The document provides an overview of Cloud Foundry, including:
- An introduction to Cloud Foundry, its architecture, and how to deploy and manage applications on it.
- Details on deploying applications and services, and how services are bound to applications.
- How Cloud Foundry provides health management of applications and the platform itself through high availability, monitoring, and logging.
- Additional resources for learning more about Cloud Foundry.
Developing Oracle Fusion Middleware Applications in the CloudMatt Wright
Slides from session at Oracle OpenWorld 2014 on Developing Oracle Fusion Middleware Applications in the Cloud.
Industry surveys show the use of cloud platforms can reduce overall development time by an order of 11 to 20 percent, with some respondents experience more than 30% time savings. This is largely due to the cloud platform's ability to streamline the development process, including the ability to quickly get the development assets online.
This session detailed the benefits and use cases for devloping and testing Oracle Fusion Middlewara Applications in the cloud. It also covers how to quickly and easily self-provision FMW development and testing environments into the cloud, as well as how to fully automate the build, deploy and configure your applications into the cloud as well as on-premise.
During the session we will provision an Oracle SOA environment to the Cloud; deploy and configure your Oracle SOA composites to the cloud, all in under 30 minutes..
Cloud Foundry and Microservices: A Mutualistic Symbiotic RelationshipMatt Stine
As delivered to the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014 in San Francisco, CA:
With businesses built around software now disrupting multiple industries that appeared to have stable leaders, the need has emerged for enterprises to create "software factories" built around the following principles:
* Streaming customer feedback directly into rapid, iterative cycles of application development
* Horizontally scaling applications to meet user demand
* Compatibility with an enormous diversity of clients, with mobility (smartphones, tablets, etc.) taking the lead
* Continuous delivery of value, shrinking the cycle time from concept to cash
Infrastructure has taken the lead in adapting to meet these needs with the move to the cloud, and Platform as a Service (PaaS) has raised the level of abstraction to a focus on an ecosystem of applications and services. However, most applications are still developed as if we're living in the previous generation of both business and infrastructure: the monolithic application. Microservices - small, loosely coupled applications that follow the Unix philosophy of "doing one thing well" - represent the application development side of enabling rapid, iterative development, horizontal scale, polyglot clients, and continuous delivery. They also enable us to scale application development and eliminate long term commitments to a single technology stack.
While microservices are simple, they are certainly not easy. It's recently been said that "microservices are not a free lunch". Interestingly enough, if you look at the concerns expressed here about microservices, you'll find that they are exactly the challenges that a PaaS is intended to address. So while microservices do not necessarily imply cloud (and vice versa), there is in fact a symbiotic relationship between the two, with each approach somehow compensating for the limitations of the other, much like the practices of eXtreme Programming.
IBM and OpenStack: Collaboration Beyond the CodeDaniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Paris, France on November 5, 2014.
As the largest open source project in the world, OpenStack is produced by a huge and diverse community of global contributors. The most high profile efforts come from the individuals and organizations that produce the code and package the releases, however there are many other ways to get involved. In this sponsored session, we will highlight some of the key ways that IBM participates in the OpenStack community. We'll start off by reviewing some of our major code contributions, then we will highlight our conference and summit content, local meetup leadership activity, social media activism, web content, and more. After this presentation, you'll appreciate the full range of the activities that make an open source community strong, and learn how you can take part in the OpenStack community, as IBMers have. Finally, you'll have a chance to provide your feedback to guide IBM with its community activities, and have a starting point to get involved yourself.
Daniel Krook - Senior Certified IT Specialist
Manuel Silveyra - Senior Cloud Solutions Architect
HP Helion Webinar #4 - Open stack the magic pillBeMyApp
We will go through a quick overview about the 5 years of OpenStack cloud computing platform. This webinar explains the short history of this fast growing open-source initiative, and try to answer the common questions about the place of infrastructure and platform services in the IT hierarchy.
The technology is ready, but are we ready for the cloud adoption? Does it really solve our business problems? Learn the basic terminology, get an insight about the IT operation and development transition steps required to win the efficiency race.
