View recording of this session at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE5lrNn7bAg
Serverless Design Patterns - a quick overview of 3 very common design patterns with Azure Functions
GAB2017 - Azure function to build serverless SharePoint appsRiwut Libinuko
Presentation how to create serverless SharePoint apps using Azure function. In this presentation, audience will be guided to create fully functional app.
Source code for this presentation is available in GitHub, and the steps is available in YouTube.
Introduction to Azure Functions - TutorialBizTalk360
In this demo heavy session, Yochay Kiriaty, from the Azure product team, will provide an overview of Azure Functions, explain some patterns, and present a lot of demos.
Serverless Orchestration with Azure Durable FunctionsCallon Campbell
Durable Functions is an open source framework for Azure Functions. It allows you to write long-running orchestration as a single function while maintaining local state. All in code with no JSON schemas or UI designers.
From PowerShell Function to Serverless code with Azure FunctionsJaap Brasser
A practical session on how we can move our existing code to the Cloud. What can be re-used? Which code should we leave in our existing silos?
These questions will be answered in this session focussed on what Serverless means for our PowerShell code. The approach we will take is as follows: we will take our existing code and transfer into Serverless code using Azure Functions; we evaluate changes or optimizations to take into account and how can we maximize the benefits of using Serverless.
Join us and find out!
Understanding how to handle Deployments in Logic Apps is crucial for it to become part of your Integration platform. Moving the Logic Apps from development to test and preparing for production with version control and automated deployments.
View recording of this session at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE5lrNn7bAg
Serverless Design Patterns - a quick overview of 3 very common design patterns with Azure Functions
GAB2017 - Azure function to build serverless SharePoint appsRiwut Libinuko
Presentation how to create serverless SharePoint apps using Azure function. In this presentation, audience will be guided to create fully functional app.
Source code for this presentation is available in GitHub, and the steps is available in YouTube.
Introduction to Azure Functions - TutorialBizTalk360
In this demo heavy session, Yochay Kiriaty, from the Azure product team, will provide an overview of Azure Functions, explain some patterns, and present a lot of demos.
Serverless Orchestration with Azure Durable FunctionsCallon Campbell
Durable Functions is an open source framework for Azure Functions. It allows you to write long-running orchestration as a single function while maintaining local state. All in code with no JSON schemas or UI designers.
From PowerShell Function to Serverless code with Azure FunctionsJaap Brasser
A practical session on how we can move our existing code to the Cloud. What can be re-used? Which code should we leave in our existing silos?
These questions will be answered in this session focussed on what Serverless means for our PowerShell code. The approach we will take is as follows: we will take our existing code and transfer into Serverless code using Azure Functions; we evaluate changes or optimizations to take into account and how can we maximize the benefits of using Serverless.
Join us and find out!
Understanding how to handle Deployments in Logic Apps is crucial for it to become part of your Integration platform. Moving the Logic Apps from development to test and preparing for production with version control and automated deployments.
Azure contains an ever growing suite of products, what tools or products do we have available to remove repetitive tasks from our daily grind. This session is viewed from the perspective of a Cloud/IT Professional, our vision is to automate anything we can using whichever tools we have available.
In this session we will dive into Azure Automation, Microsoft Flow, Azure Functions, Event Grid and more. What are they, how do they relate to each other and what are the pros and cons for using each product. By looking at and understanding how we can leverage the Cloud Automation tools that are available to us today we will be able to work less tomorrow! Warning: Contains code.
Imagine a scenario, where you can launch a video call or chat with an advisor, agent, or clinician in just one-click. We will explore application patterns that will enable you to write event-driven, resilient and highly scalable applications with Functions that too with power of engaging communication experience at scale. During the session, we will go through the use case along with code walkthrough and demonstration.
Microsoft Flow and PowerShell combined to automate everythingJaap Brasser
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos.¬¬¬ At the end of the talk we will have time for Q&A, so if you have any questions in regards to automation with Microsoft Flow or PowerShell be sure to have your questions ready.
This presentation is from the Integration Day event, a TechMeet360 Community Initiative, held on September 10, 2016 at Microsoft GSTC in Bangalore. In this slide, Microsoft's Escalation Engineers Tulika Chaudharie and Harikharan Krishnaraju explain using Azure Functions for Integration. The presentation starts with a general overview of Azure Functions and then it moves on to some of the common Integration Patterns and how Azure Functions fit into the scenarios.
Azure Functions are a great new addition to the Azure stack that allow us to repeatedly automate tasks in a cheap and efficient manner. In this session we will go into what Azure Functions are, what features and functionality and the different ways of applying them in real-world scenarios.
