Cloud Foundry has become the industry standard platform for cloud applications. IBM, HPE, Pivotal, SAP, and many others contribute to this multi-cloud open source project to enable continuous delivery for all companies.
API Strategy Austin - App-centric vs Job-centric MicroservicesIvan Dwyer
The document discusses two types of microservices: app-centric and job-centric. App-centric microservices are for real-time requests and responses, while job-centric microservices are for asynchronous background processes. It also examines different characteristics of microservices like how they are deployed, invoked, routed, scaled, execute, and get data depending on whether they are app-centric or job-centric. The document promotes using job-centric microservices for event-driven computing, batch processing, and scheduled jobs in cloud native applications.
Building A Diverse Geo-Architecture For Cloud Native Applications In One DayVMware Tanzu
Presenter: Ben Laplanche, Product Manager, Pivotal Cloud Foundry
Companies turn to PaaS and Cloud Native Applications to gain agility and speed. To provide customer value, a fault tolerant infrastructure is essential. But what happens if an entire data center, region, or even country should go offline? Cassandra holds the key to keeping application state in sync through replication, whilst Pivotal Cloud Foundry provides easy deployment to multiple IaaS providers. It also comes complete with a managed service offering for DataStax Enterprise. This talk will discuss how this setup can be deployed in one day, including demonstrations and a walkthrough of the key concepts, approaches, and considerations.
The document discusses skeuomorphs and metaphors in architecture and databases. It explores how mobile applications can architect for performance when the internet functions like a database. It recommends making applications smarter through profiling, threading, and caching, using networks intelligently through bundling and pipelining requests, and optimizing "databases" through stored procedures, queueing, denormalization, and managing result sets. The document considers whether viewing the internet as a database is a skeuomorph or metaphor, and discusses lessons from the past that can help optimize current mobile and cloud architectures.
The document discusses the shift towards sharing and openness in technology as exemplified by Amazon's policy of requiring teams to share data and functionality through external interfaces. It then discusses how this "new baseline" of sharing by default applies to continuous innovation, cloud native applications, and microservices. The Cloud Foundry Foundation is focusing on user-driven roadmaps, certification to guarantee app portability across clouds, and building support for specific industries through initiatives like the Industrial IoT SIG.
Handling Asynchronous Workloads With OpenShift and Iron.ioIvan Dwyer
This document discusses event-driven computing and how Iron.io fits into handling asynchronous workloads in modern cloud applications. It describes how Iron.io allows developers to build event-driven workflows by triggering tasks on events, choreographing workflows, and running processes at scale without managing infrastructure. The document highlights key Iron.io concepts like workers, runners, and queues and explains how developers can use Iron.io to decouple application components and respond to events. It also provides examples of how companies like Bleacher Report, Hotel Tonight, and Untappd use Iron.io to improve performance.
Cloud Foundry has become the industry standard platform for cloud applications. IBM, HPE, Pivotal, SAP, and many others contribute to this multi-cloud open source project to enable continuous delivery for all companies.
API Strategy Austin - App-centric vs Job-centric MicroservicesIvan Dwyer
The document discusses two types of microservices: app-centric and job-centric. App-centric microservices are for real-time requests and responses, while job-centric microservices are for asynchronous background processes. It also examines different characteristics of microservices like how they are deployed, invoked, routed, scaled, execute, and get data depending on whether they are app-centric or job-centric. The document promotes using job-centric microservices for event-driven computing, batch processing, and scheduled jobs in cloud native applications.
Building A Diverse Geo-Architecture For Cloud Native Applications In One DayVMware Tanzu
Presenter: Ben Laplanche, Product Manager, Pivotal Cloud Foundry
Companies turn to PaaS and Cloud Native Applications to gain agility and speed. To provide customer value, a fault tolerant infrastructure is essential. But what happens if an entire data center, region, or even country should go offline? Cassandra holds the key to keeping application state in sync through replication, whilst Pivotal Cloud Foundry provides easy deployment to multiple IaaS providers. It also comes complete with a managed service offering for DataStax Enterprise. This talk will discuss how this setup can be deployed in one day, including demonstrations and a walkthrough of the key concepts, approaches, and considerations.
The document discusses skeuomorphs and metaphors in architecture and databases. It explores how mobile applications can architect for performance when the internet functions like a database. It recommends making applications smarter through profiling, threading, and caching, using networks intelligently through bundling and pipelining requests, and optimizing "databases" through stored procedures, queueing, denormalization, and managing result sets. The document considers whether viewing the internet as a database is a skeuomorph or metaphor, and discusses lessons from the past that can help optimize current mobile and cloud architectures.
The document discusses the shift towards sharing and openness in technology as exemplified by Amazon's policy of requiring teams to share data and functionality through external interfaces. It then discusses how this "new baseline" of sharing by default applies to continuous innovation, cloud native applications, and microservices. The Cloud Foundry Foundation is focusing on user-driven roadmaps, certification to guarantee app portability across clouds, and building support for specific industries through initiatives like the Industrial IoT SIG.
