The CNCF point of view on Serverless
Presentation at Serverlessconf NYC on October 11, 2017.
https://nyc.serverlessconf.io/
The CNCF Serverless Working Group - with participation from IBM, AWS, Google, Huawei, Red Hat, VMware and many others - has been working on guidance to help end developers understand serverless computing. relative to other cloud-native deployment options such as container orchestration (for example, Kubernetes) and Platform-as-a-Service (for example, Cloud Foundry and OpenShift). A soon-to-be-published whitepaper aims to educate users about the right workloads for serverless, help them make sense of the landscape of service providers, and recommend open source projects for inclusion in the CNCF. In this lightning talk you'll hear about our work and learn how you can help steer serverless adoption and project support from the CNCF.
Serverless architectures are rapidly gaining interest from developers but it can be hard to understand when a serverless platform makes the most sense for their next application and how long a given provider might be around to support their apps. The CNCF aims to help users learn about serverless and support emerging open source projects that can run, debug, and monitor the next generation of cloud-native applications.
Serverless Architectures in Banking: OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix at SantanderDaniel Krook
Presentation at IBM InterConnect on March 21, 2017.
Santander is one of the largest companies in the world, yet size is no guarantee of future survival given several challenges in the retail banking industry, primarily from disruptive new startups and a changing regulatory landscape. Success requires cutting-edge cloud computing solutions that achieve better resource utilization through automatic application scaling to match demand; and an associated, finer-grained cost model that helps distribute compute load at a lower cost. Learn how IBM and Santander partnered to create next-generation solutions for retail banking with the OpenWhisk open source project hosted on IBM Bluemix, which enables serverless architectures for event driven programming.
Workshop: Develop Serverless Applications with IBM Cloud FunctionsDaniel Krook
Materials for the IBM Cloud Functions workshop at Index on February 20, 2018
https://developer.ibm.com/indexconf/
http://bit.ly/index-serverless
Learn the basics and strengths of IBM Cloud Functions (powered by Apache OpenWhisk). In this workshop, you will learn how to develop serverless applications composed of loosely coupled microservice-like functions. You'll play with the CLI and development tools becoming an IBM Cloud Functions star by implementing a weather bot using IBM's Weather Company Data service and Slack. You will also investigate how to use other components like our API Gateway integration. Finally, you will get a preview of new technologies we are developing for IBM Cloud Functions.
Event specifications, state of the serverless landscape, and other news from ...Daniel Krook
Presentation at Serverlessconf Paris on February 15, 2018.
https://paris.serverlessconf.io/
This is an update to the early talk at Serverlessconf NYC at:
https://www.slideshare.net/DanielKrook/the-cncf-on-serverless
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) Serverless Working Group - with participation from IBM, AWS, Microsoft, Red Hat, VMware, Nuclio, Serverless Inc., Huawei and many others - has been working on an open eventing specification and mapping the state of the serverless landscape, including the features of public cloud serverless platforms and the capabilities of on premises and open source Functions-as-a-Service projects. In this lightning talk you'll hear about those efforts, see the newly published whitepaper on serverless use cases, and learn how you can help steer serverless adoption through participation in the CNCF.
Building serverless applications with Apache OpenWhiskDaniel Krook
IBM presentation at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention in Austin, Texas on May 10, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-tx/public/schedule/detail/61295
Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are attractive for many emerging cloud workloads and when you should consider OpenWhisk for your next project. Daniel then shows you how to get started with OpenWhisk on Bluemix right away, using several samples on GitHub.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
Materials for the Serverless APIs with Apache OpenWhisk session at OSCON on July 19, 2018
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-or/public/schedule/detail/67393
Ever been frustrated with a conference schedule app that freezes up when everyone opens it right after the first day’s keynotes? Ever played a mobile game that was so popular that its backend couldn’t keep up with real-time multiplayer interaction? If you’re an app developer, chances are that you’re looking for a better mobile backend architecture that can effectively match user demand at the exact moment it’s needed while taking advantage of new per-request cost models promised by serverless technologies.
The Apache OpenWhisk project (supported by IBM, Adobe, Red Hat, and others) provides a polyglot, autoscaling environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and REST API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are great for cloud workloads and when to consider OpenWhisk in particular for your next web, mobile, IoT, bot, or analytics project.
Containers vs serverless - Navigating application deployment optionsDaniel Krook
IBM presentation at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention Container Day in Austin, Texas on May 9, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-tx/public/schedule/detail/61403
New technologies seem to arrive fast and furious these days. We were just getting used to our new container world when serverless arrived. But is it better, faster, and cheaper, as the hype suggests?
Daniel Krook explores a real application packaged using popular open source container technology and walks you through a migration to an event-oriented serverless paradigm, discussing the trade-offs and pros and cons of each approach to application deployment and examining when serverless benefit applications and when it doesn’t.
You’ll learn considerations for using serverless API frameworks and how to reuse some of your containerization strategy as you move from more traditional application models to an event-driven world.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
Building serverless applications with Apache OpenWhisk and IBM Cloud FunctionsDaniel Krook
Presentation at Functions17 in Toronto, Canada on August 25, 2017.
https://functions.world
Video, code, links: https://github.com/krook/functions17
Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are attractive for many emerging cloud workloads and when you should consider OpenWhisk for your next project. Daniel then shows you how to get started with OpenWhisk on IBM Cloud Functions right away, using several samples on GitHub.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect & Developer Advocate, IBM
Build a cloud native app with OpenWhiskDaniel Krook
IBM OpenWhisk presentation and demo for developerWorks TV on December 14, 2016.
https://developer.ibm.com/tv/build-a-cloud-native-app-with-apache-openwhisk/
New cloud programming models enabled by serverless architectures are emerging, allowing developers to focus more sharply on creating their applications and less on managing their infrastructure. The OpenWhisk project started by IBM provides an open source platform to enable these cloud native, event driven applications.