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos.¬¬¬ At the end of the talk we will have time for Q&A, so if you have any questions in regards to automation with Microsoft Flow or PowerShell be sure to have your questions ready.
Introduction to Azure Functions.
An event-based serverless compute experience to accelerate your development. Scale based on demand and pay only for the resources you consume.
The signs are on the wall, scripting and coding is becoming increasingly important for any role in IT. PowerShell is a crucial component in your toolkit and in this session we will cover the basics of PowerShell and how you can get started and be successful, how we can secure systems running PowerShell and what benefits can it bring.
In this session Jaap will talk about what PowerShell is, the language, the console, the editors and how PowerShell came to be. Recently PowerShell has been made open source and multi-platform. We will look at what the implications are and what benefits this brings along.
As security is increasingly a more important consideration for every company, we will take a look at what capabilities PowerShell has and how we can use these tools to create a more secure scripting environment.
This session contains multiple real-world examples and applications of this technology. There will be time for questions during the session and if you have any specific PowerShell related questions that are not answered in the presentation Jaap will be available for questions all day.
Using Microsoft Flow for IT ProfessionalsJaap Brasser
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos which demonstrates how Microsoft Flow can be leveraged to automate frequently recurring tasks.
In this session Sandro will focus on two of the new features: Azure Functions Integration and Call nested workflows that were announced by Microsoft Integration Product team on the monthly webcast. We will also see how they will allow us to:
Create reusable pieces
Overcome some Logic Apps limitations, and what I mean by that is, for example, the ability to add more than one action inside the condition branch’s or the ability to add more than one action inside the loop
Create awesome Azure Functions with PowerShellJaap Brasser
Azure Functions are a great new addition to the Azure platform that allow us to repeatedly automate tasks in a cheap and efficient manner. In this session we will go into what Azure Functions are, what features and functionality and how can we use PowerShell to develop our own Azure functions and integrate them. How can we use them and what does the future bring for us? Join us today in our adventure into serverless computing!
In this session, Massimo will go through the Swagger specification and some open source tools built on top of Swagger. This includes Swagger editors and how they can be used to create our API stubs,
the Swashbuckle tool to auto-generate swagger.json, to keep it in sync with the server code and to make it discoverable. Finally he will demonstrate the Swagger integration in the API Management space (Azure API Management and Sentinet).
Using Microsoft Flow to automate our workflows, automatically retweet based on certain hash tags and how powershell.cool was built entirely by content collected and generated by Microsoft Flow. Also Sheep.
Azure Integration in Production with Logic Apps and moreBizTalk360
In this session we will share our experience in using different Azure Integration components in a Production environment with Logic Apps. The Why? The How? And What Next?
Automate yourself out of a job - Use ChatOps!Jaap Brasser
In this session we will cover a range of topics regarding Chat automation and the possibilities this gives us. We will dive into the concept of ChatOps, what it is, how we can implement it and what the benefits are. After this brief introduction we will dive into real-world examples of setting up and configuring your first chatbot, configuring security and resolving real-world incidents using this chatbot.
In this session, we will understand how to create your first pipeline and build an environment to restore dependencies and how to run tests in Azure DevOps followed by building an image and pushing it to container registry.
Chat automation has been a persistent buzz in the industry, in this session we will go through setting up Chat automation using PowerShell, how to hit the ground running and what steps to take to convert your existing code base and make it work from Chat. From there on we will dive into how we can securely deploy, manage and administer this as a platform. Expect a session filled with demos and real-world insights of bringing this live in a production environment.
Anti Patterns and Mistakes Using Serverless (ServerlessConf SF - 08 2018)Yochay Kiriaty
A first draft of my Serverless Conf San-Fran presentation.
Title: Mistakes and Anti-Patterns in Serverless (or when NOT to use Serverless)
Description:
As more and more companies adopt Serverless technologies, we begin to see common mistakes and software anti-patterns. This session will explore several common errors and anti-patterns while building serverless applications and ways to overcome them, as well as identify workloads that just don’t fit Serverless architecture.
Azure contains an ever growing suite of products, what tools or products do we have available to remove repetitive tasks from our daily grind. This session is viewed from the perspective of a Cloud/IT Professional, our vision is to automate anything we can using whichever tools we have available.
In this session we will dive into Azure Automation, Microsoft Flow, Azure Functions, Event Grid and more. What are they, how do they relate to each other and what are the pros and cons for using each product. By looking at and understanding how we can leverage the Cloud Automation tools that are available to us today we will be able to work less tomorrow! Warning: Contains code.