Handling Asynchronous Workloads With OpenShift and Iron.ioIvan Dwyer
This document discusses event-driven computing and how Iron.io fits into handling asynchronous workloads in modern cloud applications. It describes how Iron.io allows developers to build event-driven workflows by triggering tasks on events, choreographing workflows, and running processes at scale without managing infrastructure. The document highlights key Iron.io concepts like workers, runners, and queues and explains how developers can use Iron.io to decouple application components and respond to events. It also provides examples of how companies like Bleacher Report, Hotel Tonight, and Untappd use Iron.io to improve performance.
Navigating the Cloud Foundry Ecosystem of Ecosystems: An ISV PerspectiveIvan Dwyer
The document discusses Iron.io's perspective as an independent software vendor (ISV) operating within the Cloud Foundry ecosystem. It outlines some of the benefits Iron.io has experienced from formally joining the Cloud Foundry Foundation, including strategic alignment, access to customers through partners, and the ability to provide services that address gaps in the Cloud Foundry platform. The document also discusses Iron.io's efforts to integrate its services with Cloud Foundry through standards like service brokers to provide capabilities like serverless computing within the Cloud Foundry environment.
This session introduces the key patterns in Cloud Native application development. It highlights the need of a unique architecture style, further, the fitment of DevOps, usage of Microservices and the runtime of Cloud Native application (* as a Service). The precautions of distributed computing gives insights of how to plan the application design and architecture.
Keynote at Dockercon Europe Amsterdam Dec 4th, 2014.
Speeding up development with Docker.
Summary of some interesting web scale microservice architectures.
Please send me updates and corrections to the architecture summaries @adrianco
Thanks Adrian
This document discusses building cloud native applications. It defines cloud native applications as having services that are published and consumed via web services, can handle failures, are designed for horizontal scalability, use asynchronous processing, and have a stateless model. It then provides an example of a social feed application, outlines its functional and non-functional requirements, and describes how to architect it using patterns like loose coupling, polyglot persistence, fault tolerance, and decoupling services. The key is to design for scalability, failures, and minimize human intervention through a DevOps approach.
In this talk, Kenny Bastani will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud. We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Cloud Foundry to spin up a microservice cluster. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
Introduction to ibm cloud paks concept license and minimum config publicPetchpaitoon Krungwong
- IBM Cloud Paks license pricing is based on VPC (Virtual Processor Core) or MVS (Managed Virtual Server) units. The number required depends on the technology, processors, and number of virtual cores/partitions used.
- Sample minimum configurations are provided for IBM Cloud Pak for Applications, Integration, and Multicloud Management. These include the required node types, operating systems, number of VMs, CPU, memory, and storage needed.
- Trade-up licenses allow customers to transition existing software support licenses to IBM Cloud Paks licenses, providing flexibility to use the licenses on-premises or in cloud environments.
Trends in Cloud and Mobile Computing - Alain Azagury, IBMCodemotion Tel Aviv
The document discusses trends in cloud and mobile computing. It covers the rise of the API economy and how cloud is enabling faster development through composable services. For enterprises, the document advocates that cloud really means hybrid cloud, with both private and public cloud resources integrated together and workloads placed in the best infrastructure to meet needs around security, customization, and elasticity.
Networking is NOT Free: Lessons in Network DesignRandy Bias
An in-depth critique of the existing OpenStack networking approach, with a focus on how the Nova network controller is more of a hindrance than a help. Discusses the gap in Quantum's functionality required to close the gap, and alternative solutions. How can we make networking in OpenStack robust, high performance, and fault tolerant? What do typical large scale networks look like and what lessons can we learn from them? Is there an approach to networking we can take that is the same with a handful of servers as it is with hundreds of racks?
This slide deck was originally used for a Lightning Talk on integrating MongoDB into a Cloud Foundry application at MongoDB World 2015. It contains an overview of Cloud Foundry, as well as an explanation of where the MongoDB service fits into the technology stack.
The document discusses characteristics of microservice architectures. It defines microservices as independently deployable services that communicate through lightweight mechanisms like HTTP APIs. Key characteristics include: componentization via services; organization around business capabilities rather than technology; treating services as products with long-term support; decentralized governance, data, and infrastructure; and designing for failure and evolutionary development. The document also compares microservices to monoliths and alternative approaches like self-contained systems.
There are options beyond a straight forward lift and shift into Azure IaaS. What are your options? Learn how Azure helps modernize applications faster with containers and how you can use serverless to add additional functionality while keeping your production codebase 'clean'. We'll also learn how to incorporate DevOps throughout your apps lifecycle and take advantage of data-driven intelligence. Demo intensive session integrating the likes of Service Fabric, AKS VSTS and more.
