Introducing H2O.ai on Azure HDInsight

We are excited to announce that H2O’s AI platform is now available on Azure HDInsight Application Platform. Users can now use H2O.ai’s open source solutions on Azure HDInsight, which allows reliable open source analytics with an industry-leading SLA.

To learn more about H2O integration with HDInsight, register for the webinar held by H2O and Azure HDInsight team.

HDInsight and H2O to make data science on big data easier

Azure HDInsight is the only fully-managed cloud Hadoop offering that provides optimized open source analytical clusters for Spark, Hive, MapReduce, HBase, Storm, Kafka, and R Server backed by a 99.9% SLA. Each of these big data technologies and ISV applications, such as H2O, are easily deployable as managed clusters with enterprise-level security and monitoring.

The ecosystem of data science has grown rapidly in the last a few years, and H2O’s AI platform provides open source machine learning framework that works with Spark sparklyr and PySpark. H2O’s Sparkling Water allows users to combine the fast, scalable machine learning algorithms of H2O with the capabilities of Spark. With Sparkling Water, users can drive computation from Scala/R/Python and utilize the H2O Flow UI, providing an ideal machine learning platform for application developers.

Setting up an environment to perform advanced analytics on top of big data is hard, but with H2O Artificial Intelligence for HDInsight, customers can get started with just a few clicks. This solution will install Sparkling Water on an HDInsight Spark cluster so you can exploit all the benefits from both Spark and H2O. The solution can access data from Azure Blob storage and/or Azure Data Lake Store in addition to all the standard data sources that H2O support. It also provides Jupyter Notebooks with in-built examples for an easy jumpstart, and a user-friendly H2O FLOW UI to monitor and debug the applications.

Getting started

With the industry leading Azure cloud platform, getting started with H2O on HDInsight is super easy with just a few clicks. Customer can install H2O during the creation of a new HDInsight cluster by simply selecting the customer applications when creating a cluster, selecting “H2O Artificial Intelligence for HDInsight”, and agreeing to the license terms.

Customers can also deploy H2O when on an existing HDInsight Spark cluster by clicking the “Application” link:

Sparkling Water integrates H2O&;s fast scalable machine learning engine with Spark. It provides utilities to publish Spark data structures (RDDs, DataFrames) as H2O&039;s frames and vice versa. Python interface enabling use of Sparkling Water directly from pySpark and many others. The architecture for H2O on HDInsight is as below:

After installing H2O on HDInsight, you can simply use Jupyter notebooks, which is built-in to Spark clusters, to write your first H2O on HDInsight applications. You can simply open the Jupyter Notebook, and will see a folder named “H2O-PySparkling-Examples”, which has a few getting started examples.

H2O Flow is an interactive web-based computational user interface where you can combine code execution, text, mathematics, plots, and rich media into a single document. It provides richer visualization experience for the machine learning models, and provides native support for hyper-parameter tuning, ROC Curve, etc.

Together with this combined offering of H2O on HDInsight, customers can easily build data science solutions and run them at enterprise grade and scale. Azure HDInsight provides the tools for a user to create a Data Science environment with underlying big data frameworks like Hadoop and Spark, while H2O’s technology brings a set of sophisticated, fully distributed algorithms to rapidly build and deploy highly accurate models at scale.

H2O.ai is now available on the Microsoft Azure marketplace and in HDInsight application. For more technical details, please refer to H2O documentation and this technical blog post on HDInsight blog.

