Red Hat’s OpenShift platform-as-a-service started as a hosted solution for developers. It was, ostensibly, Red Hat dipping its toe into the platform-as-a-service waters. It proved successful enough to keep going. In keeping with Red Hat’s open source ethos, the product was released as an open source project called OpenShift Origin.
Red Hat has announced that OpenShift, an enterprise-ready PaaS product designed to be installed on-premise within customer datacenters or private, public or hybrid clouds, is now available. OpenShift can be used to streamline and standardize developer workflows, facilitating and increasing IT service delivery velocity, which in turn affects the productivity of businesses.
Enterprise ready PaaS tool brings cloud based development to private or hybrid cloud environments.
Red Hat released Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6.1 to select customers at this week's Red Hat Summit, in which the Linux market leader promoted a greater tolerance for open-ended hybrid platforms. The event featured announcements of a & Red Hat CloudForms& cloud-computing initiative plus a related & OpenShift& platform as a service for open source cloud developers, among other news....
I have extensively searched for a solution to my problem; however, due to the lack of success I decided to post a question.
In short: I have created an OpenShift app/built based on this repo (in combination with a DIY 0.1 cartridge):
https://github.com/ehazlett/openshift-diy-py27-django
The (apparently quite common) problem I have is that I can not get access to static files working; I have tri
To anyone with OpenShift Origin experience, is there any benefit in skipping any IaaS infrastructure (like OpenStack), and installing the PaaS layer right on top of hardware?
What would be the upsides and downsides of such approach?
Thanks.
This week's open source cloud headlines yielded the not-so-suprising news that NASA will discontinue support for the OpenStack cloud platform it helped engineer. The reason?
RALEIGH, N.C.—-Red Hat, Inc. , the world’s leading provider of open source solutions, today announced that the Symbian Foundation, a global non-profit organization formed to foster an open source community around its mobile device software, has adopted Red Hat Enterprise Linux to provide a scalable, high-performance base for its private, cloud-based developer website and server.
Red Hat delivered its latest major operating platform release, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, in November 2010, representing a new standard of flexibility, efficiency and control for customers’ commercial open source environments.