Smuggling Multi-Cloud Support into Cloud-native Applications using Elastic Co...Nane Kratzke
Elastic container platforms (like Kubernetes, Docker Swarm, Apache Mesos) fit very well with existing cloud-native application architecture approaches. So it is more than astonishing, that these already existing and open source available elastic platforms are not considered more consequently for multi-cloud approaches. Elastic container platforms provide inherent multi-cloud support that can be easily accessed. We present a solution proposal of a control process which is able to scale (and migrate as a side effect) elastic container platforms across different public and private cloud-service providers. This control loop can be used in an execution phase of self-adaptive auto-scaling MAPE loops (monitoring, analysis, planning, execution). Additionally, we present several lessons learned from our prototype implementation which might be of general interest for researchers and practitioners. For instance, to describe only the intended state of an elastic platform and let a single control process take care to reach this intended state is far less complex than to define plenty of specific and necessary multi-cloud aware workflows to deploy, migrate, terminate, scale up and scale down elastic platforms or applications.
Cloud Native Machine Learning is a guide to bringing your experimental machine learning code to production using serverless capabilities from major cloud providers. You’ll start with best practices for your datasets, learning to bring VACUUM data-quality principles to your projects, and ensure that your datasets can be reproducibly sampled. Next, you’ll learn to implement machine learning models with PyTorch, discovering how to scale up your models in the cloud and how to use PyTorch Lightning for distributed ML training. Finally, you’ll tune and engineer your serverless machine learning pipeline for scalability, elasticity, and ease of monitoring with the built-in notification tools of your cloud platform. When you’re done, you’ll have the tools to easily bridge the gap between ML models and a fully functioning production system.
Learn more about the book here: http://mng.bz/em9w
The ability to deliver software is no longer a differentiator. In fact, it is a basic requirement for survival. Companies that embrace cloud native patterns of software delivery will survive; companies that don’t - will not.
In this webinar, we will:
- Look at the common patterns that distinguish cloud native companies and the architectures that they employ.
- Discover that an opinionated platform, one that stretches from the infrastructure all the way to the application framework, rather than ad-hoc automation, is an essential component to an enterprise's cloud native journey.
- Show that the combination of Pivotal Cloud Foundry and Spring is the complete cloud native platform.
Speaker:
Faiz Parkar
DIRECTOR OF PRODUCT MARKETING
As Director of Product Marketing for Pivotal in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, Faiz Parkar loves working at the intersection of cloud native platforms, big data/analytics and agile application development to help organisations deliver compelling data-driven software experiences for their customers. With more than 25 years experience in the IT industry, Faiz has helped organisations large and small to take advantage of technology transitions from proprietary systems to client/server, from physical infrastructure to virtual, and from virtual infrastructure to cloud. His mission now is to help organisations accelerate their digital transformation journey and reinvent themselves as the digital leaders of the future.
IBM BlueMix Architecture and Deep Dive (Powered by CloudFoundry) Animesh Singh
meetup.com/Bluemix
meetup.com/CloudFoundry/
In this meetup, we discussed the architecture and demonstrated IBM BlueMix, public Platform-as-a-Service offering based on Cloud Foundry
CREATE, DEPLOY, MANAGE YOUR APPLICATIONS IN THE CLOUD How to make the most of the Bluemix platform and the fundamentals of building and deploying your application in the Cloud using IBM's IoT Foundation.
In June 2017 at the Devops Enterprise Summit in London, while announcing the 2017 State of Devops Report with his esteemed colleagues, Jez Humble reveled that their studies showed that there was a strong correlation between high-functioning teams and the architecture of the software they are building, deploying and managing. In short - architecture matters to Devops.
In this talk Cornelia goes over a host of software architectural patterns and their relationship to some of the key goals of Devops - "higher throughput and higher quality and stability." Cloud native applications and cloud native data are both covered.
Using patterns and pattern languages to make better architectural decisions Chris Richardson
This is a presentation that gave at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Superstream: Software Architecture Patterns.
The talk's focus is the microservices pattern language.
However, it also shows how thinking with the pattern mindset - context/problem/forces/solution/consequences - leads to better technically decisions.
The microservices architecture offers tremendous benefits, but it’s not a silver bullet. It also has some significant drawbacks. The microservices pattern language—a collection of patterns that solve architecture, design, development, and operational problems—enables software developers to apply the microservices architecture effectively. I provide an overview of the microservices architecture and examines the motivations for the pattern language, then takes you through the key patterns in the pattern language.
Linuxcon 2011 Crash Course in Open Source Cloud ComputingMark Hinkle
Presentation on the tools needed to deploy and manage IaaS or compute clouds using free and open source software.
Changelog:
Added Open Source PaaS
Automated Toolchains Diagram
Open Cloud Initiative (OCI)
Additional Resources
Navigating the Cloud Foundry Ecosystem of Ecosystems: An ISV PerspectiveIvan Dwyer
The document discusses Iron.io's perspective as an independent software vendor (ISV) operating within the Cloud Foundry ecosystem. It outlines some of the benefits Iron.io has experienced from formally joining the Cloud Foundry Foundation, including strategic alignment, access to customers through partners, and the ability to provide services that address gaps in the Cloud Foundry platform. The document also discusses Iron.io's efforts to integrate its services with Cloud Foundry through standards like service brokers to provide capabilities like serverless computing within the Cloud Foundry environment.