Imagine a scenario, where you can launch a video call or chat with an advisor, agent, or clinician in just one-click. We will explore application patterns that will enable you to write event-driven, resilient and highly scalable applications with Functions that too with power of engaging communication experience at scale. During the session, we will go through the use case along with code walkthrough and demonstration.
Microsoft Flow and PowerShell combined to automate everythingJaap Brasser
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos.¬¬¬ At the end of the talk we will have time for Q&A, so if you have any questions in regards to automation with Microsoft Flow or PowerShell be sure to have your questions ready.
This presentation is from the Integration Day event, a TechMeet360 Community Initiative, held on September 10, 2016 at Microsoft GSTC in Bangalore. In this slide, Microsoft's Escalation Engineers Tulika Chaudharie and Harikharan Krishnaraju explain using Azure Functions for Integration. The presentation starts with a general overview of Azure Functions and then it moves on to some of the common Integration Patterns and how Azure Functions fit into the scenarios.
Azure Functions are a great new addition to the Azure stack that allow us to repeatedly automate tasks in a cheap and efficient manner. In this session we will go into what Azure Functions are, what features and functionality and the different ways of applying them in real-world scenarios.
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos.¬¬¬ At the end of the talk we will have time for Q&A, so if you have any questions in regards to automation with Microsoft Flow or PowerShell be sure to have your questions ready.
Introduction to Azure Functions.
An event-based serverless compute experience to accelerate your development. Scale based on demand and pay only for the resources you consume.
The signs are on the wall, scripting and coding is becoming increasingly important for any role in IT. PowerShell is a crucial component in your toolkit and in this session we will cover the basics of PowerShell and how you can get started and be successful, how we can secure systems running PowerShell and what benefits can it bring.
In this session Jaap will talk about what PowerShell is, the language, the console, the editors and how PowerShell came to be. Recently PowerShell has been made open source and multi-platform. We will look at what the implications are and what benefits this brings along.
As security is increasingly a more important consideration for every company, we will take a look at what capabilities PowerShell has and how we can use these tools to create a more secure scripting environment.
This session contains multiple real-world examples and applications of this technology. There will be time for questions during the session and if you have any specific PowerShell related questions that are not answered in the presentation Jaap will be available for questions all day.
Using Microsoft Flow for IT ProfessionalsJaap Brasser
Microsoft Flow is a great workflow automation tool, but most likely PowerShell is not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Flow. In this session I will show how to integrate Microsoft Flow in PowerShell scripts and vice-versa and to highlight the benefits that this provide. This demo-heavy session will feature a lot of PowerShell code and live demos which demonstrates how Microsoft Flow can be leveraged to automate frequently recurring tasks.
In this session Sandro will focus on two of the new features: Azure Functions Integration and Call nested workflows that were announced by Microsoft Integration Product team on the monthly webcast. We will also see how they will allow us to:
Create reusable pieces
Overcome some Logic Apps limitations, and what I mean by that is, for example, the ability to add more than one action inside the condition branch’s or the ability to add more than one action inside the loop
Create awesome Azure Functions with PowerShellJaap Brasser
Azure Functions are a great new addition to the Azure platform that allow us to repeatedly automate tasks in a cheap and efficient manner. In this session we will go into what Azure Functions are, what features and functionality and how can we use PowerShell to develop our own Azure functions and integrate them. How can we use them and what does the future bring for us? Join us today in our adventure into serverless computing!
In this session, Massimo will go through the Swagger specification and some open source tools built on top of Swagger. This includes Swagger editors and how they can be used to create our API stubs,
the Swashbuckle tool to auto-generate swagger.json, to keep it in sync with the server code and to make it discoverable. Finally he will demonstrate the Swagger integration in the API Management space (Azure API Management and Sentinet).
Using Microsoft Flow to automate our workflows, automatically retweet based on certain hash tags and how powershell.cool was built entirely by content collected and generated by Microsoft Flow. Also Sheep.
Azure Integration in Production with Logic Apps and moreBizTalk360
In this session we will share our experience in using different Azure Integration components in a Production environment with Logic Apps. The Why? The How? And What Next?
Automate yourself out of a job - Use ChatOps!Jaap Brasser
In this session we will cover a range of topics regarding Chat automation and the possibilities this gives us. We will dive into the concept of ChatOps, what it is, how we can implement it and what the benefits are. After this brief introduction we will dive into real-world examples of setting up and configuring your first chatbot, configuring security and resolving real-world incidents using this chatbot.
In this session, we will understand how to create your first pipeline and build an environment to restore dependencies and how to run tests in Azure DevOps followed by building an image and pushing it to container registry.