At this live coding event, Daniel Krook provide an overview of serverless architectures, introduce the OpenWhisk programming model, and then deploy an OpenWhisk application on IBM Bluemix, while you watch, step-by-step.
Daniel Krook, Senior Software Engineer, IBM
Serverless Architectures in Banking: OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix at SantanderDaniel Krook
Presentation at IBM InterConnect on March 21, 2017.
Santander is one of the largest companies in the world, yet size is no guarantee of future survival given several challenges in the retail banking industry, primarily from disruptive new startups and a changing regulatory landscape. Success requires cutting-edge cloud computing solutions that achieve better resource utilization through automatic application scaling to match demand; and an associated, finer-grained cost model that helps distribute compute load at a lower cost. Learn how IBM and Santander partnered to create next-generation solutions for retail banking with the OpenWhisk open source project hosted on IBM Bluemix, which enables serverless architectures for event driven programming.
Workshop: Develop Serverless Applications with IBM Cloud FunctionsDaniel Krook
Materials for the IBM Cloud Functions workshop at Index on February 20, 2018
https://developer.ibm.com/indexconf/
http://bit.ly/index-serverless
Learn the basics and strengths of IBM Cloud Functions (powered by Apache OpenWhisk). In this workshop, you will learn how to develop serverless applications composed of loosely coupled microservice-like functions. You'll play with the CLI and development tools becoming an IBM Cloud Functions star by implementing a weather bot using IBM's Weather Company Data service and Slack. You will also investigate how to use other components like our API Gateway integration. Finally, you will get a preview of new technologies we are developing for IBM Cloud Functions.
Event specifications, state of the serverless landscape, and other news from ...Daniel Krook
Presentation at Serverlessconf Paris on February 15, 2018.
https://paris.serverlessconf.io/
This is an update to the early talk at Serverlessconf NYC at:
https://www.slideshare.net/DanielKrook/the-cncf-on-serverless
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) Serverless Working Group - with participation from IBM, AWS, Microsoft, Red Hat, VMware, Nuclio, Serverless Inc., Huawei and many others - has been working on an open eventing specification and mapping the state of the serverless landscape, including the features of public cloud serverless platforms and the capabilities of on premises and open source Functions-as-a-Service projects. In this lightning talk you'll hear about those efforts, see the newly published whitepaper on serverless use cases, and learn how you can help steer serverless adoption through participation in the CNCF.
Building serverless applications with Apache OpenWhiskDaniel Krook
IBM presentation at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention in Austin, Texas on May 10, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-tx/public/schedule/detail/61295
Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are attractive for many emerging cloud workloads and when you should consider OpenWhisk for your next project. Daniel then shows you how to get started with OpenWhisk on Bluemix right away, using several samples on GitHub.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
Materials for the Serverless APIs with Apache OpenWhisk session at OSCON on July 19, 2018
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-or/public/schedule/detail/67393
Ever been frustrated with a conference schedule app that freezes up when everyone opens it right after the first day’s keynotes? Ever played a mobile game that was so popular that its backend couldn’t keep up with real-time multiplayer interaction? If you’re an app developer, chances are that you’re looking for a better mobile backend architecture that can effectively match user demand at the exact moment it’s needed while taking advantage of new per-request cost models promised by serverless technologies.
The Apache OpenWhisk project (supported by IBM, Adobe, Red Hat, and others) provides a polyglot, autoscaling environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and REST API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are great for cloud workloads and when to consider OpenWhisk in particular for your next web, mobile, IoT, bot, or analytics project.
Containers vs serverless - Navigating application deployment optionsDaniel Krook
IBM presentation at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention Container Day in Austin, Texas on May 9, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-tx/public/schedule/detail/61403
New technologies seem to arrive fast and furious these days. We were just getting used to our new container world when serverless arrived. But is it better, faster, and cheaper, as the hype suggests?
Daniel Krook explores a real application packaged using popular open source container technology and walks you through a migration to an event-oriented serverless paradigm, discussing the trade-offs and pros and cons of each approach to application deployment and examining when serverless benefit applications and when it doesn’t.
You’ll learn considerations for using serverless API frameworks and how to reuse some of your containerization strategy as you move from more traditional application models to an event-driven world.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
Building serverless applications with Apache OpenWhisk and IBM Cloud FunctionsDaniel Krook
Presentation at Functions17 in Toronto, Canada on August 25, 2017.
https://functions.world
Video, code, links: https://github.com/krook/functions17
Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events. Daniel Krook explains why serverless architectures are attractive for many emerging cloud workloads and when you should consider OpenWhisk for your next project. Daniel then shows you how to get started with OpenWhisk on IBM Cloud Functions right away, using several samples on GitHub.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect & Developer Advocate, IBM
Build a cloud native app with OpenWhiskDaniel Krook
IBM OpenWhisk presentation and demo for developerWorks TV on December 14, 2016.
https://developer.ibm.com/tv/build-a-cloud-native-app-with-apache-openwhisk/
New cloud programming models enabled by serverless architectures are emerging, allowing developers to focus more sharply on creating their applications and less on managing their infrastructure. The OpenWhisk project started by IBM provides an open source platform to enable these cloud native, event driven applications.
At this live coding event, Daniel Krook provide an overview of serverless architectures, introduce the OpenWhisk programming model, and then deploy an OpenWhisk application on IBM Bluemix, while you watch, step-by-step.