How Capgemini Built a Pan-European Tax Messaging System Using Oracle Fusion M...Capgemini
Capgemini discusses the architecture for a system built on Oracle Fusion Middleware for the UK tax agency to manage processes spanning international user groups and an array of enterprise systems.
In this presentation, learn how Oracle Business Process Management 12c and Oracle SOA Suite 12c solutions help consolidate role-based workflow, systems integration, decision logic, large-batch processing, and real-time messaging into simple-to-manage composite services deployed using a continuous build system.
Learn how Oracle Application Development Framework, Java, and Oracle Database are used to provide custom presentation and data services, and listen to the speaker’s experiences working with Oracle JDeveloper and the wider development platform.
First presented at Oracle OpenWorld 2015.
http://www.capgemini.com/oracle
Developing Oracle Fusion Middleware Applications in the CloudMatt Wright
Slides from session at Oracle OpenWorld 2014 on Developing Oracle Fusion Middleware Applications in the Cloud.
Industry surveys show the use of cloud platforms can reduce overall development time by an order of 11 to 20 percent, with some respondents experience more than 30% time savings. This is largely due to the cloud platform's ability to streamline the development process, including the ability to quickly get the development assets online.
This session detailed the benefits and use cases for devloping and testing Oracle Fusion Middlewara Applications in the cloud. It also covers how to quickly and easily self-provision FMW development and testing environments into the cloud, as well as how to fully automate the build, deploy and configure your applications into the cloud as well as on-premise.
During the session we will provision an Oracle SOA environment to the Cloud; deploy and configure your Oracle SOA composites to the cloud, all in under 30 minutes..
Cloud Foundry and Microservices: A Mutualistic Symbiotic RelationshipMatt Stine
As delivered to the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014 in San Francisco, CA:
With businesses built around software now disrupting multiple industries that appeared to have stable leaders, the need has emerged for enterprises to create "software factories" built around the following principles:
* Streaming customer feedback directly into rapid, iterative cycles of application development
* Horizontally scaling applications to meet user demand
* Compatibility with an enormous diversity of clients, with mobility (smartphones, tablets, etc.) taking the lead
* Continuous delivery of value, shrinking the cycle time from concept to cash
Infrastructure has taken the lead in adapting to meet these needs with the move to the cloud, and Platform as a Service (PaaS) has raised the level of abstraction to a focus on an ecosystem of applications and services. However, most applications are still developed as if we're living in the previous generation of both business and infrastructure: the monolithic application. Microservices - small, loosely coupled applications that follow the Unix philosophy of "doing one thing well" - represent the application development side of enabling rapid, iterative development, horizontal scale, polyglot clients, and continuous delivery. They also enable us to scale application development and eliminate long term commitments to a single technology stack.
While microservices are simple, they are certainly not easy. It's recently been said that "microservices are not a free lunch". Interestingly enough, if you look at the concerns expressed here about microservices, you'll find that they are exactly the challenges that a PaaS is intended to address. So while microservices do not necessarily imply cloud (and vice versa), there is in fact a symbiotic relationship between the two, with each approach somehow compensating for the limitations of the other, much like the practices of eXtreme Programming.
IBM and OpenStack: Collaboration Beyond the CodeDaniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Paris, France on November 5, 2014.
As the largest open source project in the world, OpenStack is produced by a huge and diverse community of global contributors. The most high profile efforts come from the individuals and organizations that produce the code and package the releases, however there are many other ways to get involved. In this sponsored session, we will highlight some of the key ways that IBM participates in the OpenStack community. We'll start off by reviewing some of our major code contributions, then we will highlight our conference and summit content, local meetup leadership activity, social media activism, web content, and more. After this presentation, you'll appreciate the full range of the activities that make an open source community strong, and learn how you can take part in the OpenStack community, as IBMers have. Finally, you'll have a chance to provide your feedback to guide IBM with its community activities, and have a starting point to get involved yourself.