Resources

H2O press release
Learn more about Azure HDInsight
Learn more about H2O
H2O on Azure marketplace
Getting Started with H2O on HDInsight
Use H2O with Azure HDInsight

Summary

We are pleased to announce the expansion of HDInsight Application Platform to include H2O.ai. By deploying H2O on HDInsight, customers can easily build analytical solutions and run them at enterprise grade and scale.
Quelle: Azure

Managing the Lifecycle of OpenShift Clusters: Vetting OpenShift Installations

Whether installing a new release of a software package or just installing an update (such as a bug fix), it is wise to perform tests against the newly installed software in order to confirm that it is performing correctly in the target environment. This is especially true with OpenShift since it contains a number of open source components and can be deployed to a variety of environments, such as an on-prem datacenter, or a public or private cloud.
Quelle: OpenShift

Jupyter on OpenShift Part 5: Ad-hoc Package Installation

The main reason persistent volumes are used is to store any application data. This is so that if a container running an application is restarted, that data is preserved and available to the new instance of the application.

When using an interactive coding environment such as Jupyter Notebooks, what you may want to persist can extend beyond just the notebooks and data files you are working with. Because it is an interactive environment using the dynamic scripting language Python, a user may want to install additional Python packages at the point they are creating a notebook.
Quelle: OpenShift

Enhancing your Builds on OpenShift: Chaining Builds

In addition to the typical scenario of using source code as the input to a build, OpenShift build capabilities provides another build input type called “Image source”, that will stream content from one image (source) into another (destination).

Using this, we can combine source from one or multiple source images. And we can pass one or multiple files and/or folders from a source image to a destination image. Once the destination image has been built it will be pushed into the registry (or an external registry), and will be ready to be deployed.
Quelle: OpenShift

Enhancing your Builds on OpenShift: Chaining Builds

In addition to the typical scenario of using source code as the input to a build, OpenShift build capabilities provides another build input type called “Image source”, that will stream content from one image (source) into another (destination).

Using this, we can combine source from one or multiple source images. And we can pass one or multiple files and/or folders from a source image to a destination image. Once the destination image has been built it will be pushed into the registry (or an external registry), and will be ready to be deployed.
Quelle: OpenShift

Kubernetes Services By Example

When explaining Kubernetes to people new in the space I noticed that the concept of services is often not well understood. To help you better understand what services are and how you can troubleshoot them, we will have a look at a concrete setup and discuss the inner workings of services in this post.
Quelle: OpenShift

More than 60 Red Hat-led sessions confirmed for OpenStack Summit Boston

This Spring&;s 2017 OpenStack Summit in Boston should be another great and educational event. The OpenStack Foundation has posted the final session agenda detailing the entire week&8217;s schedule of events. And once again Red Hat will be very busy during the four-day event, including delivering more than 60 sessions, from technology overviews to deep dive&8217;s around the OpenStack services for containers, storage, networking, compute, network functions virtualization (NFV), and much, much more. 

As a Headline sponsor this Fall, we also have a full day breakout room on Monday, where we plan to present additional product and strategy sessions. And we will have two keynote presenters on stage: President and CEO, Jim Whitehurst, and Vice President and Chief Technologist, Chris Wright. 
To learn more about Red Hat&8217;s general sessions, look at the details below. We&8217;ll add the agenda details of our breakout soon. Also, be sure to visit us at our booth in the center of the Marketplace to meet the team and check out our live demonstrations. Finally, we&8217;ll have Red Hat engineers, product managers, consultants, and executives in attendance, so be sure to talk to your Red Hat representative to schedule an in-person meeting while there.
And in case you haven&8217;t registered yet, visit our OpenStack Summit page for a discounted registration code to help get you to the event. We look forward to seeing you in Boston this April.
For more details on each session, click on the title below:
Monday sessions

Kuryr & Fuxi: delivering OpenStack networking and storage to Docker swarm containers
Antoni Segura Puimedon, Vikas Choudhary, and Hongbin Lu (Huawei)

Multi-cloud demo
Monty Taylor

Configure your cloud for recovery
Walter Bentley

Kubernetes and OpenStack at scale
Stephen Gordon

No longer considered an epic spell of transformation: in-place upgrade!
Krzysztof Janiszewski and Ken Holden

Fifty shades for enrollment: how to use Certmonger to win OpenStack
Ade Lee and Rob Crittenden

OpenStack and OVN &; what&8217;s new with OVS 2.7
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

Federation with Keycloak and FreeIPA
Martin Lopes, Rodrigo Duarte Sousa, and John Dennis

7 &;must haves&; for highly effective Telco NFV deployments
Anita Tragler and Greg Smith (Juniper Networks, Inc.)