Daniel Krook, Senior Software Engineer, IBM
IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk: Serverless Conference 2017, Austin, USA: The journey c...OpenWhisk
OpenWhisk is an open-source serverless platform ideally suited to a wide range of scenarios including cognitive, data, IoT, microservices, and mobile workloads. Since we presented OpenWhisk at ServerlessConf London a lot has happened. It has been successfully accepted as an Apache Incubator project and the first production OpenWhisk deployments have happened. From a technical point of view we have added capabilities like a better API Gateway integration and support for web actions, have added integrations with IBM App Connect, IBM Message Hub, and more. During this talk we will discuss our latest additions and illustrate how to benefit by “going” serverless with OpenWhisk by exploring some real-world customer usecases with a focus on how serverless architectures can be exploited in totally different scenarios. Using these usecases we will explain how OpenWhisk works and why it is the ideally platform for these emerging workloads. After the talk we will be looking forward to discussing your own usecases in more detail at our booth.
Serverless architectures built on an open source platformDaniel Krook
IBM keynote at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in New York City on April 5, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/software-architecture/sa-ny/public/schedule/detail/60432
Daniel Krook explores Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix, which provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk: Interconnect 2016, Las Vegas: CCD-1088: The Future of ...OpenWhisk
Learn more about the IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk, a serverless event-driven compute platform, which quickly executes application logic in response to events or direct invocations from web/mobile apps or other endpoints.
Building and Running Workloads the Knative WayQAware GmbH
Serverless Computing 2019, November 2019, London: Talk by Mario-Leander Reimer (@LeanderReimer, Principal Software Architect at QAware)
=== Please download slides if blurred! ===
Abstract: Knative is a K8s based platform to build, deploy, manage and run serverless workloads.
In this session we will take a look at the concepts of each Knative building block and apply them directly in practice. First, we’ll define and use Tekton pipelines to build our workloads. Then we’ll use Knative serving to rapidly deploy serverless containers with automatic scaling up and down to zero. Finally, we’ll show how to build loosely coupled event-driven architectures with the help of Knative eventing. This session will also cover the different installation options leveraging either Istio or the API gateways Gloo and Ambassador.
How to develop your first cloud-native Applications with Java - 30 MinutesNiklas Heidloff
Cloud Native Starter for Java EE based Microservices on Kubernetes and Istio
Code: https://github.com/nheidloff/cloud-native-starter
Documentation: https://github.com/nheidloff/cloud-native-starter#documentation
Building Event-Driven Workflows with Knative and TektonLeon Stigter
As Kubernetes and micro-services have gained widespread adoption in the enterprise developer community, event-driven architectures have become the standard way to build and deploy new applications. Knative and Tekton are two Kubernetes-native technologies that make it easier than ever for developers to get started: Knative as a platform to build event-driven applications and Tekton to continuously deploy them. In this workshop you will get hands-on with Knative and Tekton to:
Set up a Kubernetes cluster using KinD
Deploy Knative, Octant, and Tekton and configure those services to work with your new cluster
Deploy services using both Knative serving and eventing
Build event-driven pipelines to deploy your services using Tekton
Kubernetes as a platform is moving fast from being the "new IT" to standing right in the center of most companies infrastructure. What does that mean for IT Automation? For its own purposes, Kubernetes already comes with a well-engineered declarative model of managing computing resources that has proven to be very efficient. In classic IT, likewise proven automation solutions like Red Hat Ansible are established. This forms two automation silos, and as we all know: Silos are a bad thing. Is there a way to bridge this gap?
In this session we will highlight the possibilities to use Kubernetes state management as backbone for IT automation by extending it with custom operators using Red Hat Ansible. Ansible with its focus on idempotency is a really great match for implementing Kubernetes-Operators and doing it to automate non-K8s resources, just like you would do with Ansible Tower, is easier than you might think. We will have a look at different use cases and provide a strategic outlook.
Going Cloud Native - It Takes a PlatformChip Childers
There is a lot of buzz about “cloud native.” Becoming cloud native means changing how we think about, develop, and deploy applications. This shift impacts the structure of organizations, as teams align to common business outcomes.
Chip Childers explains why a successful cloud native approach requires a platform: a platform allows you to rethink how IT supports the application development teams. Chip explores what it means to be truly cloud native, what it takes to get there, and how a platform can make it all work.
This is a keynote talk that I gave at RedisConf 2016.
It answers three questions:
What are microservices?
Why should you use them?
Where does Redis fit into a microservices architecture?
You can find the example code here: https://github.com/eventuate-examples/eventuate-examples-restaurant-management
IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk: Serverless Conference 2017, Austin, USA: The journey c...OpenWhisk
OpenWhisk is an open-source serverless platform ideally suited to a wide range of scenarios including cognitive, data, IoT, microservices, and mobile workloads. Since we presented OpenWhisk at ServerlessConf London a lot has happened. It has been successfully accepted as an Apache Incubator project and the first production OpenWhisk deployments have happened. From a technical point of view we have added capabilities like a better API Gateway integration and support for web actions, have added integrations with IBM App Connect, IBM Message Hub, and more. During this talk we will discuss our latest additions and illustrate how to benefit by “going” serverless with OpenWhisk by exploring some real-world customer usecases with a focus on how serverless architectures can be exploited in totally different scenarios. Using these usecases we will explain how OpenWhisk works and why it is the ideally platform for these emerging workloads. After the talk we will be looking forward to discussing your own usecases in more detail at our booth.
Serverless architectures built on an open source platformDaniel Krook
IBM keynote at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in New York City on April 5, 2017.
https://conferences.oreilly.com/software-architecture/sa-ny/public/schedule/detail/60432
Daniel Krook explores Apache OpenWhisk on IBM Bluemix, which provides a powerful and flexible environment for deploying cloud-native applications driven by data, message, and API call events.
Daniel Krook, Software Architect, IBM
IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk: Interconnect 2016, Las Vegas: CCD-1088: The Future of ...OpenWhisk
Learn more about the IBM Bluemix OpenWhisk, a serverless event-driven compute platform, which quickly executes application logic in response to events or direct invocations from web/mobile apps or other endpoints.
