Introducing OpenShift Sandbox
Introducing OpenShift Sandbox
Introducing OpenShift Sandbox
Introduction to the OpenShift Developer Sandbox Series
ArgoCon 2022 is taking place in Mountain View, CA this September. Discover how to participate in ArgoCon and learn how to access the ample resources Red Hat provides.
2022 state of Kubernetes security report
DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift provides a roadmap for building empowered product teams within your organization.
Why should developers learn Ansible? Find out how this simple yet powerful DevOps tool makes automating environments and configuring systems easy.
Learn how OpenShift Serverless lets you focus on building and deploying next-gen applications with a wide choice of languages, frameworks, and environments.
We introduce helpful, common tips for managing reliable builds and deployments on Red Hat OpenShift.
Scott McCarty shares how containers can help in the DevOps world, but pay attention to 3 items.
By aligning development and operations teams with solutions from Red Hat Consulting and OpenShift Enterprise by Red Hat, you can: -Reduce product cycle time. -Write applications faster. -Drive automation that strengthens the link between IT and the needs of your organization. This video includes a demonstration of OpenShift Enterprise.
OpenShift Commons Briefing: Continuous Development with JRebel on OpenShift with Adam Koblentz (ZeroTurnAround) & Arun Gupta (Red Hat)
Lesson Learned at OpenShift Online (http://openshift.com); insights into Operational Monitoring at OpenShift.com, use of Zabbix, Puppet, Ansible. Nagios and even collectd! A great presentation by Red Hat's Thomas Wiest.
Netflix designs our systems and deployment processes to help the service survive both catastrophic events like zone and regional outages and less catastrophic events like network latency and random instance death. This system has previously been described as "dream devops". In our data centers we had monolithic systems and centralized operations. When we moved to the cloud we fully embraced the distributed services and the devops model. Now, with experience, we've uncovered real-world challenges with the devops model and, as a result, have embraced more effective hybrid approaches. More specifically, how do we reconcile local agility and ownership with the achievement of system-wide objectives, such as the overall quality and reliability of large scale distributed environment? Topics will include our software lifecycle from code checkin to automated machine image baking to deployment, monitoring and alerting, and how Netflix uses self service tools to enable our developers to maintain maximum code velocity.
Afternoon keynote at DevNation 2014. Gene is a multiple award winning CTO, researcher and author. He was founder and CTO of Tripwire for 13 years. He has written three books, including "The Visible Ops Handbook" and "The Phoenix Project: A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win." Gene is a huge fan of IT operations, and how it can enable developers to maximize throughput of features from "code complete" to "in production," without causing chaos and disruption to the IT environment. He has worked with some of the top Internet companies on improving deployment flow and increasing the rigor around IT operational processes. In 2007, ComputerWorld added Gene to the "40 Innovative IT People Under The Age Of 40" list, and was given the Outstanding Alumnus Award by the Department of Computer Sciences at Purdue University for achievement and leadership in the profession.
Creating a large website that's written in multiple programming languages can be tricky. Enabling it to run continuously is even harder. Join us as we outline how we brought continuous delivery to JBoss Developer (jboss.org), a thousand-page website that's served up as a mix of HTML, JavaScript and CSS and that communicates with a variety of back-end services. We'll talk about challenges we faced and our solutions, including: Sizing a converged infrastructure. Organizational challenges. Testing websites and creating good test environments . Introducing Docker.
You've worked hard and mastered every coding language on the planet, including COBOL. You know jenkins, travis, go, puppet, chef, CFengine, nagios, github, graphite, logstash, ansible, aws, gce, vagrant, cms, cvs, abc, 123, and even a little bit of TFS. Your resume is up to date, and you are ready for your next job. But you might be missing a key skill. Industry trends in engineering show a growing desire in companies to hire people who have proven soft skills, are good at collaborating with others, and can regularly solve the most complex problem we face today: effectively talking to our fellow humans. Join Jen for a conversation about the journey of becoming more comfortable with collaboration and open communication. Topics will include: Collaborate-or-die survival skills. Dreaded soft skills and how to become comfortable with them. What to do in common situations that all engineers face. How to convince others that your idea is the right idea. How to get the time you need to get your work done.
DevOps is changing at a fast pace as containers are rapidly going mainstream. In this panel, leading startup companies and Red Hat's platform group will discuss their insights and predictions for the how DevOps will change going forward. Our industry experts will discuss: DevOps Docker technology Source-to-image STI CI/CD Immutable infrastructure Panel members Krish Subramanian (moderator), OpenShift director of strategy, Red Hat Avi Cavale, CEO Shippable.com Steven Sheinfield, Sr. business development manager, NewRelic Andrew Phillips, VP of product management, XebiaLabs Langdon White, Developer evangelist, Red Hat Ryan King (introduction), Red Hat Innovate