This session introduces the key patterns in Cloud Native application development. It highlights the need of a unique architecture style, further, the fitment of DevOps, usage of Microservices and the runtime of Cloud Native application (* as a Service). The precautions of distributed computing gives insights of how to plan the application design and architecture.
Keynote at Dockercon Europe Amsterdam Dec 4th, 2014.
Speeding up development with Docker.
Summary of some interesting web scale microservice architectures.
Please send me updates and corrections to the architecture summaries @adrianco
Thanks Adrian
This document discusses building cloud native applications. It defines cloud native applications as having services that are published and consumed via web services, can handle failures, are designed for horizontal scalability, use asynchronous processing, and have a stateless model. It then provides an example of a social feed application, outlines its functional and non-functional requirements, and describes how to architect it using patterns like loose coupling, polyglot persistence, fault tolerance, and decoupling services. The key is to design for scalability, failures, and minimize human intervention through a DevOps approach.
In this talk, Kenny Bastani will introduce you to Spring Cloud, a set of tools for building cloud-native JVM applications. We will take a look at some of the common patterns for microservice architectures and how to use Cloud Foundry to deploy multiple microservices to the cloud. We will also dive into a microservices example project of a cloud-native application built using Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. Using this example project, I'll show you how to use Cloud Foundry to spin up a microservice cluster. We will then explore what a cloud-native application looks like when using self-describing REST APIs that link multiple microservices together.
Introduction to ibm cloud paks concept license and minimum config publicPetchpaitoon Krungwong
- IBM Cloud Paks license pricing is based on VPC (Virtual Processor Core) or MVS (Managed Virtual Server) units. The number required depends on the technology, processors, and number of virtual cores/partitions used.
- Sample minimum configurations are provided for IBM Cloud Pak for Applications, Integration, and Multicloud Management. These include the required node types, operating systems, number of VMs, CPU, memory, and storage needed.
- Trade-up licenses allow customers to transition existing software support licenses to IBM Cloud Paks licenses, providing flexibility to use the licenses on-premises or in cloud environments.
Trends in Cloud and Mobile Computing - Alain Azagury, IBMCodemotion Tel Aviv
The document discusses trends in cloud and mobile computing. It covers the rise of the API economy and how cloud is enabling faster development through composable services. For enterprises, the document advocates that cloud really means hybrid cloud, with both private and public cloud resources integrated together and workloads placed in the best infrastructure to meet needs around security, customization, and elasticity.
Networking is NOT Free: Lessons in Network DesignRandy Bias
An in-depth critique of the existing OpenStack networking approach, with a focus on how the Nova network controller is more of a hindrance than a help. Discusses the gap in Quantum's functionality required to close the gap, and alternative solutions. How can we make networking in OpenStack robust, high performance, and fault tolerant? What do typical large scale networks look like and what lessons can we learn from them? Is there an approach to networking we can take that is the same with a handful of servers as it is with hundreds of racks?
This slide deck was originally used for a Lightning Talk on integrating MongoDB into a Cloud Foundry application at MongoDB World 2015. It contains an overview of Cloud Foundry, as well as an explanation of where the MongoDB service fits into the technology stack.
The document discusses characteristics of microservice architectures. It defines microservices as independently deployable services that communicate through lightweight mechanisms like HTTP APIs. Key characteristics include: componentization via services; organization around business capabilities rather than technology; treating services as products with long-term support; decentralized governance, data, and infrastructure; and designing for failure and evolutionary development. The document also compares microservices to monoliths and alternative approaches like self-contained systems.
There are options beyond a straight forward lift and shift into Azure IaaS. What are your options? Learn how Azure helps modernize applications faster with containers and how you can use serverless to add additional functionality while keeping your production codebase 'clean'. We'll also learn how to incorporate DevOps throughout your apps lifecycle and take advantage of data-driven intelligence. Demo intensive session integrating the likes of Service Fabric, AKS VSTS and more.
Smuggling Multi-Cloud Support into Cloud-native Applications using Elastic Co...Nane Kratzke
Elastic container platforms (like Kubernetes, Docker Swarm, Apache Mesos) fit very well with existing cloud-native application architecture approaches. So it is more than astonishing, that these already existing and open source available elastic platforms are not considered more consequently for multi-cloud approaches. Elastic container platforms provide inherent multi-cloud support that can be easily accessed. We present a solution proposal of a control process which is able to scale (and migrate as a side effect) elastic container platforms across different public and private cloud-service providers. This control loop can be used in an execution phase of self-adaptive auto-scaling MAPE loops (monitoring, analysis, planning, execution). Additionally, we present several lessons learned from our prototype implementation which might be of general interest for researchers and practitioners. For instance, to describe only the intended state of an elastic platform and let a single control process take care to reach this intended state is far less complex than to define plenty of specific and necessary multi-cloud aware workflows to deploy, migrate, terminate, scale up and scale down elastic platforms or applications.