Daniel Krook - Senior Certified IT Specialist
Manuel Silveyra - Senior Cloud Solutions Architect
HP Helion Webinar #4 - Open stack the magic pillBeMyApp
We will go through a quick overview about the 5 years of OpenStack cloud computing platform. This webinar explains the short history of this fast growing open-source initiative, and try to answer the common questions about the place of infrastructure and platform services in the IT hierarchy.
The technology is ready, but are we ready for the cloud adoption? Does it really solve our business problems? Learn the basic terminology, get an insight about the IT operation and development transition steps required to win the efficiency race.
How Capgemini Built a Pan-European Tax Messaging System Using Oracle Fusion M...Capgemini
Capgemini discusses the architecture for a system built on Oracle Fusion Middleware for the UK tax agency to manage processes spanning international user groups and an array of enterprise systems.
In this presentation, learn how Oracle Business Process Management 12c and Oracle SOA Suite 12c solutions help consolidate role-based workflow, systems integration, decision logic, large-batch processing, and real-time messaging into simple-to-manage composite services deployed using a continuous build system.
Learn how Oracle Application Development Framework, Java, and Oracle Database are used to provide custom presentation and data services, and listen to the speaker’s experiences working with Oracle JDeveloper and the wider development platform.
First presented at Oracle OpenWorld 2015.
http://www.capgemini.com/oracle
Considerations for Operating An OpenStack CloudMark Voelker
My talk from All Things Open 2014
Over the past four years, OpenStack has become a widely adopted cloud operating system. Cloud computing has made many tasks like creating new servers and networks easy for end users by creating abstractions above the infrastructure. However, cloud operators need to maintain not only the cloud operating system itself, but all of the underpinning systems beneath it. The challenges of managing a set of distributed systems isn’t small, but with proper tooling is well within reach. This talk will discuss considerations for cloud operators such as logging, storage, monitoring, high availability, configuration management with a focus on OpenStack clouds with a focus on open source solutions for common issues encountered when operating an OpenStack cloud. We’ll consider data gathered from the community and discuss “day 1″ and “day 2″ concerns as well as established patterns and technology choices among OpenStack deployers today.
What You Need to Know about Oracle Cloud ConnectivitySimon Haslam
All about Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (Classic and next generation) network terminology, concepts and connectivity options. First presented at the DOAG 2018 conference, then UKOUG Tech18.
HP Helion Webinar #2 - Developing and deploying a web app using Cloud Foundry with Etienne Cointet
HP is one of the founding members of the Cloud Foundry PaaS foundation, the fast becoming de facto standards in Cloud-Native Applications.
http://hphelion.bemyapp.com
Oracle OpenWorld - A quick take on all 22 press releases of Day #1 - #3Holger Mueller
Take a look at Constellation Research Analyst Holger Mueller walking through all 22 Oracle OpenWorld pres releases - capturing Day #1 till Day #3 - and ongoing in San Francisco.
Finding and Organizing a Great Cloud Foundry User GroupDaniel Krook
Slides from the 2015 Cloud Foundry Summit on May 12.
http://sched.co/2tGc
Virtualization and global distribution are great when it comes to cloud computing and open source. In both cases, physical location is irrelevant. But one of the best ways to join the Cloud Foundry community is to participate in a local meetup. The presenters will share their experience running user groups over the past decade and lessons learned from recent Cloud Foundry events.
This session will teach you how to:
1. Find an active Cloud Foundry (or related cloud computing) user group
2. Contribute your own knowledge at an upcoming event
3. Organize - and sustain - a strong Cloud Foundry community
After this presentation, you will:
1. Appreciate the professional (and social) benefits of attending a meetup
2. Know how to share your expertise and establish your eminence as a Cloud Foundry expert
3. Be prepared to effectively organize a sustainable Cloud Foundry user group
Everything You Need to Know About the Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud Interc...Revelation Technologies
Back in 2019, Microsoft and Oracle announced a partnership enabling customers to migrate and run mission-critical enterprise workloads across Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud.
