutions. Serverless microservices are executed on-demand, in milliseconds, rather than having to sit idle waiting. Users pay only for the raw computation time used.
In this talk detail how to build a distributed serverless, event-driven, microservices framework on OpenStack
Docker provides PODA (Package Once Deploy Anywhere) and complements WORA (Write Once Run Anywhere) provided by Java. It also helps you reduce the impedance mismatch between dev, test, and production environment and simplifies Java application deployment.
This session will explain how to:
* Run your first Java application with Docker
* Package your Java application with Docker
* Share your Java application using Docker Hub
* Deploy your Java application using Maven
* Deploy your application using Docker for AWS
* Scale Java services with Docker Engine swarm mode
* Package your multi-container application and use service discovery
* Monitor your Docker + Java applications
* Build a deployment pipeline using common tools
DCEU 18: How To Build Your Containerization StrategyDocker, Inc.
Lee Namba - EMEA Professional Services Manager, Docker
The Docker Enterprise container platform helps organizations deploy and manage applications faster and it secures the application pipeline at a lower cost than traditional application delivery models. But it takes more than just great technology to achieve the desired results. The organization and culture of your enterprise directly impacts what you transform, how it’s done, and who does it. Success requires a strategy for how you will govern the container platform environment, how to assess your application estate, what your delivery pipeline will look like, and how to ensure developers, operators, security teams and others play nicely together. In this talk I will cover topics such as different types of workloads (legacy, microservices, FaaS, big data and more), how your org chart can influence whether you deploy CaaS (Containers as a Service) vs CLaaS (Clusters as a Service), how "shifting left" can determine if you can outsource, centralized vs distributed CI/CD and how containers play a role, transforming your pets into cattle, how giant whale balloons are used for onboarding, and a prescriptive and comprehensive methodology for successfully deploying containers into your enterprise.
Docker Orchestration: Welcome to the Jungle! Devoxx & Docker Meetup Tour Nov ...Patrick Chanezon
In two years, Docker hit the sweet spot for devs and ops, with tools for building, shipping, and running distributed apps architected as a set of collaborating microservices packaged as Linux containers. One area of the Docker ecosystem that saw a lot of innovation in the past year is container orchestration systems. This session compares and contrasts various Docker orchestration systems (Swarm, Machine, and Compose), the batteries included with Docker itself, Mesos, Kubernetes, CoreOS/Fleet, Deis, Cloud Foundry, and Tutum. It includes a demo of how to deploy a Java 8 app with MongoDB on several of these systems. The goal of the session is to give you a framework to help evaluate how these systems can meet your particular requirements.
Demo code at https://github.com/chanezon/docker-tips/blob/master/orchestration-networking/README.md
Docker Bday #5, SF Edition: Introduction to DockerDocker, Inc.
In celebration of Docker's 5th birthday in March, user groups all around the world hosted birthday events with an introduction to Docker presentation and hands-on-labs. We invited Docker users to recognize where they were on their Docker journey and the goal was to help them take the next step of their journey with the help of mentors. This presentation was done at the beginning of the events (this one is from the San Francisco event in HQ) and gives a run down of the birthday event series, Docker's momentum, a basic explanation of containers, the benefits of using the Docker platform, Docker + Kubernetes and more.
AtlanTEC 2017: Containers! Why Docker, Why NOW?Phil Estes
A talk given at the AtlanTEC festival/conference (http://atlantec.ie/#atlantec-conference) in Galway, Ireland on Thursday, May 25th, 2017. This talk provides the background of how container popularity exploded in the past few years, the impact of Docker to this ecosystem, and why containers are interesting for developers and the enterprise in 2017.
It’s the first breakout after the keynote and you need to know more about all the latest and greatest Docker announcements. We've got you covered! In this session, the Docker team will go deeper, looking into what's new with Docker, demoing the latest features and answering your questions.
Immutable Awesomeness by John Willis and Josh CormanDocker, Inc.
This presentation will show the combination of two ideas that can create 2 to 3 order of magnitude efficiencies in service delivery. We will discuss an example used in an insurance company that has experienced these efficiencies. Josh Corman will present the concept of using Open Source and Toyota Supply Chain principles as a weapon for eliminating operational costs of service delivery. By applying first order principles like fewer suppliers (e.g, less logging frameworks) and image manifests (i.e., bill of materials) he will show how an organization can cut down on bugs and issue resolution times. John Willis will then cover how these principles fit like peanut butter and chocolate when used in an immutable delivery model based on Docker. This presentation was the third highest rated session at the 2015 Devops Enterprise Summit.
