Modernising technology is key to keeping pace with rapid digitalisation. Central to this modernisation is leveraging hybrid cloud environments, which involves the oftentimes complex task of managing multiple clouds, heterogeneous applications and differing sets of tools. Containers are seen as a foundational technology to address app portability and scalability across environments, however, to manage containerised workloads at scale you need a management and orchestration system of which the open-source project Kubernetes (K8s) has become the de facto industry standard.
K8s helps automate the deployment of applications by managing the infrastructure layer across distributed systems providing capabilities such as scaling, resiliency and resource management. However, K8s on its own is not enough. To make it enterprise-ready and more importantly accessible to developers, you need to build components on top of Kubernetes – things like build tools, runtimes, deployment pipelines, monitoring and alerting, security profiles, persistent storage and network routing to name a few. Think of K8s as a platform layer to build your application platform on top of.
Red Hat OpenShift, which is built on top of K8s, adds the critical capabilities to make it more accessible to developers and to simplify operational tasks. In addition to the aforementioned components, OpenShift adds developer-focused services such as service mesh, serverless, GitOps and observability.
To further reduce operational complexity OpenShift is offered as a cloud service across the major cloud providers including AWS and Azure. Red Hat’s Global Site Reliability Engineering team takes care of the Day 1 and Day 2 operations ensuring a 99.95% uptime SLA. This means development teams can focus on delivering business value through building and scaling applications across clouds.
Red Hat OpenShift Is Built Differently
Red Hat has been working on the K8s project since its inception alongside Google. Since then, Red Hat has become the second-leading contributor to the Kubernetes project – with this experience going towards building OpenShift as an enterprise-ready application platform.
Click HERE for a primer on how Red Hat OpenShift is different from others.
As to how Red Hat OpenShift cloud services are different from other hosted K8s services, consider the following:
- OpenShift delivers a consistent experience across the hybrid cloud. Forrester Wave™ assessments rate Red Hat OpenShift as the industry-leading multicloud container development platform. That stamp of approval is in part due to a suite of cloud-agnostic features that enable an organisation’s DevOps team to spread workloads across multiple cloud providers. This ensures consistency for developers and improves their productivity spanning across environments.
- Others are managed but OpenShift is fully managed. In many cases, Kubernetes service providers only manage the actual K8s control plane but other components that need to be put on top require additional costs and configuration (see the figure below). Red Hat OpenShift, in contrast, provides a fully managed service—meaning, it not only manages the entire platform stack, including monitoring, registry and metrics and CI/CD pipelines but also offers said additional components as part of the subscription. Upgrades and patching are automated also, saving you in terms of not only cost but also the major challenge of keeping up with the K8s release cycle.
- OpenShift Cloud Services reduces operational complexity. Red Hat OpenShift’s site reliability engineering team helps reduce security and compliance risks. The platform is covered by 24×7 support. The added deployment flexibility, on the other hand, ensures repeatability and consistency for multi-cloud deployments, thus lessening integration bottlenecks.
Kubernetes Still Needs Help—and Red Hat Can Give it
It is important to keep in mind that K8s is just a means, not the end itself. And for all that it can do for your digital transformation efforts, it still needs to be integrated with a host of other components, including networking, storage, ingress and load balancing, monitoring and logging.
Red Hat OpenShift Cloud Services is a turnkey application platform that not only integrates the components required to build, deploy and run your cloud-native and traditional workloads, it also automates routine operational tasks, accelerating time to value. As a fully managed service, it reduces your risk, enabling teams to focus on delivering innovation.
Put simply, Red Hat OpenShift is not just a product software; it is a key to modernisation. Click here to find out more.
Archive
- October 2024(44)
- September 2024(94)
- August 2024(100)
- July 2024(99)
- June 2024(126)
- May 2024(155)
- April 2024(123)
- March 2024(112)
- February 2024(109)
- January 2024(95)
- December 2023(56)
- November 2023(86)
- October 2023(97)
- September 2023(89)
- August 2023(101)
- July 2023(104)
- June 2023(113)
- May 2023(103)
- April 2023(93)
- March 2023(129)
- February 2023(77)
- January 2023(91)
- December 2022(90)
- November 2022(125)
- October 2022(117)
- September 2022(137)
- August 2022(119)
- July 2022(99)
- June 2022(128)
- May 2022(112)
- April 2022(108)
- March 2022(121)
- February 2022(93)
- January 2022(110)
- December 2021(92)
- November 2021(107)
- October 2021(101)
- September 2021(81)
- August 2021(74)
- July 2021(78)
- June 2021(92)
- May 2021(67)
- April 2021(79)
- March 2021(79)
- February 2021(58)
- January 2021(55)
- December 2020(56)
- November 2020(59)
- October 2020(78)
- September 2020(72)
- August 2020(64)
- July 2020(71)
- June 2020(74)
- May 2020(50)
- April 2020(71)
- March 2020(71)
- February 2020(58)
- January 2020(62)
- December 2019(57)
- November 2019(64)
- October 2019(25)
- September 2019(24)
- August 2019(14)
- July 2019(23)
- June 2019(54)
- May 2019(82)
- April 2019(76)
- March 2019(71)
- February 2019(67)
- January 2019(75)
- December 2018(44)
- November 2018(47)
- October 2018(74)
- September 2018(54)
- August 2018(61)
- July 2018(72)
- June 2018(62)
- May 2018(62)
- April 2018(73)
- March 2018(76)
- February 2018(8)
- January 2018(7)
- December 2017(6)
- November 2017(8)
- October 2017(3)
- September 2017(4)
- August 2017(4)
- July 2017(2)
- June 2017(5)
- May 2017(6)
- April 2017(11)
- March 2017(8)
- February 2017(16)
- January 2017(10)
- December 2016(12)
- November 2016(20)
- October 2016(7)
- September 2016(102)
- August 2016(168)
- July 2016(141)
- June 2016(149)
- May 2016(117)
- April 2016(59)
- March 2016(85)
- February 2016(153)
- December 2015(150)