Cloud Native Machine Learning is a guide to bringing your experimental machine learning code to production using serverless capabilities from major cloud providers. You’ll start with best practices for your datasets, learning to bring VACUUM data-quality principles to your projects, and ensure that your datasets can be reproducibly sampled. Next, you’ll learn to implement machine learning models with PyTorch, discovering how to scale up your models in the cloud and how to use PyTorch Lightning for distributed ML training. Finally, you’ll tune and engineer your serverless machine learning pipeline for scalability, elasticity, and ease of monitoring with the built-in notification tools of your cloud platform. When you’re done, you’ll have the tools to easily bridge the gap between ML models and a fully functioning production system.
Learn more about the book here: http://mng.bz/em9w
The ability to deliver software is no longer a differentiator. In fact, it is a basic requirement for survival. Companies that embrace cloud native patterns of software delivery will survive; companies that don’t - will not.
In this webinar, we will:
- Look at the common patterns that distinguish cloud native companies and the architectures that they employ.
- Discover that an opinionated platform, one that stretches from the infrastructure all the way to the application framework, rather than ad-hoc automation, is an essential component to an enterprise's cloud native journey.
- Show that the combination of Pivotal Cloud Foundry and Spring is the complete cloud native platform.
Speaker:
Faiz Parkar
DIRECTOR OF PRODUCT MARKETING
As Director of Product Marketing for Pivotal in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, Faiz Parkar loves working at the intersection of cloud native platforms, big data/analytics and agile application development to help organisations deliver compelling data-driven software experiences for their customers. With more than 25 years experience in the IT industry, Faiz has helped organisations large and small to take advantage of technology transitions from proprietary systems to client/server, from physical infrastructure to virtual, and from virtual infrastructure to cloud. His mission now is to help organisations accelerate their digital transformation journey and reinvent themselves as the digital leaders of the future.
IBM BlueMix Architecture and Deep Dive (Powered by CloudFoundry) Animesh Singh
meetup.com/Bluemix
meetup.com/CloudFoundry/
In this meetup, we discussed the architecture and demonstrated IBM BlueMix, public Platform-as-a-Service offering based on Cloud Foundry
CREATE, DEPLOY, MANAGE YOUR APPLICATIONS IN THE CLOUD How to make the most of the Bluemix platform and the fundamentals of building and deploying your application in the Cloud using IBM's IoT Foundation.
In June 2017 at the Devops Enterprise Summit in London, while announcing the 2017 State of Devops Report with his esteemed colleagues, Jez Humble reveled that their studies showed that there was a strong correlation between high-functioning teams and the architecture of the software they are building, deploying and managing. In short - architecture matters to Devops.
In this talk Cornelia goes over a host of software architectural patterns and their relationship to some of the key goals of Devops - "higher throughput and higher quality and stability." Cloud native applications and cloud native data are both covered.
Using patterns and pattern languages to make better architectural decisions Chris Richardson
This is a presentation that gave at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Superstream: Software Architecture Patterns.
The talk's focus is the microservices pattern language.
However, it also shows how thinking with the pattern mindset - context/problem/forces/solution/consequences - leads to better technically decisions.
The microservices architecture offers tremendous benefits, but it’s not a silver bullet. It also has some significant drawbacks. The microservices pattern language—a collection of patterns that solve architecture, design, development, and operational problems—enables software developers to apply the microservices architecture effectively. I provide an overview of the microservices architecture and examines the motivations for the pattern language, then takes you through the key patterns in the pattern language.
Linuxcon 2011 Crash Course in Open Source Cloud ComputingMark Hinkle
Presentation on the tools needed to deploy and manage IaaS or compute clouds using free and open source software.
Changelog:
Added Open Source PaaS
Automated Toolchains Diagram
Open Cloud Initiative (OCI)
Additional Resources
Ohio LinuxFest: Crash Course in Open Source Cloud ComputingMark Hinkle
This document summarizes Mark R. Hinkle's presentation on open source cloud computing. The presentation provides an overview of cloud computing concepts and models. It then discusses various open source tools that can be used to build public and private clouds, including hypervisors, virtual machine formats, storage solutions, APIs, configuration management, monitoring, and automation/orchestration tools. The presentation aims to demonstrate how open source software can be combined to create cloud computing platforms and manage cloud infrastructure.
CNCF general introduction to beginners at openstack meetup Pune & Bangalore February 2018. Covers broadly the activities and structure of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation.
Best Practices for Building Hybrid-Cloud Architectures | Hans Jespersenconfluent
Best Practices for building Hybrid-Cloud Architectures - Hans Jespersen
Afternoon opening presentation during Confluent’s streaming event in Paris, presented by Hans Jespersen, VP WW Systems Engineering at Confluent.
This document discusses continuous delivery using Spinnaker, an open source continuous delivery platform. It provides an overview of Spinnaker, including how it supports continuous integration and delivery goals like shipping faster and reducing risk. Spinnaker allows automated deployment pipelines across multiple cloud providers and supports features like zero-downtime deployments, rollbacks, and automated canary analysis. The document also describes how Spinnaker integrates with platforms like Cloud Foundry and CI systems like Concourse.