This extremely low-latency, private connection can distribute workload, and it opens a world of possibilities including deploying applications using the best of Oracle Cloud and Microsoft Azure. Scenarios such as running Oracle E-Business Suite in Azure with its databases operating in Oracle Cloud are now entirely possible.
Highlights on the current offerings, support and licensing models, details on performance, and a list of pitfalls are covered in this presentation. Join this presentation to learn more about what the Oracle and Microsoft cloud partnership is all about, how it works, and what this means for cloud interoperability.
Considerations for Operating An OpenStack CloudMark Voelker
My talk from All Things Open 2014
Over the past four years, OpenStack has become a widely adopted cloud operating system. Cloud computing has made many tasks like creating new servers and networks easy for end users by creating abstractions above the infrastructure. However, cloud operators need to maintain not only the cloud operating system itself, but all of the underpinning systems beneath it. The challenges of managing a set of distributed systems isn’t small, but with proper tooling is well within reach. This talk will discuss considerations for cloud operators such as logging, storage, monitoring, high availability, configuration management with a focus on OpenStack clouds with a focus on open source solutions for common issues encountered when operating an OpenStack cloud. We’ll consider data gathered from the community and discuss “day 1″ and “day 2″ concerns as well as established patterns and technology choices among OpenStack deployers today.
What You Need to Know about Oracle Cloud ConnectivitySimon Haslam
All about Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (Classic and next generation) network terminology, concepts and connectivity options. First presented at the DOAG 2018 conference, then UKOUG Tech18.
HP Helion Webinar #2 - Developing and deploying a web app using Cloud Foundry with Etienne Cointet
HP is one of the founding members of the Cloud Foundry PaaS foundation, the fast becoming de facto standards in Cloud-Native Applications.
http://hphelion.bemyapp.com
Oracle OpenWorld - A quick take on all 22 press releases of Day #1 - #3Holger Mueller
Take a look at Constellation Research Analyst Holger Mueller walking through all 22 Oracle OpenWorld pres releases - capturing Day #1 till Day #3 - and ongoing in San Francisco.
Finding and Organizing a Great Cloud Foundry User GroupDaniel Krook
Slides from the 2015 Cloud Foundry Summit on May 12.
http://sched.co/2tGc
Virtualization and global distribution are great when it comes to cloud computing and open source. In both cases, physical location is irrelevant. But one of the best ways to join the Cloud Foundry community is to participate in a local meetup. The presenters will share their experience running user groups over the past decade and lessons learned from recent Cloud Foundry events.
This session will teach you how to:
1. Find an active Cloud Foundry (or related cloud computing) user group
2. Contribute your own knowledge at an upcoming event
3. Organize - and sustain - a strong Cloud Foundry community
After this presentation, you will:
1. Appreciate the professional (and social) benefits of attending a meetup
2. Know how to share your expertise and establish your eminence as a Cloud Foundry expert
3. Be prepared to effectively organize a sustainable Cloud Foundry user group
Everything You Need to Know About the Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud Interc...Revelation Technologies
Back in 2019, Microsoft and Oracle announced a partnership enabling customers to migrate and run mission-critical enterprise workloads across Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud.
This extremely low-latency, private connection can distribute workload, and it opens a world of possibilities including deploying applications using the best of Oracle Cloud and Microsoft Azure. Scenarios such as running Oracle E-Business Suite in Azure with its databases operating in Oracle Cloud are now entirely possible.
Highlights on the current offerings, support and licensing models, details on performance, and a list of pitfalls are covered in this presentation. Join this presentation to learn more about what the Oracle and Microsoft cloud partnership is all about, how it works, and what this means for cloud interoperability.
by Filippo Lambiente - This round table represents a unique chance to meet the main solution vendors and learn directly from their specialists how PaaS adoption can streamline continuous delivery processes and increase team focus and productivity to dramatically improve time to market. Continuous delivery is an agile approach to software delivery that helps to achieve frequent and reliable releases through team collaboration and full automation. Platform as a service (PaaS) is a cloud computing paradigm that enables rapid deployment of applications without the complexity of managing the underlying infrastructure.