Your developers just walked into your cube and said: "Here's the new app, I built it with Docker, and it's ready to go live." What do you do next? In this session, we'll talk about what containers are and what they are not. And we'll step through a series of considerations that need to be examined when deploying containerized workloads - VMs or Container? Bare Metal or Cloud? What about capacity planning? Security? Disaster Recovery? How do I even get started?
When Docker Engine 1.12 features unleashes software architectureAdrien Blind
This slidedeck deals with new features delivered with Docker Engine 1.12, in a larger context of application architecture & security. It has been presented at Voxxed Days Luxembourg 2016
Docker, Pierre angulaire du continuous delivery ?Adrien Blind
This presentation explores continuous delivery principles leveraging on Docker : it depicts the use of Docker containers as universal application artifacts, delivered flowly all along a deployment pipeline.
This slideshow has been initially presented at Devops D-Day conference, Marseille.
Introduction to Unikernels at first Paris Unikernels meetupAdrien Blind
This is an introduction to unikernels and their impact on architecture and IT organizations (in French, I'll translate it in short terms). I produced this talk for the first Paris Unikernels Meetup.
Identity & Access Management in the cloudAdrien Blind
This presentation discusses the evolution of IAM (Identity & Access Management) problematic, considering a context pushing more & more externalization & opening (B2B, B2C) of enterprises IS, also leveraging massively on the cloud.
The talk particularly focuses on IAM SSO & federation topics, and subsequent technologies (SAML, OpenID, OAuth...).
2 self-managed Docker clusters deployed on public clouds and fight each other in a ruthless battle. One has been designed to resist any form of threat. The other one's only aim is to destroy the first one. Who's going to win?
Although it's presented as an entertainment, this talk will show off two serious platforms leveraging on different principles. Beyond the technical aspects covered (swarm/kubernetes orchestration, IaaS clouds, various tools such as terraform, kops or helm) , it will be the opportunity to discuss more largely architecture topics such as immutable infrastructure, hybridation, microservices, etc.
Petit déjeuner Octo - L'infra au service de ses projetsAdrien Blind
Cette présentation revient sur le projet d'automatisation de l'infrastructure informatique de Société Générale, dans un contexte plus large de déploiement des pratiques et outils du continuous delivery et devops.
DevOps, NoOps, everything-as-code, commoditisation… Quel futur pour les ops ?Adrien Blind
La mise en oeuvre du continuous delivery engendre de nouvelles pressions sur les Ops, l’infra et l’opérabilité d’une application se bâtissant désormais au rythme croissant des itérations livrées. En parallèle, les patterns d’architecture évoluent eux aussi : résilience et scalabilité se traitent désormais de plus en plus au sein même des applications, ramenant progressivement l’infrastructure au rang de commodité… Enfin, les équipes de Devs n’ont de cesse de réclamer plus d’autonomie et une ergonomie plus adaptée à leurs besoins : les acteurs du cloud et de solutions star comme Docker ne s’y sont pas trompés en proposant des produits qui leur parlent directement : la tentation du NoOps grandit peu à peu…
L’enjeu pour les Ops consiste donc à proposer un positionnement et une offre en résonance avec ces nouvelles attentes. Les challenges sont nombreux, revêtant à la fois des aspects techniques (infra-as-code, software-defined-software/storage/, hybridation du SI…) et non techniques (agilité, craftsmanship, devops…).
Des Devs s’arrogeant la place des Ops, des Ops acquérant des compétence de Dev… Dans cette session, nous vous proposons ainsi d’explorer ces profondes mutations culturelles et techniques, et nous vous partagerons quelques recettes pour le plus grand bénéfice des OPs… comme des DEVs. Comme l’écrivait Audiard, « Quand ça change, ça change... Faut jamais se laisser démonter » !
DevOps à l'échelle: ce que l'on a fait, ce que l'on a appris chez Societe Gen...Adrien Blind
The following talk discusses Societe Generale's transformation journey to DevOps, and more largelly to continuous delivery principles, inside a large, traditionnal company. It emphases the importance of practices over tooling, a human centric approach massively leveraging on coaching, and our "framework" approach to make it scaling up to the IS level.
It has been initially delivered at DevOps Rex conference, with teammate Laurent Dussault, also DevOps coach at Societe Generale.
DevOps at scale: what we did, what we learned at Societe GeneraleAdrien Blind
The following talk discusses Societe Generale's transformation journey to DevOps, and more largelly to continuous delivery principles, inside a large, traditionnal company. It emphases the importance of practices over tooling, a human centric approach massively leveraging on coaching, and our "framework" approach to make it scaling up to the IS level.