Chat automation has been a persistent buzz in the industry, in this session we will go through setting up Chat automation using PowerShell, how to hit the ground running and what steps to take to convert your existing code base and make it work from Chat. From there on we will dive into how we can securely deploy, manage and administer this as a platform. Expect a session filled with demos and real-world insights of bringing this live in a production environment.
Anti Patterns and Mistakes Using Serverless (ServerlessConf SF - 08 2018)Yochay Kiriaty
A first draft of my Serverless Conf San-Fran presentation.
Title: Mistakes and Anti-Patterns in Serverless (or when NOT to use Serverless)
Description:
As more and more companies adopt Serverless technologies, we begin to see common mistakes and software anti-patterns. This session will explore several common errors and anti-patterns while building serverless applications and ways to overcome them, as well as identify workloads that just don’t fit Serverless architecture.
Expert Days: The VP R&D Open Seminar: Project ManagementMoshe Kaplan
All you wanted to know regarding product development, Classic Project Management, SCRUM, Agile, Continuous Deployment, Minimum Viable Product and how to build a winning team
Debugging,Troubleshooting & Monitoring Distributed Web & Cloud Applications a...Theo Jungeblut
In the past, applications where created as monolithic entities running on a single server. If this is the past for you, too, you will have experienced the downside of modern distributed and cloud applications, as debugging, troubleshooting, and monitoring is not easily accomplished with traditional approaches.
Within this session, we will explore different possibilities for collecting and analyzing the needed information to solve issues on modern distributed application and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each approach like debugger, log files, performance counter and third party solutions. The focus of this session will be on Developer and DevOps need, as increased release cycles and third party dependency more and more result in the need for troubleshooting also on production system, rather than in an isolated test environment.
This session requires a solid understanding of distributed applications and knowledge of SOA, but most principles also apply to and can be beneficial for more traditional application design approaches. The used code examples are in .NET but the shown principles generally apply to other languages, too, and shown software is often available for a variety of environments.
Designing Forge UI: A Story of Designing an App UI SystemAtlassian
Creating apps with Forge and its UI frontend components is now easier than ever. Join Senior Designer Allard van Helbergen and Product Manager Josephine Lee as they walk through the story of designing Forge UI.
What is a declarative UI and why did we choose this paradigm? What are all the considerations that go into defining the set of components to build apps with? And how do you make ‘creating apps’ simple? Walk away understanding the foundations of Forge, how all the different components work together, and where Forge UI is headed in the future.
Oracle Development Cloud Service is built on top of open source tools that are essential in today’s software development - source code control; task management; build automation; wiki; - striking the perfect balance between the developer's need of a light process, and on the other hand, the manager’s need of a global insight and oversight of development stages. Florin will describe how CHB Jelly House, start-up company, build their first custom application using Oracle Development Cloud Service across entire application’s lifecycle, from the requirements gathering phase right up to production.
Cross Platform Angular 2 and TypeScript DevelopmentJeremy Likness
Jeremy Likness explains why Angular is a powerful front end web technology, then demonstrates a cross-platform approach to building Angular 2 apps using NodeJs, Visual Studio Code, and TypeScript.
Part of the SPBiz Conference, a real-world look at some basic and complex SharePoint scenarios that did not go so well. However, each issue has a solution or an alternate method to resolve it. In this presentation, we follow a six step process to analyze, solve and prevent SharePoint issues & "debacles".
Continuous Delivery is hot. As we all increasingly compete using software, the business always wants more change faster. However, change is seen as risky. How do we deliver quickly while not exposing the business to excessive risk? What does this imply for how we update our mission critical databases?
Successful continuous delivery efforts use quality as an enabler of rapid change. Rapid feedback on the quality of the application, and a disciplined, high quality process support frequent delivery of business value, rather than frequent outage.
IBM UrbanCode’s Eric Minick and DBmaestro’s Yaniv Yehuda present how to build safety in to your delivery process. We will look at database change in some detail while delivering generally applicable lessons.
Build Proactive bot using Microsoft Bot FrameworkSri Kanth
Learn to build proactive Bot using Microsoft Bot framework.
This Slide deck is a supporting artifact for the training video uploaded on my youtube Channel : "Tech Talks with Sriks"
Spring Boot Tutorial | Microservices Spring Boot | Microservices Architecture...Edureka!
***** Microservices Architecture Training: https://www.edureka.co/microservices-... *****
This Edureka's tutorial on "Spring Boot Tutorial" will help you understand how to create Spring Boot project and implement various annotations of Spring Boot in your projects
Experience our free, in-depth three-part Tendenci Platform Corporate Membership Management workshop series! In Session 1 on May 14th, 2024, we began with an Introduction and Setup, mastering the configuration of your Corporate Membership Module settings to establish membership types, applications, and more. Then, on May 16th, 2024, in Session 2, we focused on binding individual members to a Corporate Membership and Corporate Reps, teaching you how to add individual members and assign Corporate Representatives to manage dues, renewals, and associated members. Finally, on May 28th, 2024, in Session 3, we covered questions and concerns, addressing any queries or issues you may have.