{code} and Containers - Open Source Infrastructure within Dell TechnologiesThe {code} Team
Learn how The {code} Team is building new infrastructure possibilities for persistent storage in all the major container ecosystems such as Kubernetes, Docker, and Mesos with native integrations and contributing the Container Storage Interface
An introduction to {code} by Dell EMC, our mission on containers, and our core project REX-Ray. This will give the audience an understanding of why REX-Ray is important and where you can go to learn more.
OSCON 2013 - The Hitchiker’s Guide to Open Source Cloud ComputingMark Hinkle
And while the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (HHGTTG) is a wholly remarkable book it doesn’t cover the nuances of cloud computing. Whether you want to build a public, private or hybrid cloud there are free and open source tools that can help provide you a complete solution or help augment your existing Amazon or other hosted cloud solution. That’s why you need the Hitchhiker’s Guide to (Open Source) Cloud Computing (HHGTCC) or at least to attend this talk understand the current state of open source cloud computing. This talk will cover infrastructure-as-a-service, platform-as-a-service and developments in big data and how to more effectively deploy and manage open source flavors of these technologies. Specific the guide will cover:
Infrastructure-as-a-Service – The Systems Cloud – Get a comparison of the open source cloud platforms including OpenStack, Apache CloudStack, Eucalyptus and OpenNebula
Platform-as-a-Service – The Developers Cloud – Learn about the tools that abstract the complexity for developers and used to build portable auto-scaling applications ton CloudFoundry, OpenShift, Stackato and more.
Data-as-a-Service – The Analytics Cloud – Want to figure out the who, what, where, when and why of big data? You’ll get an overview of open source NoSQL databases and technologies like MapReduce to help parallelize data mining tasks and crunch massive data sets in the cloud.
Network-as-a-Service – The Network Cloud – The final pillar for truly fungible network infrastructure is network virtualization. We will give an overview of software-defined networking including OpenStack Quantum, Nicira, open Vswitch and others.
Finally this talk will provide an overview of the tools that can help you really take advantage of the cloud. Do you want to auto-scale to serve millions of web pages and scale back down as demand fluctuates. Are you interested in automating the total lifecycle of cloud computing environments You’ll learn how to combine these tools into tool chains to provide continuous deployment systems that will help you become agile and spend more time improving your IT rather than simply maintaining it.
[Finally, for those of you that are Douglas Adams fans please accept the deepest apologies for bad analogies to the HHGTTG.]
As DevOps practices have been put into wide use, it's become evident that developers and operations aren't merging to become one discipline. Nor is operations simply going away. Rather, DevOps is leading software development and operations - together with other practices such as security - to collaborate and coexist with less overhead and conflict than in the past.
In his session at @DevOpsSummit at 19th Cloud Expo, Gordon Haff, Red Hat Technology Evangelist, will discuss what modern operational practices look like in a world in which applications are more loosely coupled, are developed using DevOps approaches, and are deployed on software-defined, and often containerized, infrastructures - and where operations itself is increasingly another "as a service" capability from the perspective of developers.
How does the operations tool chest change? How does the required skill set differ? How are the interactions between operations and other IT and business organizations different from in the past? How can operations provide the confidence to the entire organization that this new pipeline is still delivering non-functional requirements such as regulatory compliance and a secure and certified operating environment? How does operations safely consume vendor and upstream dependencies while meeting developer desires for the latest and greatest?
Operations is more important than ever for a business to derive value from its IT organization. But the roles and the goals of operations are significantly different than they were historically.
Delivering IaaS with Open Source SoftwareMark Hinkle
Mark Hinkle presented on delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) using open source software. He discussed various open source tools for building cloud computing including hypervisors like KVM and Xen, object storage solutions like OpenStack Swift, and automation/orchestration tools like CloudStack and OpenStack. Hinkle emphasized that open source solutions provide many advantages for cloud computing including lower costs, collaboration, and avoidance of vendor lock-in. He also covered management tools for private clouds and highlighted the importance of automation.
OpenStack and Cloud Foundry - Pair the leading open source IaaS and PaaSDaniel Krook
OpenStack is the leading open source Infrastructure-as-a-Service, and Cloud Foundry has become the leading open source Platform-as-a-Service. Deploying them together is a natural fit for your next generation systems of engagement.
This special joint meetup of the OpenStack NY and NYC Cloud Foundry communities will give both audiences an introduction to these popular open source IaaS and PaaS projects.
The presentation will describe the compelling advantages of each technology, and then explain how they can be integrated, optimized, and scaled to provide a complete cloud application hosting solution.
Containers Anywhere with OpenShift by Red Hat - Session Sponsored by Red HatAmazon Web Services
OpenShift is Red Hat's Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that lets developers quickly develop, host, and scale Docker container-based applications. OpenShift enables a uniform and standardised approach to container management across all hosting options including AWS/EC2 and other private/public cloud and on/off-premise variants.
At this session, you will learn how Red Hat's enterprise clients are using OpenShift to enable their digital transformation initiatives. Examples will cover how realising a hybrid cloud strategy can simplify and reduce the risk of migrating and transitioning application workloads to containers in the cloud.