It has been initially delivered at DevOps Rex conference, with teammate Laurent Dussault, also DevOps coach at Societe Generale.
Docker networking basics & coupling with Software Defined NetworksAdrien Blind
This presentation reminds Docker networking, exposes Software Defined Network basic paradigms, and then proposes a mixed-up implementation taking benefits of a coupled use of these two technologies. Implementation model proposed could be a good starting point to create multi-tenant PaaS platforms.
As a bonus, OpenStack Neutron internal design is presented.
You can also have a look on our previous presentation related to enterprise patterns for Docker:
http://fr.slideshare.net/ArnaudMAZIN/docker-meetup-paris-enterprise-docker
Kubo (Cloud Foundry Container Platform): Your Gateway Drug to Cloud-nativecornelia davis
You’re at the Cloud Foundry Summit, which means you are by definition a cloud-native enthusiast. There’s no question that building apps in this architectural style will produce resilient, scalable software in an agile manner, and allow you to operate it far more efficiently than you’ve been able to in the past. But you’ve also got a whole lot of software in your company’s portfolio that isn’t there yet. Do you have to resign yourself to the pains of managing those applications the old way until you can finally refactor them to be cloud-native? Kubo to the rescue.
You can run legacy applications on Kubo without significant refactoring – pure and simple. As an added bonus, it allows you to satisfy the CIO mandate of running containers (check). But it’s far more than that – running those workloads on Kubo offers advantages over running them on traditional virtualized infrastructure. This session covers those advantages –resource consolidation, health management, multi-cloud and more. It will also present the abstractions in Kubernetes, things like pods and stateful sets, that support running legacy workloads in the cloud environments that are far more distributed and changing than they have been in the past. It’s a first step to cloud-native.
Kubo (Cloud Foundry Container Platform): Your Gateway Drug to Cloud-nativeVMware Tanzu
You’re at the Cloud Foundry Summit, which means you are by definition a cloud-native enthusiast. There’s no question that building apps in this architectural style will produce resilient, scalable software in an agile manner, and allow you to operate it far more efficiently than you’ve been able to in the past. But you’ve also got a whole lot of software in your company’s portfolio that isn’t there yet. Do you have to resign yourself to the pains of managing those applications the old way until you can finally refactor them to be cloud-native? Kubo to the rescue.
You can run legacy applications on Kubo without significant refactoring – pure and simple. As an added bonus, it allows you to satisfy the CIO mandate of running containers (check). But it’s far more than that – running those workloads on Kubo offers advantages over running them on traditional virtualized infrastructure. This session covers those advantages –resource consolidation, health management, multi-cloud and more. It will also present the abstractions in Kubernetes, things like pods and stateful sets, that support running legacy workloads in the cloud environments that are far more distributed and changing than they have been in the past. It’s a first step to cloud-native.
Moving from Legacy Development Tools to transformative DevOps with Enterprise...Infostretch
DevOps is a movement, a vision and a series of processes. But at its core, the right technology needs to be in place to make it a coordinated and efficient practice. In this webinar, we discuss the challenges related to a number of legacy tools and why it makes sense to upgrade to more complete toolsets. Join us as we discuss the strategic gains and day-to-day improvements that can be realized from deploying enterprise scale continuous delivery with CloudBees Jenkins Platform. We will also explain the practicalities of a migration to enterprise-scale Jenkins, from planning to execution – as well as the results that enterprises can expect to gain when complete.
Attendees will learn:
- The challenges of legacy DevOps tools
- Planning a migration to newer DevOps tools
- Tips and tricks for a smooth migration
- The benefits of upgrading to the CloudBees Jenkins Platform
Presenters:
Kari Price, Director, Partner Marketing, Cloudbees
Sanil Pillai, Director, Infostretch Labs, Infostretch
Cloud system configurations and their dependencies can quickly grow into the thousands of virtual machine, network and storage components. Once software is included, the number of components can easily rise into six figures.
Frequent releases using continuous integration and deployment tools makes a repository of these components and relationships absolutely critical to cloud system integrity and quality of service no matter what cloud management tools you use.
Systems configurations are more naturally represented using a graph database than the relational representations used by traditional IT management products.
Our talk will explore how we use Neo4J to create a live, active, self-updating repository service, containing nearly all virtual hardware, network and software components and their dependencies, enabling continuous deployment in any cloud environment at scale.