For more Tendenci AMS events, check out www.tendenci.com/events
Top Features to Include in Your Winzo Clone App for Business Growth (4).pptxrickgrimesss22
Discover the essential features to incorporate in your Winzo clone app to boost business growth, enhance user engagement, and drive revenue. Learn how to create a compelling gaming experience that stands out in the competitive market.
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing SuiteGoogle
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing Suite
👉👉 Click Here To Get More Info 👇👇
https://sumonreview.com/ai-pilot-review/
AI Pilot Review: Key Features
✅Deploy AI expert bots in Any Niche With Just A Click
✅With one keyword, generate complete funnels, websites, landing pages, and more.
✅More than 85 AI features are included in the AI pilot.
✅No setup or configuration; use your voice (like Siri) to do whatever you want.
✅You Can Use AI Pilot To Create your version of AI Pilot And Charge People For It…
✅ZERO Manual Work With AI Pilot. Never write, Design, Or Code Again.
✅ZERO Limits On Features Or Usages
✅Use Our AI-powered Traffic To Get Hundreds Of Customers
✅No Complicated Setup: Get Up And Running In 2 Minutes
✅99.99% Up-Time Guaranteed
✅30 Days Money-Back Guarantee
✅ZERO Upfront Cost
See My Other Reviews Article:
(1) TubeTrivia AI Review: https://sumonreview.com/tubetrivia-ai-review
(2) SocioWave Review: https://sumonreview.com/sociowave-review
(3) AI Partner & Profit Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-partner-profit-review
(4) AI Ebook Suite Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-ebook-suite-review
Climate Science Flows: Enabling Petabyte-Scale Climate Analysis with the Eart...Globus
The Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF) is a global network of data servers that archives and distributes the planet’s largest collection of Earth system model output for thousands of climate and environmental scientists worldwide. Many of these petabyte-scale data archives are located in proximity to large high-performance computing (HPC) or cloud computing resources, but the primary workflow for data users consists of transferring data, and applying computations on a different system. As a part of the ESGF 2.0 US project (funded by the United States Department of Energy Office of Science), we developed pre-defined data workflows, which can be run on-demand, capable of applying many data reduction and data analysis to the large ESGF data archives, transferring only the resultant analysis (ex. visualizations, smaller data files). In this talk, we will showcase a few of these workflows, highlighting how Globus Flows can be used for petabyte-scale climate analysis.
Globus Connect Server Deep Dive - GlobusWorld 2024Globus
We explore the Globus Connect Server (GCS) architecture and experiment with advanced configuration options and use cases. This content is targeted at system administrators who are familiar with GCS and currently operate—or are planning to operate—broader deployments at their institution.
First Steps with Globus Compute Multi-User EndpointsGlobus
In this presentation we will share our experiences around getting started with the Globus Compute multi-user endpoint. Working with the Pharmacology group at the University of Auckland, we have previously written an application using Globus Compute that can offload computationally expensive steps in the researcher's workflows, which they wish to manage from their familiar Windows environments, onto the NeSI (New Zealand eScience Infrastructure) cluster. Some of the challenges we have encountered were that each researcher had to set up and manage their own single-user globus compute endpoint and that the workloads had varying resource requirements (CPUs, memory and wall time) between different runs. We hope that the multi-user endpoint will help to address these challenges and share an update on our progress here.
OpenFOAM solver for Helmholtz equation, helmholtzFoam / helmholtzBubbleFoamtakuyayamamoto1800
In this slide, we show the simulation example and the way to compile this solver.
In this solver, the Helmholtz equation can be solved by helmholtzFoam. Also, the Helmholtz equation with uniformly dispersed bubbles can be simulated by helmholtzBubbleFoam.
SOCRadar Research Team: Latest Activities of IntelBrokerSOCRadar
The European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation (Europol) has suffered an alleged data breach after a notorious threat actor claimed to have exfiltrated data from its systems. Infamous data leaker IntelBroker posted on the even more infamous BreachForums hacking forum, saying that Europol suffered a data breach this month.
The alleged breach affected Europol agencies CCSE, EC3, Europol Platform for Experts, Law Enforcement Forum, and SIRIUS. Infiltration of these entities can disrupt ongoing investigations and compromise sensitive intelligence shared among international law enforcement agencies.