Building and Running Workloads the Knative WayQAware GmbH
Serverless Computing 2019, November 2019, London: Talk by Mario-Leander Reimer (@LeanderReimer, Principal Software Architect at QAware)
=== Please download slides if blurred! ===
Abstract: Knative is a K8s based platform to build, deploy, manage and run serverless workloads.
In this session we will take a look at the concepts of each Knative building block and apply them directly in practice. First, we’ll define and use Tekton pipelines to build our workloads. Then we’ll use Knative serving to rapidly deploy serverless containers with automatic scaling up and down to zero. Finally, we’ll show how to build loosely coupled event-driven architectures with the help of Knative eventing. This session will also cover the different installation options leveraging either Istio or the API gateways Gloo and Ambassador.
How to develop your first cloud-native Applications with Java - 30 MinutesNiklas Heidloff
Cloud Native Starter for Java EE based Microservices on Kubernetes and Istio
Code: https://github.com/nheidloff/cloud-native-starter
Documentation: https://github.com/nheidloff/cloud-native-starter#documentation
Building Event-Driven Workflows with Knative and TektonLeon Stigter
As Kubernetes and micro-services have gained widespread adoption in the enterprise developer community, event-driven architectures have become the standard way to build and deploy new applications. Knative and Tekton are two Kubernetes-native technologies that make it easier than ever for developers to get started: Knative as a platform to build event-driven applications and Tekton to continuously deploy them. In this workshop you will get hands-on with Knative and Tekton to:
Set up a Kubernetes cluster using KinD
Deploy Knative, Octant, and Tekton and configure those services to work with your new cluster
Deploy services using both Knative serving and eventing
Build event-driven pipelines to deploy your services using Tekton
Kubernetes as a platform is moving fast from being the "new IT" to standing right in the center of most companies infrastructure. What does that mean for IT Automation? For its own purposes, Kubernetes already comes with a well-engineered declarative model of managing computing resources that has proven to be very efficient. In classic IT, likewise proven automation solutions like Red Hat Ansible are established. This forms two automation silos, and as we all know: Silos are a bad thing. Is there a way to bridge this gap?
In this session we will highlight the possibilities to use Kubernetes state management as backbone for IT automation by extending it with custom operators using Red Hat Ansible. Ansible with its focus on idempotency is a really great match for implementing Kubernetes-Operators and doing it to automate non-K8s resources, just like you would do with Ansible Tower, is easier than you might think. We will have a look at different use cases and provide a strategic outlook.
Going Cloud Native - It Takes a PlatformChip Childers
There is a lot of buzz about “cloud native.” Becoming cloud native means changing how we think about, develop, and deploy applications. This shift impacts the structure of organizations, as teams align to common business outcomes.
Chip Childers explains why a successful cloud native approach requires a platform: a platform allows you to rethink how IT supports the application development teams. Chip explores what it means to be truly cloud native, what it takes to get there, and how a platform can make it all work.
This is a keynote talk that I gave at RedisConf 2016.
It answers three questions:
What are microservices?
Why should you use them?
Where does Redis fit into a microservices architecture?
You can find the example code here: https://github.com/eventuate-examples/eventuate-examples-restaurant-management
#hacksummit 2016 - event-driven microservices – Events on the outside, on the...Chris Richardson
This is my presentation from #hacksummit 2016
This presentation looks at the importance of events and the role that they play in applications. We describe how events are a key application integration mechanism and how they are used by applications to communicate with the outside world. You will learn how the microservices inside a system can use events to maintain data consistency. We discuss how easy it is to implement both of these mechanisms by developing your core business logic using an event-centric approach known as event sourcing.
Microservices are an essential enabler of agility but developing and deploying them is a challenge. In order for microservices to be loosely coupled,each service must have its own datastore. This makes it difficult to maintain data consistency across services.
Deploying microservices is also a complex problem since an application typically consists of 10s or 100s of services, written in a variety of languages and frameworks. In this presentation, you will learn how to solve these problems by using an event-driven architecture to maintain data consistency and by using Docker to simplify deployment.
Developing microservices with aggregates (SpringOne platform, #s1p)Chris Richardson
The Domain Model pattern is a great way to develop complex business logic. Unfortunately, a typical domain model is a tangled, birds nest of classes. It can’t be decomposed into microservices. Moreover, business logic often relies on ACID transactions to maintain consistency.
Fortunately, there is a solution to this problem: aggregates. An aggregate is an often overlooked modeling concept from the must read book Domain Driven Design. In this talk you will learn how aggregates enable you to develop business logic for the modern world of microservices and NoSQL. We will describe how to use aggregates to design modular business logic that can be partitioned into microservices. You will learn how aggregates enable you to use eventual consistency instead of ACID. We will describe the design of a microservice that is built using aggregates, and Spring Cloud.
Handling Eventual Consistency in JVM Microservices with Event Sourcing (javao...Chris Richardson
This is the talk that the Kenny Bastani and I gave at JavaOne 2016.
When you’re building JVM applications in a microservice architecture, managing state becomes a distributed systems problem. Instead of being able to manage state as transactions inside the boundaries of a single monolithic application, a microservice must be able to manage consistency by using transactions that are distributed across a network of many different applications and databases. This session explores the problems of data consistency and high availability in JVM-based microservices and how to use event sourcing to solve these problems.
CNCF general introduction to beginners at openstack meetup Pune & Bangalore February 2018. Covers broadly the activities and structure of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation.
By,
Krishna Kumar
This very brief talk gives you an overview of how you can contribute to CNCF (Cloud Native Computing Foundation) not just through the code.
How to contribute to cloud native computing foundation (CNCF)Krishna-Kumar
Contribute to cloud native computing foundation - various ways. This is an introductory presentation given in Container conference in Bangalore April 2017 and may help new comers to get in to the CNCF eco system faster.