Speaker: Andrea Spanner, Red Hat Asia Pacific Pty Ltd
Arquitetando soluções de computação em nuvem com JavaOtávio Santana
O Cloud Native se tornou uma grande palavra de ordem em todo o mundo, um termo que é praticamente usado por todos em todos os momentos. Mas o que isso significa? Quais são as vantagens que ele traz ao seu aplicativo e ao seu dia como desenvolvedor ou arquiteto de software? O que há de novo no mundo Java e quais são as etapas a seguir para um aplicativo em nuvem nativo? Esta apresentação é um guia passo a passo que praticamente o guiará na implementação de serviços de computação em nuvem de maneira eficaz e eficiente.
Architecting Cloud Computing Solutions with Java [1.1]Otávio Santana
This document discusses cloud-native concepts and architectures using Java. It begins with an introduction to the speaker, Otavio Santana, and his background. It then covers topics like cloud types, cloud native approaches, and how they apply concepts like microservices, containers, and orchestration. It also discusses Java optimizations for cloud environments and projects like Eclipse MicroProfile that help build cloud native Java applications. It concludes with a demonstration of Platform.sh's polyglot platform as a service that aims to simplify developing, deploying and managing cloud applications.
An introduction to the open source project that empowers modern workflows to build, deploy and manage the lifecycle of containers. You will learn what OpenShift is, what are its use cases, and more about all the fuss around Cloud computing, microservices, DevOps and whatnot.
Microsoft Ignite 2018 BRK3192 Container DevOps on AzureJessica Deen
This document provides an overview of DevOps concepts and tools. It discusses containers and container orchestration with Kubernetes. It also mentions Azure DevOps and Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) as tools that can help with DevOps practices like continuous integration/delivery (CI/CD). Helm charts are presented as a way to define and manage complex Kubernetes applications and services. Some best practices for Kubernetes are also listed.
An introduction to the open source project that empowers modern workflows to build, deploy and manage the lifecycle of containers. You will learn what OpenShift is, what are its use cases, and more about all the fuss around Cloud computing, microservices, DevOps and whatnot.
Similar to Introducing the Open Container Project (20)
Open source is a positive-sum game, and Cloud Foundry is building on positive-sum economics to provide a a multi-cloud open source platform for all developers and enterprises.
This document discusses platforms as positive-sum games that can include more people. It notes how civilization has expanded the scale of positive-sum games over time. Platforms drive network effects by supporting users, developers, providers and operators, and the more people included, the greater the network effects. Examples are given of open source projects with thousands of contributors and members. The vision is for ubiquitous and flexible cloud computing supporting multi-cloud applications that are portable and interoperable across a growing ecosystem.
APIs challenge every notion of IT – governance, financial planning, team composition, success metrics, security – and many notions of business – secrecy, precise business agreements, locus of control.
This is not because of APIs as a technical evolution.
This is because APIs are part of the vanguard of the new world of work, the beginning of a 20-year productivity boom that will unsettle traditional hierarchies and business models in an even more pervasive way than the 10-year boom of the Web.
Looking back from 2018, how will you describe the changes and how you led your company to a dominant market position?
Skeuomorphs, Databases, and Mobile PerformanceSam Ramji
The document discusses skeuomorphs and metaphors in architecture and databases. It explores how mobile applications can architect for performance by making the application smarter through profiling, threading, and caching, using the network intelligently through bundling and pipelining requests, and optimizing databases through stored procedures, queueing, denormalization, and managing result sets. The document considers whether describing the internet as a database is a skeuomorph or metaphor, and discusses lessons learned from prior database architectures that can help improve mobile performance.
Amundsen's Dogs, Information Halos, and APIsSam Ramji
The Web has evolved, moving further and further beyond the browser with a new generation of applications, mobile platforms and connected devices. From the internet of things to internet-enabled cars, everyone from new startups to industry stalwarts must continually reinvent their strategies for a rapidly-moving technology landscape. APIs are the building blocks for the new web, fueling apps, platforms, cloud services and mobile; this talk is about the building blocks you’ll need for your own successful API program.
How do you deal with global consumption of your APIs? You need to understand the lesson of the Black Swan and apply the following rules for resilience: deliver locally, serve elastically, and specialize universally.
Punctuated Equilibrium, Celestial Navigation, and APIsSam Ramji
Darwin's theory of punctuated equilibrium proposes that evolution occurs in bursts of rapid change separated by long periods of stability, rather than through gradual change. The document discusses how this applies to business models and APIs, which also experience periods of rapid, revolutionary change punctuated by longer periods of equilibrium. It provides examples of how business models, architectures, and data sharing have evolved in a punctuated manner over time for companies like Netflix.