Getting Started with Docker - Nick StinematesAtlassian
Docker is an open-source engine that automates the deployment of any application as a lightweight, portable, self-sufficient container that will run virtually anywhere. In this session, you will learn how to get started building your first Docker container, and how to use Docker containers to simplify your CI process.
Business and IT agility through DevOps and microservice architecture powered ...Lucas Jellema
IT needs to run in production in order to generate business value. DevOps is among other things a way of thinking focusing on production software. A business application requires a tailor made platform to generate business value. The combination of application and its platform is a DevOps product. The DevOps team has full responsibility for that product through its entire lifecycle.
The microservices architecture promises flexibility, scalability, and optimal use of compute resources. Via independent components with well-defined scope and responsibility, interface, and ownership that are evolved and managed in an automated DevOps process, this architecture leverages current technologies and hard-learned insights from past decades.
This session defines the objectives of Business with IT, of microservices and DevOps and introduces Containers and the container platform Kubernetes as crucial ingredients for making DevOps happen.
Managing Your Application Lifecycle on AWS: Continuous Integration and Deploy...Amazon Web Services
In this session you’ll learn best practices for managing your application lifecycle with these tools with a particular focus on development speed and release agility. Through interactive demonstrations, this session shows you how to get an application running using AWS Elastic Beanstalk, CloudFormation and CodeDeploy. You will also see how advanced techniques such as blue/green deployment, AMI baking, customer resources and in-place deployment reduce deployment friction and rapid change in your environment.
Large-Scale Enterprise Platform Transformation with Microservices, DevOps, an...VMware Tanzu
SpringOne Platform 2016
Speakers: Christopher Tretina; Director, Comcast & Vipul Savjani; Director of PaaS, Accenture
Comcast is embarking on a multi-year application modernization and transformation journey to achieve application resiliency, velocity and cost optimization at enterprise scale. We will discuss how we are addressing significant technical architecture, engineering, and delivery challenges faced in transformation of Comcast’s Enterprise Services Platform (ESP) from SOA architecture to Cloud-Native architecture using Microservices, DevOps, and PaaS.
Managing Your Application Lifecycle on AWS: Continuous Integration and Deploy...Amazon Web Services
AWS offers a number of services that help you easily develop, build, deploy and run applications in the cloud. In this session you’ll learn best practices for managing your application lifecycle with these tools with a particular focus on development speed and release agility. Through interactive demonstrations, this session shows you how to get an application running using AWS Elastic Beanstalk, CloudFormation and CodeDeploy. You will also see how advanced techniques such as blue/green deployment, AMI baking, customer resources and in-place deployment reduce deployment friction and rapid change in your environment.
Speaker: Adrian White, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services
DCEU 18: Desigual Transforms the In-Store Experience with Docker Enterprise C...Docker, Inc.
Mathias Kriegel - IT Operations, Desigual
Joan Anton Sances - Software Architect, Desigual
Desigual, a $1-billion-dollar fashion retailer headquartered in Barcelona, operates over 500 stores worldwide. The company is on a digital transformation journey touching every aspect of the customer experience. In this session, IT Operations and Software Architecture teams, will explain how Desigual built an in-store “assistant shopping” that transformed the customer experience adopting modern architecture models leveraging Docker Enterprise for containerization. In the session, you’ll learn: ● How Desigual is leveraging containers with Docker Enterprise, micro services, API´s, CI/CD and hybrid cloud to create an excellent customer experience. ● How to use a container platform to accelerate time-to-market for new applications. ● How Desigual changed its traditional IT operational model, focusing on bringing a PaaS like model for Developer teams, and what they learned along the way. ● How Dev and Ops teams aligned together in the process. ● How Developer productivity increased by adopting modern architecture models.
Microservices are not for everyone! If you're a small shop, a monolith provides a great amount of value and reduces the complexities involved. However as your company grows, this monolith becomes more difficult to maintain. We’ll look at how microservices allow you to easily deploy and debug atomic pieces of infrastructure which allows for increased velocity in reliable, tested, and consistent deploys. We’ll look into key metrics you can use to identify the right time to begin the transition from monolith to microservices.
[OpenInfra Days Vietnam 2019] Innovation with open sources and app modernizat...Ian Choi
- Title: Innovation with open sources and app modernization for developers
- Event: OpenInfra Days Vietnam 2019 (URL: https://2019.vietopeninfra.org )
- Presenter: Ian Choi
Italy Agriculture Equipment Market Outlook to 2027harveenkaur52
Agriculture and Animal Care
Ken Research has an expertise in Agriculture and Animal Care sector and offer vast collection of information related to all major aspects such as Agriculture equipment, Crop Protection, Seed, Agriculture Chemical, Fertilizers, Protected Cultivators, Palm Oil, Hybrid Seed, Animal Feed additives and many more.