[Srijan Wednesday Webinars] How to Build a Cloud Native Platform for Enterpri...Srijan Technologies
Drupal has been a consistent leader in the Gartner Magic Quadrant for Web Content Management. However, enterprises leveraging Drupal have traditionally relied on PaaS providers for their hosting, scaling and lifecycle management. And that usually leads to enterprise applications being locked-in with a particular cloud or vendor.
As container and container orchestration technologies disrupt the cloud and platform landscape, there’s a clear way to avoid this state of affairs. In this webinar, we discuss why it's important to build a cloud-native Drupal platform, and exactly how to do that.
Join the webinar to understand how you can avoid vendor lock-in, and create a secure platform to manage, operate and scale your Drupal applications in a multi-cloud portable manner.
Key Takeaways:
- Why you need a cloud-native Drupal platform and how to build one
- How to craft an idiomatic development workflow
- Understanding infrastructure and cloud engineering - under the hood
- Demystifying the art and science of Docker and Kubernetes: deep dive into scaling the LAMP stack
- Exploring cost optimization and cloud governance
- Understand portability of applications
- A hands-on demo of how the platform works
Inspired by the cloud native community and CNCF Research end-users such as CERN, University of Michigan and many others. With our small contribution, Nora Alwadah and I extended the bridge to the Saudi HPC community.
Key takeaway: Follow and join the new Kubernetes Batch Working Group. Help them nourish and evolve.
Cloud Native Architectures with an Open Source, Event Driven, Serverless Plat...Daniel Krook
IBM keynote at CloudNativeCon / KubeCon in Seattle, Washington on November 8, 2016.
https://cnkc16.sched.org/event/8K4c
New cloud programming models enabled by serverless architectures are emerging, allowing developers to focus more sharply on creating their applications and less on managing their infrastructure. The OpenWhisk project started by IBM provides an open source platform to enable these cloud native, event driven applications.
Daniel Krook, Senior Software Engineer, IBM
The Containers Ecosystem, the OpenStack Magnum Project, the Open Container In...Daniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Tokyo, Japan on October 27, 2015.
http://sched.co/49x0
The technology industry has been abuzz about cloud workload containerization since the open source Docker project became a phenomenon in early 2014.
Meanwhile, an OpenStack Containers Team was formed and the Magnum project launched to provide users with a convenient Containers-as-a-Service solution for OpenStack environments.
As the potential of both technologies emerged, many wanted to see shared governance over the baseline container specification and runtime technology to ensure an open cloud ecosystem.
This past June, a new group was formed with a goal of creating open, industry standards around container formats and runtimes, called the Open Container Initiative (http://www.opencontainers.org).
So how will OpenStack Magnum influence - and be influenced by - the new OCI group? Why is the OCI under the stewardship of the Linux Foundation? What is the scope of the OCI effort? What project goals and/or principles will guide their work?
Attend this session to learn the following:
* A brief history of the open container ecosystem and the major benefits that containerization provides
* An overview of the Magnum CaaS plugin architecture and design goals
* Insider details on the the progress of the Linux Foundation Open Container Initiative (and the related Cloud Native Computing Foundation)
* What it all means for deploying container orchestration engines on your cloud with OpenStack Magnum
Megan Kostick - Software Engineer, Cloud and Open Source Technologies, IBM
Daniel Krook - Senior Software Engineer, Cloud and Open Source Technologies, IBM
Jeffrey Borek - WW Program Director, Open Technologies and Partnerships, Cloud Computing
Triangle Devops Meetup covering Netflix open source, cloud architecture, and what Andrew did in his first year working as a senior software engineer in the cloud platform group.
Commit to the Cause, Push for Change: Contributing to Call for Code Open Sour...Daniel Krook
Materials for the OPEN TALK: Commit to the Cause, Push for Change: Contributing to Call for Code Open Source Projects session at DeveloperWeek Virtual on February 18, 2020
https://www.developerweek.com/conference/
Daniel Krook
IBM, Chief Technology Officer for the Call for Code Global Initiative
Andres Meira
Grillo, Founder & CEO
Lakshyana K.C.
Build Change, Technology Consultant
Call for Code is a multi-year program that calls on developers to create practical, effective, and high-quality applications based on one or more IBM Cloud services (for example, web, mobile, data, analytics, AI, IoT, or weather) or Red Hat platforms (including OpenShift) to build a solution that can have an immediate and lasting impact on humanitarian issues as open source projects. In this session you'll learn more about the solutions built to tackle natural hazards, climate change, and the pandemic. What sets Call for Code apart from other technology-for-good competitions is the commitment to deploy the winning solutions with the IBM Service Corps and to help teams build sustainable open source communities through The Linux Foundation. Join us at this talk to hear about the most recent winning projects, get an update on previous year's progress, and learn about how to contribute to two projects directly from the developers.
Engaging Open Source Developers to Develop Tech for Good through Code and Res...Daniel Krook
Materials for the Engaging Open Source Developers to Develop Tech for Good through Code and Response™ with The Linux Foundation session at Open Source Summit on July 1, 2020
https://sched.co/c3YP
The Call for Code Global Initiative is a five-year program that calls on developers to create practical, effective, and high-quality applications based on one or more IBM Cloud services (for example, web, mobile, data, analytics, AI, IoT, or weather) or Red Hat platforms (including OpenShift) to build a solution that can have an immediate and lasting impact on humanitarian issues as open source projects. Building on the success of the 2018 and 2019 competitions, the Call for Code 2020 Global Challenge asks teams of developers, data scientists, designers, business analysts, subject matter experts and more to build solutions that significantly address climate change through solutions for energy and water sustainability and resilience to natural disasters. Learn about this year's Call for Code Challenge (which has a top prize of $200K USD), be inspired by the 2018 and 2019 winners (Project OWL and Prometeo), and discover the new Code and Response™ with The Linux Foundation initiative.