Containerizing OpenStack deployments: lessons learned from TripleO
Flavio Percoco

Project update &8211; Heat
Rabi Mishra, Zane Bitter, and Rico Lin (EasyStack)

Tuesday sessions

OpenStack Telemetry and the 10,000 instances
Julien Danjou and Alex Krzos

Mastering and troubleshooting NFV issues
Sadique Puthen and Jaison Raju

The Ceph power show &8211; hands-on with Ceph: Episode 2 &8211; &;The Jewel Story&8217;
Karan Singh, Daniel Messer, and Brent Compton

SmartNICs &8211; paving the way for 25G/40G/100G speed NFV deployments in OpenStack
Anita Tragler and Edwin Peer (Netronome)

Scaling NFV &8211; are containers the answer?
Azhar Sayeed

Free my organization to pursue cloud native infrastructure!
Dave Cain and Steve Black (East Carolina University)

Container networking using Kuryr &8211; a hands-on lab
Sudhir Kethamakka and Amol Chobe (Ericsson)

Using software-defined WAN implementation to turn on advanced connectivity services in OpenStack
Ali Kafel and Pratik Roychowdhury (OpenContrail)

Don&8217;t fail at scale: how to plan for, build, and operate a successful OpenStack cloud
David Costakos and Julio Villarreal Pelegrino

Red Hat OpenStack Certification Program
Allessandro Silva

OpenStack and OpenDaylight: an integrated IaaS for SDN and NFV
Nir Yechiel and Andre Fredette

Project update &8211; Kuryr
Antoni Segura Puimedon and Irena Berezovsky (Huawei)

Barbican workshop &8211; securing the cloud
Ade Lee, Fernando Diaz (IBM), Dave McCowan (Cisco Systems), Douglas Mendizabal (Rackspace), Kaitlin Farr (Johns Hopkins University)

Bridging the gap between deploying OpenStack as a cloud application and as a traditional application
James Slagle

Real time KVM and how it works
Eric Lajoie

Wednesday sessions

Projects Update &8211; Sahara
Telles Nobrega and Elise Gafford

Project update &8211; Mistral
Ryan Brady

Bite off more than you can chew, then chew it: OpenStack consumption models
Tyler Britten, Walter Bentley, and Jonathan Kelly (MetacloudCisco)

Hybrid messaging solutions for large scale OpenStack deployments
Kenneth Giusti and Andrew Smith

Project update &8211; Nova
Dan Smith, Jay Pipes (Mirantis), and Matt Riedermann (Huawei)

Hands-on to configure your cloud to be able to charge your users using official OpenStack components
Julien Danjou, Christophe Sautheir (Objectif Libre), and Maxime Cottret (Objectif Libre)

To OpenStack or not OpenStack; that is the question
Frank Wu

Distributed monitoring and analysis for telecom requirements
Tomofumi Hayashi, Yuki Kasuya (KDDI Research), and Ryota Mibu (NEC)

OVN support for multiple gateways and IPv6
Russell Bryant and Numan Siddique

Kuryr-Kubernetes: the seamless path to adding pods to your datacenter networking
Antoni Segura Puimedon, Irena Berezovsky (Huawei), and Ilya Chukhnakov (Mirantis)

Unlocking the performance secrets of Ceph object storage
Karan Singh, Kyle Bader, and Brent Compton

OVN hands-on tutorial part 1: introduction
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

Kuberneterize your baremetal nodes in OpenStack!
Ken Savich and Darin Sorrentino

OVN hands-on tutorial part 2: advanced
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