Our continuous study and findings in agriculture sector provide better insights to companies dealing with related product and services, government and agriculture associations, researchers and students to well understand the present and expected scenario.
Our Animal care category provides solutions on Animal Healthcare and related products and services, including, animal feed additives, vaccination
2.Cellular Networks_The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting...JeyaPerumal1
A cellular network, frequently referred to as a mobile network, is a type of communication system that enables wireless communication between mobile devices. The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting the comprehensive service area into several compact zones, each called a cell.
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
Bridging the Digital Gap Brad Spiegel Macon, GA Initiative.pptxBrad Spiegel Macon GA
Brad Spiegel Macon GA’s journey exemplifies the profound impact that one individual can have on their community. Through his unwavering dedication to digital inclusion, he’s not only bridging the gap in Macon but also setting an example for others to follow.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Meet up Milano 14 _ Axpo Italia_ Migration from Mule3 (On-prem) to.pdfFlorence Consulting
Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
2. Let’s push some context
• Major CIB european bank, and so relying on a dense & complex IT
• Thousands apps & IT people
• Dozen of thousands servers
• A large technology stack
• IT split in two departments committed on different roles
• Siloted build & operation of applications
• Deliver infrastructure capabilities
@AdrienBlind
3. Ambition
“Build a simple, agile & efficient IS in a
risk controlled environment”
Carlos Goncalves, CIO
• Become a busines partner: generate more business value,
adapt to change
• Reduce TTM, strengthen reliability
• Introduced agility in our DNA for some years now (40% apps
covered)
• Engage on continuous delivery practices from end-to-end:
involve Biz, Craftmanship, DevOps, Architecture for 50% of critical apps
• Transform people (coaching, training) & toolset
@AdrienBlind
4. Focus on delivery
• Promote DevOps practices
• Feature teams engaged on the whole product lifecycle
• Automate infrastructure & application deployments
• Make environments ephemeral and elastic
@AdrienBlind
5. Leveraging on private IaaS cloud
• IaaS brings flexibility (on demand, self-service, pay-per-use)
• API centric: plug environment creation in continuous
integration
• Post-configure with a conf. mgmt tools (infra as code)
Capacity (VM, Storage…) IaaS
@AdrienBlind
6. Leveraging on PaaS cloud
App (code) PaaS
• Provide high-level building blocks: DBs, middlewares, etc.
• API-centric too
@AdrienBlind
8. The container paradigm
« Self-sufficient artifact enclosing apps modules and
subsequent system requirements »
Software
factories
Cloud
@AdrienBlind
9. DevOps Roles shift
Apps team focuses on
container’s content
Don’t care about where the
container will run
Knows how to build the container
and operate the app
“You build it, you run it!”
CaaS team concerned
about external shape
Ignore how images are built
Knows how to operate huge
amount of containers
@AdrienBlind
10. Rebuild vs Upgrade
Full stack
Versioning
& idempotency
Patch
vs
immutable
@AdrienBlind
11. • Extract data from the container
• Leverage on applicative storage services
• OpenStack Swift, Ceph...
• Hadoop, Cassandra, Elastic Search...
• Externalize on system storage
• Data containers
• Host mounting points
Data consideration
@AdrienBlind
12. Architecture consideration
• Trends
• Application deploiement frequency
• Micro services
• Commodity infrastructure
• High availability & scalability more and more embedded in
apps. New emerging patterns:
• Stateless, design for failure, loose coupling, zero
downtime deployment...
@AdrienBlind
13. Continuous Delivery chain
001101010011010
110110101111101
110101111010011
Binary repo.
Environments
CVS+
Soft. factory
Developer
@AdrienBlind
How to handle subsequent infra conf ?
18. The CaaS provider
• Internal / External offers consider brokering?
• Key services
• Manage underlying IaaS (multihosts, multi-tenancy,
system management, SLA...)
• Expose management API for containers and handle
orchestration
• Expose transversal services API (load balancers, DNS,
service directories)
• But don’t forget to move step by step to make it
happen. Remind how virutalization arrived!
@AdrienBlind
19. Tips & tricks
• Think DevOps: don’t forget your Ops
• Expect a shift in traditional apps
• Importance of the architecture
• Application configuration management
• Move pro-gres-siv-ely: baby steps first
• Start at the Dev workstation
• Avoid discussing big CaaS cloud, orchestration,
right from the begining
@AdrienBlind