COVID-19 and Climate Change Action Through Open Source TechnologyDaniel Krook
Materials for the COVID-19 and Climate Change Action Through Open Source Technology keynote at DeveloperWeek on June 16, 2020
https://www.developerweek.com/global/
Call for Code a five-year program that inspires developers to create practical, effective, and high-quality applications that can have an immediate and lasting impact on humanitarian issues as sustainable open source projects. Building on the success of the 2018 and 2019 competitions, the Call for Code 2020 Global Challenge asks teams of programmers, data scientists, designers, business analysts, subject matter experts, and more to build solutions that significantly address climate change through solutions for energy and water sustainability and disaster resiliency. A second track was added for solutions to the social and business aspects of COVID-19 which include crisis communications, remote education, and community cooperation. Learn about this year's Call for Code Challenge (which has a top prize of $200K USD), be inspired by the 2018 and 2019 winners (Project OWL and Prometeo), and discover the new Code and Response™ with The Linux Foundation initiative which supports the most promising solutions.
Open Container Technologies and OpenStack - Sorting Through Kubernetes, the O...Daniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Barcelona, Spain on October 25, 2016.
http://bit.ly/os-kub-oci-cncf
Containers along with next generation topics such as orchestration and serverless computing continue to draw interest across the application developer and data center operator communities because of the enormous potential of the technology and the rapid pace of change.
As the potential of Docker continues to evolve, Kubernetes emerges as the leading orchestration technology, and the OpenStack Magnum project has matured, many want to see shared governance over the baseline container specification and associated runtime and format/image to protect investments and enable confident adoption of this emerging technology.
Join this session to learn the latest about the Open Container Initiative (www.opencontainers.org) and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (cncf.io) - both collaborative projects of the Linux Foundation - that drive the latest cloud native technologies and projects and see how they relate to Magnum and Kuryr.
Daniel Krook, Senior Software Engineer, IBM
Jeffrey Borek, Program Director, Open Tech, IBM
Sarah Novotny, Senior Kubernetes Community Manger, Google
Serverless architectures are one of the hottest trends in cloud computing this year, and for good reason. There are several technical capabilities and business factors coming together to make this approach compelling from both an application development and deployment cost perspective. The new OpenWhisk project provides an open source platform to enable these cloud-native, event-driven applications.
This talk will lay out the technical and business drivers behind the rise of serverless architectures, provide an introduction to the OpenWhisk open source project (and describe how it differs from other services like AWS Lambda), and give a demonstration showing how to start developing with this new cloud computing model using the OpenWhisk implementation available on IBM Bluemix.
Presented on October 12, 2016 at the NYC Bluemix meetup
OpenWhisk - A platform for cloud native, serverless, event driven appsDaniel Krook
Cloud computing has recently evolved to enable developers to write cloud native applications better, faster, and cheaper using serverless technology.
OpenWhisk provides an open source platform to enable cloud native, serverless, event driven applications.
This presentation lays out the technical and business drivers behind the rise of serverless architectures, and provides an intro to the OpenWhisk open source project.
Presented at Cloud Native Day in Toronto, Canada on August 25, 2016.
Containers, OCI, CNCF, Magnum, Kuryr, and You!Daniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Austin, Texas on April 28, 2016.
http://bit.ly/os-oci-cncf-ses
The technology industry has been abuzz about cloud workload containerization since the open source Docker project became a phenomenon in early 2014.
Meanwhile, an OpenStack Containers Team was formed and the Magnum project launched to provide users with a convenient Containers-as-a-Service solution for OpenStack environments.
As the potential of both technologies emerged, many wanted to see shared governance over the baseline container specification and runtime technology to ensure an open cloud ecosystem.
This past December, two new groups were launched with a goal of creating open, industry standards. The first called the Open Container Initiative (http://www.opencontainers.org), and the second called the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (http://cncf.io)
Jeffrey Borek - Program Director, Open Tech, IBM - @JeffBorek
Daniel Krook - Senior Software Engineer, IBM - @DanielKrook
Val Bercovici - Global Cloud CTO, NetApp/SolidFire - @valb00
Taking the Next Hot Mobile Game Live with Docker and IBM SoftLayerDaniel Krook
Presentation at the IBM InterConnect Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada on February 24, 2016.
Mobile games are the fastest-growing sector of the $70 billion video game industry, far outpacing traditional consoles. But companies that aspire to create the next hot title have to account for more than just the app downloaded to a user device. They must prepare for huge spikes in game play with scalable backends to handle massive data and transactions behind socially linked user profiles and global leaderboards. This talk looks at how IBM successfully partnered with Firemonkeys, a major studio that had hit their vertical scaling limit, to design and deploy a new Docker-based architecture on SoftLayer. This scale-out architecture is able to handle an order of magnitude more customers for their next major release.
CAPS: What's best for deploying and managing OpenStack? Chef vs. Ansible vs. ...Daniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Tokyo, Japan on October 29, 2015.
http://sched.co/49vI
This talk will cover the pros and cons of four different OpenStack deployment mechanisms. Puppet, Chef, Ansible, and Salt for OpenStack all claim to make it much easier to configure and maintain hundreds of OpenStack deployment resources. With the advent of large-scale, highly available OpenStack deployments spread across multiple global regions, the choice of which deployment methodology to use has become more and more relevant.
Beyond the initial day-one deployment, when it comes to the day-two and beyond questions of updating and upgrading existing OpenStack deployments, it becomes all the more important choose the right tool.
Come join the Bluebox and IBM team to discuss the pros and cons of these approaches. We look at each of these four tools in depth, explore their design and function, and determine which scores higher than others to address your particular deployment needs.
