Virtualization

Featured image for AI/ML
Article

How to install single node OpenShift on bare metal

Diego Alvarez Ponce +1

Learn how to deploy single node OpenShift on a physical bare metal node using the OpenShift Assisted Installer to simpify the OpenShift cluster setup process.

Featured image for Red Hat OpenShift.
Article

Modernization: A reference approach

Yashwanth Maheshwaram

Explores how Red Hat OpenShift technologies can aid the transition from monolith to microservices, simplifying the process and ensuring a robust and secure application.

Red Hat Developer - Build Here Go Anywhere
Page

Red Hat Developers

Join Red Hat Developer for the software and tutorials to develop cloud applications using Kubernetes, microservices, serverless and Linux.

Virtualization share image
Topic

Virtualization

Virtualization is the creation of a virtual, rather than physical, version of a

Learning path featured image
Page

Red Hat Interactive Learning Portal

No matter where you are in your software development career, from just starting, to re-training, to expert-level but needing a brush-up, the Red Hat Developer program can help with tutorials and learning.

Red Hat CDK
Article

How to install Red Hat CDK 3.4 on Fedora 28

Robin Owen

Red Hat Container Development Kit (CDK) provides a single-node Red Hat OpenShift cluster that can assist with containerized application development. This environment is like a production OpenShift environment that works on a single user's computer. Follow these steps to install CDK 3.4 on Fedora 28.

RedHat Shadowman Logo
Article

Red Hat Container Development Kit (CDK) With Nested KVM

Scott McCarty (fatherlinux)

running the Red Hat Container Development Kit (CDK) With Nested KVM. Red Hat Container Development Kit (CDK) relies on virtualization to create a Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) virtual machine to run OpenShift (based on Kubernetes).

Article Thumbnail
Article

Beyond Microbenchmarks: breakthrough container performance with Tesla efficiency

Jeremy Eder

Back story As virtualization was beginning it's march to prominence, we saw a phased approach to adoption. This is common with any sort of game changing technology....let's take electric cars as an example. Early adopters are willing to make certain trade-offs (short range) to gain new capabilities (saving money at the gas station). In the meantime, engineers are off in the lab working hard to increase the possible consumer-base for electric cars by increasing range, decreasing charging cycle times, and...