Domain: openshift.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to openshift.com.
Comments · 11
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Re:Wow...
reading this old thread. FWIW yes RedHat's focus is on containers. RedHat's IaaS/PaaS strategy is based on OpenStack / OpenShift and a core component of the new PaaS designs is managing containers. Systemd is one of the 5 underlying technologies in Project Atomic (here is an image of how this looks on OpenShift: https://blog.openshift.com/wp-...). Systemd is useful because it handles many of the low level function that the PaaS (in RedHat's case OpenShift but they also support others) used to have to do.
That being said clients and developers care a great deal about PaaS functionality. So the AC is simply wrong on that front. RedHat is focusing on that because that's the direction development is going in.
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Re:Gnome3, systemd etc.
And I will repeat that, last time I checked servers do not run systemd.
In CoreOS, systemd unit files are used not only for system services, but also for running Docker containers.
https://blog.openshift.com/gea...etc..
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Re:Hope!
They want you moving towards a PaaS type infrastructure. https://www.openshift.com/ https://www.heroku.com/ http://www.activestate.com/sta...
... So yes an entirely new stack but one that is already well tested and in use. The entire concept of how you do internal tooling should be changing. -
Re:All of these are supported by Red Hat
Exactly. Funny they mention Puppet, it's the default used in Red Hat's latest Dev Ops initiative, OpenShift.
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Re:tt-rss
Redhat provides a quick start for Tiny Tiny RSS in its public cloud (Openshift) for free. I didn't try nor use it but some may find it useful so you don't need to run own server.
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Re:Self-hosted TinyTinyRSS
Easy way to do it
https://www.openshift.com/quickstarts/tiny-tiny-rss -
Openshift PaaS
Try out Red Hat's Openshift, it has node.js and a bunch of other applications. Best part is it's free, so if you don't like it no reason to scale it up and pay.
http://www.openshift.com/ -
Red Hat's OpenShift
IMHO, rejecting Google App Engine at this stage is a bit myopic, but it's your choice.
:)Among the more open-standards-focused cloud offerings, there is Red Hat's OpenShift
- https://www.openshift.com/
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/java
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/pricing
- http://www.jboss.org/openshift.html -
Red Hat's OpenShift
IMHO, rejecting Google App Engine at this stage is a bit myopic, but it's your choice.
:)Among the more open-standards-focused cloud offerings, there is Red Hat's OpenShift
- https://www.openshift.com/
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/java
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/pricing
- http://www.jboss.org/openshift.html -
Red Hat's OpenShift
IMHO, rejecting Google App Engine at this stage is a bit myopic, but it's your choice.
:)Among the more open-standards-focused cloud offerings, there is Red Hat's OpenShift
- https://www.openshift.com/
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/java
- https://www.openshift.com/developers/pricing
- http://www.jboss.org/openshift.html -
Re:Java Coding Online