However, this is neither the first nor the last activity of IntekBroker. We have compiled for you what happened in the last few days. To track such hacker activities on dark web sources like hacker forums, private Telegram channels, and other hidden platforms where cyber threats often originate, you can check SOCRadar’s Dark Web News.
Stay Informed on Threat Actors’ Activity on the Dark Web with SOCRadar!
TROUBLESHOOTING 9 TYPES OF OUTOFMEMORYERRORTier1 app
Even though at surface level ‘java.lang.OutOfMemoryError’ appears as one single error; underlyingly there are 9 types of OutOfMemoryError. Each type of OutOfMemoryError has different causes, diagnosis approaches and solutions. This session equips you with the knowledge, tools, and techniques needed to troubleshoot and conquer OutOfMemoryError in all its forms, ensuring smoother, more efficient Java applications.
Developing Distributed High-performance Computing Capabilities of an Open Sci...Globus
COVID-19 had an unprecedented impact on scientific collaboration. The pandemic and its broad response from the scientific community has forged new relationships among public health practitioners, mathematical modelers, and scientific computing specialists, while revealing critical gaps in exploiting advanced computing systems to support urgent decision making. Informed by our team’s work in applying high-performance computing in support of public health decision makers during the COVID-19 pandemic, we present how Globus technologies are enabling the development of an open science platform for robust epidemic analysis, with the goal of collaborative, secure, distributed, on-demand, and fast time-to-solution analyses to support public health.
Innovating Inference - Remote Triggering of Large Language Models on HPC Clus...Globus
Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently the center of attention in the tech world, particularly for their potential to advance research. In this presentation, we'll explore a straightforward and effective method for quickly initiating inference runs on supercomputers using the vLLM tool with Globus Compute, specifically on the Polaris system at ALCF. We'll begin by briefly discussing the popularity and applications of LLMs in various fields. Following this, we will introduce the vLLM tool, and explain how it integrates with Globus Compute to efficiently manage LLM operations on Polaris. Attendees will learn the practical aspects of setting up and remotely triggering LLMs from local machines, focusing on ease of use and efficiency. This talk is ideal for researchers and practitioners looking to leverage the power of LLMs in their work, offering a clear guide to harnessing supercomputing resources for quick and effective LLM inference.
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
Unleash Unlimited Potential with One-Time Purchase
BoxLang is more than just a language; it's a community. By choosing a Visionary License, you're not just investing in your success, you're actively contributing to the ongoing development and support of BoxLang.
Listen to the keynote address and hear about the latest developments from Rachana Ananthakrishnan and Ian Foster who review the updates to the Globus Platform and Service, and the relevance of Globus to the scientific community as an automation platform to accelerate scientific discovery.
Large Language Models and the End of ProgrammingMatt Welsh
Talk by Matt Welsh at Craft Conference 2024 on the impact that Large Language Models will have on the future of software development. In this talk, I discuss the ways in which LLMs will impact the software industry, from replacing human software developers with AI, to replacing conventional software with models that perform reasoning, computation, and problem-solving.
How to Position Your Globus Data Portal for Success Ten Good PracticesGlobus
Science gateways allow science and engineering communities to access shared data, software, computing services, and instruments. Science gateways have gained a lot of traction in the last twenty years, as evidenced by projects such as the Science Gateways Community Institute (SGCI) and the Center of Excellence on Science Gateways (SGX3) in the US, The Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) and its platforms in Australia, and the projects around Virtual Research Environments in Europe. A few mature frameworks have evolved with their different strengths and foci and have been taken up by a larger community such as the Globus Data Portal, Hubzero, Tapis, and Galaxy. However, even when gateways are built on successful frameworks, they continue to face the challenges of ongoing maintenance costs and how to meet the ever-expanding needs of the community they serve with enhanced features. It is not uncommon that gateways with compelling use cases are nonetheless unable to get past the prototype phase and become a full production service, or if they do, they don't survive more than a couple of years. While there is no guaranteed pathway to success, it seems likely that for any gateway there is a need for a strong community and/or solid funding streams to create and sustain its success. With over twenty years of examples to draw from, this presentation goes into detail for ten factors common to successful and enduring gateways that effectively serve as best practices for any new or developing gateway.
Quarkus Hidden and Forbidden ExtensionsMax Andersen
Quarkus has a vast extension ecosystem and is known for its subsonic and subatomic feature set. Some of these features are not as well known, and some extensions are less talked about, but that does not make them less interesting - quite the opposite.
Come join this talk to see some tips and tricks for using Quarkus and some of the lesser known features, extensions and development techniques.