The Amazon effect on open source cloud business models
Flavio Percoco, Monty Taylor, Nati Shalom (GigaSpaces), and Yaron Haviv (Iguazio)

Neutron port binding and impact of unbound ports on DVR routers with floatingIP
Brian Haley and Swaminathan Vasudevan (HPE)

Upstream contribution &8211; give up or double down?
Assaf Muller

Hyper cool infrastructure
Randy Robbins

Strategic distributed and multisite OpenStack for business continuity and scalability use cases
Rob Young

Per API role-based access control
Adam Young and Kristi Nikolla (Massachusetts Open Cloud)

Logging work group BoF
Erno Kuvaja, Rochelle Grober, Hector Gonzalez Mendoza (Intel), Hieu LE (Fujistu) and Andrew Ukasick (AT&T)

Performance and scale analysis of OpenStack using Browbeat
 Alex Krzos, Sai Sindhur Malleni, and Joe Talerico

Scaling Nova: how CellsV2 affects your deployment
Dan Smith

Ambassador community report
Erwan Gallen, Lisa-Marie Namphy (OpenStack Ambassador), Akihiro Hasegawa (Equinix), Marton Kiss (Aptira), and Akira Yoshiyama (NEC)

Thursday sessions

Examining different ways to get involved: a look at open source
Rob Wilmoth

CephFS backed NFS share service for multi-tenant clouds
Victoria Martinez de la Cruz, Ramana Raja, and Tom Barron

Create your VM in a (almost) deterministic way &8211; a hands-on lab
Sudhir Kethamakka and Geetika Batra

RDO&8217;s continuous packaging platform
Matthieu Huin, Fabien Boucher, and Haikel Guemar (CentOS)

OpenDaylight Network Virtualization solution (NetVirt) with FD.io VPP data plane
Andre Fredette, Srikanth Vavilapalli (Ericsson), and Prem Sankar Gopanna (Ericsson)

Ceph snapshots for fun & profit
Gregory Farnum

Gnocchi and collectd for faster fault detection and maintenance
Julien Danjou and Emma Foley

Project update &8211; TripleO
Emillien Macchi, Flavio Percoco, and Steven Hardy

Project update &8211; Telemetry
Julien Danjou, Mehdi Abaakouk, and Gordon Chung (Huawei)

Turned up to 11: low latency Ceph block storage
Jason Dillaman, Yuan Zhou (INTC), and Tushar Gohad (Intel)

Who reads books anymore? Or writes them?
Michael Solberg and Ben Silverman (OnX Enterprise Solutions)

Pushing the boundaries of OpenStack &8211; wait, what are they again?
Walter Bentley

Multi-site OpenStack &8211; deployment option and challenges for a telco
Azhar Sayeed

Ceph project update
Sage Weil

 
Quelle: RedHat Stack

More than 60 Red Hat-led sessions confirmed for OpenStack Summit Boston

This Spring&;s 2017 OpenStack Summit in Boston should be another great and educational event. The OpenStack Foundation has posted the final session agenda detailing the entire week&8217;s schedule of events. And once again Red Hat will be very busy during the four-day event, including delivering more than 60 sessions, from technology overviews to deep dive&8217;s around the OpenStack services for containers, storage, networking, compute, network functions virtualization (NFV), and much, much more. 

As a Headline sponsor this Fall, we also have a full day breakout room on Monday, where we plan to present additional product and strategy sessions. And we will have two keynote presenters on stage: President and CEO, Jim Whitehurst, and Vice President and Chief Technologist, Chris Wright. 
To learn more about Red Hat&8217;s general sessions, look at the details below. We&8217;ll add the agenda details of our breakout soon. Also, be sure to visit us at our booth in the center of the Marketplace to meet the team and check out our live demonstrations. Finally, we&8217;ll have Red Hat engineers, product managers, consultants, and executives in attendance, so be sure to talk to your Red Hat representative to schedule an in-person meeting while there.
And in case you haven&8217;t registered yet, visit our OpenStack Summit page for a discounted registration code to help get you to the event. We look forward to seeing you in Boston this April.
For more details on each session, click on the title below:
Monday sessions