Daniel Krook - Senior Software Engineer, Cloud and Open Source Technologies, IBM
Paul Czarkowski - Cloud Engineer at Blue Box, an IBM company
Daniel Krook - Senior Software Engineer, Cloud and Open Source Technologies, IBM
Quickly build and deploy a scalable OpenStack Swift application using IBM Blu...Daniel Krook
Slides from the 2015 OpenStack Summit on May 18.
http://sched.co/35rZ
Sample code here: http://bit.ly/ibm-bos
Object Storage services are a powerful tool when used as a backing store for your application and OpenStack Swift is now easy to integrate with your application. In this interactive session, IBM developers will demonstrate how you can use Bluemix (IBM's Cloud Foundry offering) and IBM DevOps Services to create a scalable Node.js application backed by Swift. The session will show how - using only a browser - a developer can employ Bluemix tools to clone, develop, deploy, and manage an application in minutes. The team will then describe how developers can then extend the application by using another one of the available services or by incorporating Bluemix into their existing developer workflows.
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
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
Dockerizing OpenStack for High AvailabilityDaniel Krook
Presentation at the OpenStack Summit in Paris, France on November 4, 2014.
High availability in OpenStack can be achieved in many ways. In this session we will describe how Docker can be used to provide an active-active highly available OpenStack environment. We will focus the real world work that we have done to "Dockerize" OpenStack services, detail the advantages to this type of deployment (rapid deployment, rapid scale out, versioning, etc.), and walk through our design - from requirements, limitations, obstacles, and especially our decisions. We will use our experiences as examples to provide real world best practices, as well as showing a demonstration of the environment in action.
Manuel Silveyra - Senior Cloud Solutions Architect
Daniel Krook - Senior Certified IT Specialist
Shaun Murakami - Senior Cloud Solution Architect
Kalonji Bankole - Cloud Architect
Lightning talk from the OpenStack NYC meetup on October 8, 2014.
http://bit.ly/ibm-os-meetup
By Paul Crumley
This talk provides an overview of activities in IBM Research to allow IBM Power Systems resources to be consumed using OpenStack tooling and APIs.
The content of this talk is a statement from the IBM Research division, not IBM product divisions, and is not a statement from IBM regarding its plans, directions or product intents. Any activities described by this talk are subject to change.
Neutron Networking: Service Groups, Policies and ChainsDaniel Krook
Lightning talk from the OpenStack NYC meetup on October 8, 2014.
http://bit.ly/ibm-os-meetup
By John M. Tracey for Mohammad Banikazemi
The content of this talk is a statement from the IBM Research division, not IBM product divisions, and is not a statement from IBM regarding its plans, directions or product intents. Any activities described by this talk are subject to change.
Advanced Data Retrieval and Analytics with Apache Spark and Openstack SwiftDaniel Krook
Lightning talk from the OpenStack NYC meetup on October 8, 2014.
http://bit.ly/ibm-os-meetup
By Gil Vernik
The integration between Apache Spark and Swift, and the use of Storlets for smart retrieval via filtering and privacy-support.
The content of this talk is a statement from the IBM Research division, not IBM product divisions, and is not a statement from IBM regarding its plans, directions or product intents. Any activities described by this talk are subject to change.
Lightning talk from the OpenStack NYC meetup on October 8, 2014.
http://bit.ly/ibm-os-meetup
By Paolo Dettori and Seetharami Seelam
We will describe our experiences running Docker containers in a multi-node OpenStack environment deployed on public cloud infrastructure. From this we will show DockerCloud, providing IaaS like capabilities for Docker containers as well as container orchestration on OpenStack.
The content of this talk is a statement from the IBM Research division, not IBM product divisions, and is not a statement from IBM regarding its plans, directions or product intents. Any activities described by this talk are subject to change.
Building a hybrid, dynamic cloud on an open architectureDaniel Krook
Daniel Krook's version of the IBM open cloud overview, focusing on the business and technological imperatives driving the IBM strategy for customers.
Presented 9/30 and 10/1 at Boston TechFest, Cambridge, MA.
At this joint NYC Cloud Foundry and NY PHP meetup, we'll discuss the shift to Platform-as-a-Service and what it means for PHP development on the cloud.
First, we'll take a look at the "traditional" cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (virtual servers and disks) model and describe how Platform-as-a-Service builds upon it to provide the runtimes and data services for hosting PHP applications.
We'll then demonstrate how a PHP developer can use buildpacks and services within a Cloud Foundry PaaS to deploy scalable and resilient apps to his or her cloud of choice.
Along the way we'll compare the variety of buildpacks available to PHP developers, show techniques for binding to services, and highlight best practices for creating born-on-the-cloud apps based on a microservices architecture.
Special thanks to Dan Mikusa for helping with the buildpack comparison.
PHP developers: Please give all three build packs a try. Provide your feedback and submit pull requests on GitHub.
Enhancing Project Management Efficiency_ Leveraging AI Tools like ChatGPT.pdfJay Das
With the advent of artificial intelligence or AI tools, project management processes are undergoing a transformative shift. By using tools like ChatGPT, and Bard organizations can empower their leaders and managers to plan, execute, and monitor projects more effectively.
A Comprehensive Look at Generative AI in Retail App Testing.pdfkalichargn70th171
Traditional software testing methods are being challenged in retail, where customer expectations and technological advancements continually shape the landscape. Enter generative AI—a transformative subset of artificial intelligence technologies poised to revolutionize software testing.
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.
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.
Code reviews are vital for ensuring good code quality. They serve as one of our last lines of defense against bugs and subpar code reaching production.
Yet, they often turn into annoying tasks riddled with frustration, hostility, unclear feedback and lack of standards. How can we improve this crucial process?