Securing Red Hat OpenShift Containerized Applications At Enterprise ScaleDevOps.com
Improve and simplify securing Red Hat OpenShift containerized environments by leveraging CyberArk’s secrets management solutions and out-of-the-box certified integrations. This demo heavy technical session expands on the prior webinar and uses demos and examples to give practical guidance on how to improve securing your organization’s containerized applications. All while avoiding impacting developer velocity.
This session will provide:
A clear understanding of the challenges and requirements for securing Kubernetes and Red Hat OpenShift containerized environments at enterprise scale
The benefits of enhancing the native secrets management and security capabilities of OpenShift with CyberArk’s certified integrations
Guidance to address common security challenges, including achieving enterprise scale and availability, minimizing the time spent on audit and compliance requests, avoiding problems with developer adoption
Practical steps to get started using Conjur Open Source and next steps
CyberArk, the global leader in privileged access management, offers the industry’s most complete solution for securing both the credentials and secrets used by applications, Playbooks, scripts and other non-human identities, as well as human users. CyberArk solutions are deployed at many of the world’s largest enterprises including over half the Fortune 500.
Using Databases and Containers From Development to DeploymentAerospike, Inc.
We cover the following topics:
Using Docker to Orchestrate a multi container application (Flask + Aerospike)
Injecting HAProxy and other production requirements as we deploy to production
Scaling the Web and Aerospike clusters to grow to meet demand
Introducing Cloud Development with Project Shipped and Mantl: a deep diveCisco DevNet
A session in the DevNet Zone at Cisco Live, Berlin. Developers are driving the market for cloud consumption and leading each industry into the new era of software defined disruption. There are no longer questions about whether elastic and flexible agile development are the way to innovate and reduce time to market for businesses. In addition, businesses are moving to application development architectures leveraging microservices, which are becoming increasingly important to their business strategy. When making the decision to build and operate an application on a physical or cloud platform, microservices are becoming central to architecture and strategy. This session will clearly define what a microservices infrastructure is and how it enables elastic, flexible, and portable application workload deployment. The Mantl platform will be introduced, with each component described and demonstrated. Project Shipped will be used to build, deploy and run an application.
OpenStack: Everything You Need To Know to Get Started (ATO2014)Mark Voelker
Slides for my talk at All Things Open 2014
OpenStack is widely recognized as a leading open source cloud computing platform and has attracted plenty of attention from developers, end users, IT companies, and media. As OpenStack continue to gain adoption, the audience of potential users continues to expand. Whether you’re building a public cloud service or private clouds for e-commerce, video/collaboration apps, sceintific research, NFV, or are simply looking for a more elastic model of infrastructure, OpenStack is an option to consider. This talk will serve as an extensive introduction for newcomers to OpenStack. We’ll discuss both the software itself and the makeup of the community of developers and users around it. We’ll learn how to contribute to OpenStack, who’s using it today, different deployment scenarios and use cases, and provide both online and local resources for learning more. We’ll also provide an introduction to incubated components, underpinning pieces, and pointers to installers and service providers who can help you get started.
OpenStack: Everything You Need to Know To Get StartedAll Things Open
All Things Open 2014 - Day 2
Thursday, October 23rd, 2014
Mark Voelker
Technical Leader with Cisco
Cloud/OpenStack
OpenStack: Everything You Need to Know To Get Started
Find more by Mark here: http://www.slideshare.net/markvoelker
Then! You've successfully implemented a few Web Services, and you're wondering how to deploy, scale, secure and monitor them. We'll explain the the "SideCar" and "API Gateway" patterns of microservices architectures principles, and apply these principles to the deployment of scalable and secure Chat Bots with the Caddy Server. Join this session to learn about microservices architecture patterns and implementation options (whether you're a bot builder or not !).
DEVNET_1871
https://www.ciscolive.com/us/learn/sessions/session-catalog/?search=1871
Similar to OpenStack + Cloud Foundry for the OpenStack Boston Meetup (20)