2. Yochay Kiriatry
Principal Program Manager @ Microsoft
Azure Functions/ App Service
Technical Evangelist / Advocate
Bunch of startups
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/appserviceteam
@yochayk
yochay@microsoft.com
3. Yochay Kiriatry
Principal Program Manager @ Microsoft
Azure Functions/ App Service
Technical Evangelist / Advocate
Bunch of startups
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/appserviceteam
@yochayk
yochay@microsoft.com
Peter Sbarski intro slide
29. Yochay Kiriatry
Principal Program Manager @ Microsoft
Azure Functions/ App Service
Technical Evangelist / Advocate
Bunch of startups
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/appserviceteam
@yochayk
yochay@microsoft.com
Editor's Notes
Before we start, I was told a good presentation must start with a personal story, in order to connect with the audience
So here is my personal story that I hope helps set the stage for this session.
I might be dating my self here, but let me take you to late 2001. Right after the .COM area, where I crushed and burned my start up, like so many others
I was leading a small team of developers working on creating an EPG for a set top box.
Technolgy: HTML and Javascript
Quick reminder, back in 2001 JS and HTML were somewhat early stage. How early, To give you example Yahoo and ask.com where the leading search engines…
Yochay Kiriaty is a principal program manager at the Microsoft Azure team, specifically driving Web, Mobile, API and Functions experiences as part of Azure App Service Platform. Yochay has been working with web technologies since the late 90s and has a strange passion for scale and performance. Yochay joined Microsoft in 2006 after managing engineering teams for several Internet and Telecommunications start-ups. Until 2011 Yochay worked as a Technical Evangelist working with marquee customers on Windows and Azure adoption. In 2011 Yochay joined the Azure team working on a new project called Azure Websites, which today is known as Azure App Service. Yochay have been working on Azure App Services since project from the project’s day one. As part of the core team Yochay helped architect, shape the user experience and deliver one of the most popular services on Azure. Recently Azure launched the Azure Functions service and is now one of the fastest growing Azure services offering easy to start Serverless compute. You can contact Yochay at yochay@microsoft.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/yochayk.
Yochay writes books, blogs, and articles about scale, apps, and good end-2-end user’s experience.
Yochay Kiriaty is a principal program manager at the Microsoft Azure team, specifically driving Web, Mobile, API and Functions experiences as part of Azure App Service Platform. Yochay has been working with web technologies since the late 90s and has a strange passion for scale and performance. Yochay joined Microsoft in 2006 after managing engineering teams for several Internet and Telecommunications start-ups. Until 2011 Yochay worked as a Technical Evangelist working with marquee customers on Windows and Azure adoption. In 2011 Yochay joined the Azure team working on a new project called Azure Websites, which today is known as Azure App Service. Yochay have been working on Azure App Services since project from the project’s day one. As part of the core team Yochay helped architect, shape the user experience and deliver one of the most popular services on Azure. Recently Azure launched the Azure Functions service and is now one of the fastest growing Azure services offering easy to start Serverless compute. You can contact Yochay at yochay@microsoft.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/yochayk.
Yochay writes books, blogs, and articles about scale, apps, and good end-2-end user’s experience.
Evolution of “software” over time
Happening across two main axis:
Hardware abstraction: with HW virtualization, moving HW to the cloud, reducing HW operations with PaaS and Serverless. HW abstraction focuses on reducing the cost (time) of setting up and long term HW management. Basically, it takes about a minute to setup a VM that someone else manages, HW, for you. HW abstraction also increases density, which drives a lot of the cost benefits …
Evolution of “software” over time
Happening across two main axis:
Hardware abstraction: with HW virtualization, moving HW to the cloud, reducing HW operations with PaaS and Serverless. HW abstraction focuses on reducing the cost (time) of setting up and long term HW management. Basically, it takes about a minute to setup a VM that someone else manages, HW, for you. HW abstraction also increases density, which drives a lot of the cost benefits …
Software architecture: from Monolithic, to N-Tier, to Micro-Services (SOA), to Functions (Serverless). I will argue, that the main advances in Application Software architecture focuses on reducing the long term cost of maintaining complex software system. Everyone agrees that monolithic architecture approach, is supper inefficient over the long run because it is hard to test and verify changes and it just doesn't’t scale- Not from engineering or management. The move to smaller and smaller chunks of code that are self-contained is happening. The latest buzz word such as MicroServices and Functions are a good example.
If you think about it, Serverless is the first time we can actually use a single word, “Serverless”, to describe both the HW and Software improvements
On one hand, everyone understands Serverless mean a fully managed, self-contained ; system that abstract the use of servers
On the other hand, Everyone agree Serverless is event-based programing model
We are at the beginning of the “Serverless-area”.