In this session we will cover:
- The Art of Effective Code Reviews
- Streamlining the Review Process
- Elevating Reviews with Automated Tools
By the end of this presentation, you'll have the knowledge on how to organize and improve your code review proces
Enhancing Research Orchestration Capabilities at ORNL.pdfGlobus
Cross-facility research orchestration comes with ever-changing constraints regarding the availability and suitability of various compute and data resources. In short, a flexible data and processing fabric is needed to enable the dynamic redirection of data and compute tasks throughout the lifecycle of an experiment. In this talk, we illustrate how we easily leveraged Globus services to instrument the ACE research testbed at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility with flexible data and task orchestration capabilities.
Understanding Globus Data Transfers with NetSageGlobus
NetSage is an open privacy-aware network measurement, analysis, and visualization service designed to help end-users visualize and reason about large data transfers. NetSage traditionally has used a combination of passive measurements, including SNMP and flow data, as well as active measurements, mainly perfSONAR, to provide longitudinal network performance data visualization. It has been deployed by dozens of networks world wide, and is supported domestically by the Engagement and Performance Operations Center (EPOC), NSF #2328479. We have recently expanded the NetSage data sources to include logs for Globus data transfers, following the same privacy-preserving approach as for Flow data. Using the logs for the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) as an example, this talk will walk through several different example use cases that NetSage can answer, including: Who is using Globus to share data with my institution, and what kind of performance are they able to achieve? How many transfers has Globus supported for us? Which sites are we sharing the most data with, and how is that changing over time? How is my site using Globus to move data internally, and what kind of performance do we see for those transfers? What percentage of data transfers at my institution used Globus, and how did the overall data transfer performance compare to the Globus users?
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.
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.
Paketo Buildpacks : la meilleure façon de construire des images OCI? DevopsDa...Anthony Dahanne
Les Buildpacks existent depuis plus de 10 ans ! D’abord, ils étaient utilisés pour détecter et construire une application avant de la déployer sur certains PaaS. Ensuite, nous avons pu créer des images Docker (OCI) avec leur dernière génération, les Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNCF en incubation). Sont-ils une bonne alternative au Dockerfile ? Que sont les buildpacks Paketo ? Quelles communautés les soutiennent et comment ?
Venez le découvrir lors de cette session ignite
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
Field Employee Tracking System| MiTrack App| Best Employee Tracking Solution|...informapgpstrackings
Keep tabs on your field staff effortlessly with Informap Technology Centre LLC. Real-time tracking, task assignment, and smart features for efficient management. Request a live demo today!
For more details, visit us : https://informapuae.com/field-staff-tracking/
Globus Compute wth IRI Workflows - GlobusWorld 2024Globus
As part of the DOE Integrated Research Infrastructure (IRI) program, NERSC at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab and ALCF at Argonne National Lab are working closely with General Atomics on accelerating the computing requirements of the DIII-D experiment. As part of the work the team is investigating ways to speedup the time to solution for many different parts of the DIII-D workflow including how they run jobs on HPC systems. One of these routes is looking at Globus Compute as a way to replace the current method for managing tasks and we describe a brief proof of concept showing how Globus Compute could help to schedule jobs and be a tool to connect compute at different facilities.
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead.
Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Security,
Spring Transaction, Spring MVC,
Log4j, REST/SOAP WEB-SERVICES.
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.
May Marketo Masterclass, London MUG May 22 2024.pdfAdele Miller
Can't make Adobe Summit in Vegas? No sweat because the EMEA Marketo Engage Champions are coming to London to share their Summit sessions, insights and more!
This is a MUG with a twist you don't want to miss.
1. The CNCF on Serverless
Daniel Krook • Software Engineer • IBM
2. @DanielKrook
The CNCF supports modern distributed systems
Create and drive the adoption of a new computing
paradigm that is optimized for modern distributed
systems environments capable of scaling to tens
of thousands of self healing multi-tenant nodes.
• Provide stewardship for projects
• Foster growth and evolution of ecosystems
• Promote of the underlying technologies
• Make the technology accessible and reliable
Fast • Open • Fair
6. @DanielKrook
Four current CNCF Working Groups
Provides infrastructure to
hosted projects.
Looks to offer integration
testing between projects.
Providing a Container
Networking Interface
(CNI) specification.
Aims for connectivity and
portability in cloud native
application networking.
Providing a Container
Storage Interface (CSI)
specification.
Aims for portability
across cloud
orchestration systems.
Educate cloud native
developers on serverless
architectures.
Determine what the
CNCF should do in this
space.
Recommend involvement
in specifications and
projects.
7. @DanielKrook
CNCF Serverless Working Group
Formed in June 2017
Participation from:
Google, Red Hat, Huawei, IBM, Microsoft,
SolarWinds, Docker, iguazio, Amazon,
MasterCard, Pivotal, VMware, Serverless
Inc., Clay Labs, The New Stack, A Cloud
Guru, Platform9, Bitnami, Auth0, and Hyper.
github.com/cncf/wg-serverless
8. @DanielKrook
CNCF Serverless Working Group
● Describes serverless platforms as they exist today using a common vocabulary.
● Highlights promising use cases and areas where they’ve already proven value.
● Differentiates serverless from PaaS and Container Orchestration.
● Describes the mechanics of a generic serverless system.
github.com/cncf/wg-serverless
9. @DanielKrook
CNCF Serverless Working Group
Creating a common model for event data, similar to CNI and CSI.
Coalescing on a single format between a few proposals:
● Cloud-Native Event Mapping (CNEM) – (iguazio)
● OpenEvents – (Serverless, Inc.)
● Cloud Auditing Data Federation – (IBM, DMTF)
Handle
any event
from
anywhere
github.com/cncf/wg-serverless
10. @DanielKrook
CNCF Serverless Working Group
● Maintain a matrix and landscape of serverless implementations and features.
● Produce additional documents and samples that educate users on serverless apps.
● Document integration with other CNCF projects, such as how to monitor and observe.
● Potential collaboration on a declarative packaging format specification.
github.com/cncf/wg-serverless