Kuryr & Fuxi: delivering OpenStack networking and storage to Docker swarm containers
Antoni Segura Puimedon, Vikas Choudhary, and Hongbin Lu (Huawei)

Multi-cloud demo
Monty Taylor

Configure your cloud for recovery
Walter Bentley

Kubernetes and OpenStack at scale
Stephen Gordon

No longer considered an epic spell of transformation: in-place upgrade!
Krzysztof Janiszewski and Ken Holden

Fifty shades for enrollment: how to use Certmonger to win OpenStack
Ade Lee and Rob Crittenden

OpenStack and OVN &; what&8217;s new with OVS 2.7
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

Federation with Keycloak and FreeIPA
Martin Lopes, Rodrigo Duarte Sousa, and John Dennis

7 &;must haves&; for highly effective Telco NFV deployments
Anita Tragler and Greg Smith (Juniper Networks, Inc.)

Containerizing OpenStack deployments: lessons learned from TripleO
Flavio Percoco

Project update &8211; Heat
Rabi Mishra, Zane Bitter, and Rico Lin (EasyStack)

Tuesday sessions

OpenStack Telemetry and the 10,000 instances
Julien Danjou and Alex Krzos

Mastering and troubleshooting NFV issues
Sadique Puthen and Jaison Raju

The Ceph power show &8211; hands-on with Ceph: Episode 2 &8211; &;The Jewel Story&8217;
Karan Singh, Daniel Messer, and Brent Compton

SmartNICs &8211; paving the way for 25G/40G/100G speed NFV deployments in OpenStack
Anita Tragler and Edwin Peer (Netronome)

Scaling NFV &8211; are containers the answer?
Azhar Sayeed

Free my organization to pursue cloud native infrastructure!
Dave Cain and Steve Black (East Carolina University)

Container networking using Kuryr &8211; a hands-on lab
Sudhir Kethamakka and Amol Chobe (Ericsson)

Using software-defined WAN implementation to turn on advanced connectivity services in OpenStack
Ali Kafel and Pratik Roychowdhury (OpenContrail)

Don&8217;t fail at scale: how to plan for, build, and operate a successful OpenStack cloud
David Costakos and Julio Villarreal Pelegrino

Red Hat OpenStack Certification Program
Allessandro Silva

OpenStack and OpenDaylight: an integrated IaaS for SDN and NFV
Nir Yechiel and Andre Fredette

Project update &8211; Kuryr
Antoni Segura Puimedon and Irena Berezovsky (Huawei)

Barbican workshop &8211; securing the cloud
Ade Lee, Fernando Diaz (IBM), Dave McCowan (Cisco Systems), Douglas Mendizabal (Rackspace), Kaitlin Farr (Johns Hopkins University)

Bridging the gap between deploying OpenStack as a cloud application and as a traditional application
James Slagle

Real time KVM and how it works
Eric Lajoie

Wednesday sessions

Projects Update &8211; Sahara
Telles Nobrega and Elise Gafford

Project update &8211; Mistral
Ryan Brady

Bite off more than you can chew, then chew it: OpenStack consumption models
Tyler Britten, Walter Bentley, and Jonathan Kelly (MetacloudCisco)

Hybrid messaging solutions for large scale OpenStack deployments
Kenneth Giusti and Andrew Smith

Project update &8211; Nova
Dan Smith, Jay Pipes (Mirantis), and Matt Riedermann (Huawei)

Hands-on to configure your cloud to be able to charge your users using official OpenStack components
Julien Danjou, Christophe Sautheir (Objectif Libre), and Maxime Cottret (Objectif Libre)