Serverless is a very good improvement of Platform as a Service. Serverless builds on top of PaaS to further reduce Dev Ops from developers.
however, because we are at the early stages of the Serverless-Area and revolution, there still growing pains and lack of clarity. Fundamentally, with Functional Programing Model, the we are dealing with
Stateless distributed system
Scale by design, if you follow some basic rules and properly design your solution to fit FaaS
Offers an application model
But the thing is, with Serverless, we are getting a LOT of Functions!
There are a lot of Functions – even with a basic “CRUD” as single functions, you can very easily end up with many Functions. 50 to 200 functions are “standard” number of Functions in a given small-to-medium application.
Beyond the management nightmare, there are some software architecture ‘issues’
Expressed over many different functions:
With no an easy way to ‘group’ (cluster) them into logical building blocks.
Functions can’t “easily talk” to each other, so we end up using queues, SNS, etc… which can lead to spaghetti code
Visualizing the big picture is difficult – often I hear developers complaining it is hard to see/ understand the entire system. which raises the interesting questions, whether you even care to see / understand the entire system
A Function is not aware of other Functions… how do you handle errors across multiple functions that represent a given business process?
There are no ‘clear’ guidelines, best practices, only few patterns with focus on dev-ops
There are no ‘formal’ patterns
With that in mind, one of this session goals is to just highlight the fact we need to build and foster common usage patterns and start building repository of common Serverless ‘design’ patterns
We are at the beginning of the “Serverless-area”.
While Serverless is a very good improvement of Platform as a Service - Serverless builds on top of PaaS to further reduce Dev Ops from developers. It is still early days of serverlsss.
however, because we are at the early stages of the Serverless-Area and revolution, there still growing pains and lack of clarity. Fundamentally, with Functional Programing Model, the we are dealing with
Offers an application model – event based
Stateless distributed system
Scale by design, if you follow some basic rules and properly design your solution to fit FaaS
But the thing is, with Serverless, we are getting a LOT of Functions!
There are a lot of Functions – even with a basic “CRUD” as single functions, you can very easily end up with many Functions. 50 to 200 functions are “standard” number of Functions in a given small-to-medium application.
Beyond the management nightmare, there are some software architecture ‘issues’
Expressed over many different functions:
With no an easy way to ‘group’ (cluster) them into logical building blocks.
Functions can’t “easily talk” to each other, so we end up using queues, SNS, etc… which can lead to spaghetti code
Visualizing the big picture is difficult – often I hear developers complaining it is hard to see/ understand the entire system. which raises the interesting questions, whether you even care to see / understand the entire system
A Function is not aware of other Functions… how do you handle errors across multiple functions that represent a given business process?
There are no ‘clear’ guidelines, best practices, only few patterns with focus on dev-ops
There are no ‘formal’ patterns
With that in mind, one of this session goals is to just highlight the fact we need to build and foster common usage patterns and start building repository of common Serverless ‘design’ patterns
With that opening in mind and somewhat general understanding of what we are trying to prove here
Now that we understand some of the pain points with having big application with many functions.
It is important to take a moment to review some basic best practices for Functions:
Functions should do one thing
Functions should finish as quickly as possible
Functions should be stateless
Functions should be idempotent
https://agilevision.io/blog/serverless%20architecture/2017/02/12/easily-create-complex-workflows-with-aws-step-functions.html
Both allow you to orchestrate functions and create a ‘workflow’
Deals with No visualization to show relationship between functions.
Queues (SQQ/ SNS) are an implementation detail.
We don’t have time to review this, but it is a nightmare
Here is a pointer to the repo
To Serverless and Beyond: Opening New Possibilities in App
Yochay Kiriaty is a principal program manager at the Microsoft Azure team, specifically driving Web, Mobile, API and Functions experiences as part of Azure App Service Platform. Yochay has been working with web technologies since the late 90s and has a strange passion for scale and performance. Yochay joined Microsoft in 2006 after managing engineering teams for several Internet and Telecommunications start-ups. Until 2011 Yochay worked as a Technical Evangelist working with marquee customers on Windows and Azure adoption. In 2011 Yochay joined the Azure team working on a new project called Azure Websites, which today is known as Azure App Service. Yochay have been working on Azure App Services since project from the project’s day one. As part of the core team Yochay helped architect, shape the user experience and deliver one of the most popular services on Azure. Recently Azure launched the Azure Functions service and is now one of the fastest growing Azure services offering easy to start Serverless compute. You can contact Yochay at yochay@microsoft.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/yochayk.
Yochay writes books, blogs, and articles about scale, apps, and good end-2-end user’s experience.