Darwin's Finches, 20th Century Business, and APIsSam Ramji
APIs are transforming the web economy and forcing changes in Web business models. Darwin's imperative - adapt or perish - has never been more apt. Much like the changes from direct to indirect channels in 20th century business, APIs represent an indirect channel to customers, led by developers and applications. Learn about successful adaptations to this environment and how to help others understand the API imperative.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
Removing Uninteresting Bytes in Software FuzzingAftab Hussain
Imagine a world where software fuzzing, the process of mutating bytes in test seeds to uncover hidden and erroneous program behaviors, becomes faster and more effective. A lot depends on the initial seeds, which can significantly dictate the trajectory of a fuzzing campaign, particularly in terms of how long it takes to uncover interesting behaviour in your code. We introduce DIAR, a technique designed to speedup fuzzing campaigns by pinpointing and eliminating those uninteresting bytes in the seeds. Picture this: instead of wasting valuable resources on meaningless mutations in large, bloated seeds, DIAR removes the unnecessary bytes, streamlining the entire process.
In this work, we equipped AFL, a popular fuzzer, with DIAR and examined two critical Linux libraries -- Libxml's xmllint, a tool for parsing xml documents, and Binutil's readelf, an essential debugging and security analysis command-line tool used to display detailed information about ELF (Executable and Linkable Format). Our preliminary results show that AFL+DIAR does not only discover new paths more quickly but also achieves higher coverage overall. This work thus showcases how starting with lean and optimized seeds can lead to faster, more comprehensive fuzzing campaigns -- and DIAR helps you find such seeds.
- These are slides of the talk given at IEEE International Conference on Software Testing Verification and Validation Workshop, ICSTW 2022.
A tale of scale & speed: How the US Navy is enabling software delivery from l...sonjaschweigert1
Rapid and secure feature delivery is a goal across every application team and every branch of the DoD. The Navy’s DevSecOps platform, Party Barge, has achieved:
- Reduction in onboarding time from 5 weeks to 1 day
- Improved developer experience and productivity through actionable findings and reduction of false positives
- Maintenance of superior security standards and inherent policy enforcement with Authorization to Operate (ATO)
Development teams can ship efficiently and ensure applications are cyber ready for Navy Authorizing Officials (AOs). In this webinar, Sigma Defense and Anchore will give attendees a look behind the scenes and demo secure pipeline automation and security artifacts that speed up application ATO and time to production.
We will cover:
- How to remove silos in DevSecOps
- How to build efficient development pipeline roles and component templates
- How to deliver security artifacts that matter for ATO’s (SBOMs, vulnerability reports, and policy evidence)
- How to streamline operations with automated policy checks on container images
Why You Should Replace Windows 11 with Nitrux Linux 3.5.0 for enhanced perfor...SOFTTECHHUB
The choice of an operating system plays a pivotal role in shaping our computing experience. For decades, Microsoft's Windows has dominated the market, offering a familiar and widely adopted platform for personal and professional use. However, as technological advancements continue to push the boundaries of innovation, alternative operating systems have emerged, challenging the status quo and offering users a fresh perspective on computing.
One such alternative that has garnered significant attention and acclaim is Nitrux Linux 3.5.0, a sleek, powerful, and user-friendly Linux distribution that promises to redefine the way we interact with our devices. With its focus on performance, security, and customization, Nitrux Linux presents a compelling case for those seeking to break free from the constraints of proprietary software and embrace the freedom and flexibility of open-source computing.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/building-and-scaling-ai-applications-with-the-nx-ai-manager-a-presentation-from-network-optix/
Robin van Emden, Senior Director of Data Science at Network Optix, presents the “Building and Scaling AI Applications with the Nx AI Manager,” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
In this presentation, van Emden covers the basics of scaling edge AI solutions using the Nx tool kit. He emphasizes the process of developing AI models and deploying them globally. He also showcases the conversion of AI models and the creation of effective edge AI pipelines, with a focus on pre-processing, model conversion, selecting the appropriate inference engine for the target hardware and post-processing.
van Emden shows how Nx can simplify the developer’s life and facilitate a rapid transition from concept to production-ready applications.He provides valuable insights into developing scalable and efficient edge AI solutions, with a strong focus on practical implementation.
Introducing Milvus Lite: Easy-to-Install, Easy-to-Use vector database for you...Zilliz
Join us to introduce Milvus Lite, a vector database that can run on notebooks and laptops, share the same API with Milvus, and integrate with every popular GenAI framework. This webinar is perfect for developers seeking easy-to-use, well-integrated vector databases for their GenAI apps.
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
28. “Any organization that designs a
system (defined broadly) will produce
a design whose structure is a copy of
the organization's communication
structure.
Melvyn Conway, 1967
29. “When looking to split a large application into parts, often
management focuses on the technology layer, leading to UI teams,
server-side logic teams, and database teams.
When teams are separated along these lines, even simple changes
can lead to a cross-team project taking time and budgetary
approval.
A smart team will optimise around this and plump for the lesser of
two evils - just force the logic into whichever application they have
access to. Logic everywhere in other words.
This is an example of Conway's Law in action.”
Martin Fowler, “Microservices”
35. Cloud Foundry is the cloud native application platform.
open source project microservices + speed + reliability + security
We build the open source
multi-vendor + multi-cloud app platform.