To OpenStack or not OpenStack; that is the question
Frank Wu

Distributed monitoring and analysis for telecom requirements
Tomofumi Hayashi, Yuki Kasuya (KDDI Research), and Ryota Mibu (NEC)

OVN support for multiple gateways and IPv6
Russell Bryant and Numan Siddique

Kuryr-Kubernetes: the seamless path to adding pods to your datacenter networking
Antoni Segura Puimedon, Irena Berezovsky (Huawei), and Ilya Chukhnakov (Mirantis)

Unlocking the performance secrets of Ceph object storage
Karan Singh, Kyle Bader, and Brent Compton

OVN hands-on tutorial part 1: introduction
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

Kuberneterize your baremetal nodes in OpenStack!
Ken Savich and Darin Sorrentino

OVN hands-on tutorial part 2: advanced
Russell Bryant, Ben Pfaff (VMware), and Justin Pettit (VMware)

The Amazon effect on open source cloud business models
Flavio Percoco, Monty Taylor, Nati Shalom (GigaSpaces), and Yaron Haviv (Iguazio)

Neutron port binding and impact of unbound ports on DVR routers with floatingIP
Brian Haley and Swaminathan Vasudevan (HPE)

Upstream contribution &8211; give up or double down?
Assaf Muller

Hyper cool infrastructure
Randy Robbins

Strategic distributed and multisite OpenStack for business continuity and scalability use cases
Rob Young

Per API role-based access control
Adam Young and Kristi Nikolla (Massachusetts Open Cloud)

Logging work group BoF
Erno Kuvaja, Rochelle Grober, Hector Gonzalez Mendoza (Intel), Hieu LE (Fujistu) and Andrew Ukasick (AT&T)

Performance and scale analysis of OpenStack using Browbeat
 Alex Krzos, Sai Sindhur Malleni, and Joe Talerico

Scaling Nova: how CellsV2 affects your deployment
Dan Smith

Ambassador community report
Erwan Gallen, Lisa-Marie Namphy (OpenStack Ambassador), Akihiro Hasegawa (Equinix), Marton Kiss (Aptira), and Akira Yoshiyama (NEC)

Thursday sessions

Examining different ways to get involved: a look at open source
Rob Wilmoth

CephFS backed NFS share service for multi-tenant clouds
Victoria Martinez de la Cruz, Ramana Raja, and Tom Barron

Create your VM in a (almost) deterministic way &8211; a hands-on lab
Sudhir Kethamakka and Geetika Batra

RDO&8217;s continuous packaging platform
Matthieu Huin, Fabien Boucher, and Haikel Guemar (CentOS)

OpenDaylight Network Virtualization solution (NetVirt) with FD.io VPP data plane
Andre Fredette, Srikanth Vavilapalli (Ericsson), and Prem Sankar Gopanna (Ericsson)

Ceph snapshots for fun & profit
Gregory Farnum

Gnocchi and collectd for faster fault detection and maintenance
Julien Danjou and Emma Foley

Project update &8211; TripleO
Emillien Macchi, Flavio Percoco, and Steven Hardy

Project update &8211; Telemetry
Julien Danjou, Mehdi Abaakouk, and Gordon Chung (Huawei)

Turned up to 11: low latency Ceph block storage
Jason Dillaman, Yuan Zhou (INTC), and Tushar Gohad (Intel)

Who reads books anymore? Or writes them?
Michael Solberg and Ben Silverman (OnX Enterprise Solutions)

Pushing the boundaries of OpenStack &8211; wait, what are they again?
Walter Bentley

Multi-site OpenStack &8211; deployment option and challenges for a telco
Azhar Sayeed

Ceph project update
Sage Weil

 
Quelle: RedHat Stack

Bring In the “New” Infrastructure Stack

The post Bring In the “New” Infrastructure Stack appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
Today, Mirantis has announced Mirantis Cloud Platform .0, which heralds an operations-centric approach to open cloud.  But what does that mean in terms of cloud services today and into the future?  I think it may change your perspective when considering or deploying cloud infrastructure.
When our Co-Founder Boris Renski declared Infrastructure Software Is Dead, he was not talking about the validity or usefulness of infrastructure software, he was talking about the delivery and operations model for infrastructure software.  Historically, infrastructure software has been complicated as well as being notorious for challenging in terms of lifecycle management.  The typical model encompassed a very slow release model comprised of very large, integrated releases that arrived on the order of years for major releases (1.x, 2.x, 3.x&;) and many quarters for minor releases (3.2, 3.3, 3.4…).  Moving from one to the other was an extremely taxing process for IT organizations, and combined with a typical hardware refresh cycle, this usually resulted in the mega-project mentality in our industry:

Architect and deploy service(s) on a top-to-bottom stack
Once it is working &; don’t touch it (keep it running)
Defer consumption of new features and innovation until next update
Define a mega-project plan (typically along a 3 year HW refresh)
Execute plan by starting at 1 again

While virtualization and cloud technologies provided a separation of hardware from applications, it didn’t necessarily solve this problem.  Even OpenStack by itself did not solve this problem.  As infrastructure software, it was still released and consumed in slow, integrated cycles.
Meanwhile, many interesting developments occurred in the application space.  Microservices, agile development methodologies, CI/CD, containers, DevOps — all focused on the ability to rapidly innovate and rapidly consume software in very small increments comprising a larger whole as opposed to one large integrated release.  This approach has been successful at the application level and has allowed an arms race to develop in the software economy: who can develop new services to drive revenue for their business faster than their competition?
Ironically, this movement has been happening with applications running on the older infrastructure methodology.  Why not leverage these innovations at the infrastructure level as well?
Enter Mirantis Cloud Platform (MCP)…
MCP was designed with the operations-centric approach in mind, to be able to consume and manage cloud infrastructure in the same way modern microservices are delivered at the application level.  The vision for MCP is that of a Continuously Delivered Cloud:

With a single platform for virtual machines, containers and bare metal
Delivered by a CI/CD pipeline
With continuous monitoring

Our rich OpenStack platform has been extended with a full Kubernetes distribution which together enables the deployment and orchestration of VMs, containers and bare metal together, all on the same cloud.  As containers become increasingly important as a means of microservices development and deployment, they can be managed within the same open cloud infrastructure.
Mirantis will update MCP on a continuous basis with a lifecycle determined in weeks, not years.  This allows for the rapid release and consumption of updates to the infrastructure in small increments as opposed to the large integrated releases necessitating the mega-project.  Your consumption is based on DriveTrain, the lifecycle management tool connecting your cloud to the innovation coming from Mirantis.  With DriveTrain you consume the technology at your desired pace, pushed through a CI/CD pipeline and tested in staging, then promoted into production deployment.  In the future, this will include new features and full upgrades performed non-disruptively in an automated fashion.  You will be able to take advantage of the latest innovations quickly, as opposed to waiting for the next infrastructure mega-project.
Operations Support Systems have always been paramount to successful IT delivery, and even more so in a distributed system based on a continuous lifecycle paradigm. StackLight is the OSS that is purpose-built for MCP and provides continuous monitoring to enable automated alerts with a goal of SLA compliance.  This is the same OSS used when your cloud is managed by Mirantis with our Mirantis Managed OpenStack (MMO) offering where we can deliver up to 99.99% SLA guarantees, or if you are managing MCP in-house with your own IT operations.  As part of our Build-Operate-Transfer model, we focus on operational training with StackLight such that post-transfer you are able to use the same in-place StackLight and same in-place standard operating procedures.
Finally!  Infrastructure software that can be consumed and managed in a modern approach just like microservices are consumed and managed at the application level.  Long live the new infrastructure!
To learn more about MCP, please sign up for our webinar on April 26. See you there!
The post Bring In the “New” Infrastructure Stack appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
Quelle: Mirantis