Red Hat accelerates application delivery

Lightweight Red Hat Enterprise Linux-based host environment and integrated developer services enable organizations to streamline application development and deployment across the open hybrid cloud.

Red Hat, Inc. has announced several new Linux Container innovations in support of the company’s vision for streamlined application delivery and orchestration across bare metal systems, virtual machines and private and public clouds via containers and Docker technology. These innovations include:
· Project Atomic – a new community project to develop technologies for creating lightweight Linux Container hosts, based on next-generation capabilities in the Linux ecosystem. The tools that result from Project Atomic will allow creation of a new variant of Red Hat Enterprise Linux – Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host – which Red Hat plans to debut with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.
· GearD – a new OpenShift Origin community project to enable rapid application development, continuous integration, delivery, and deployment of application code to containerized application environments.
· High-Touch Beta Program – an expansion of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 high-touch beta program to include Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host and Docker container technologies that will enable select customers to evaluate these new container technologies in enterprise environments.
Linux Containers and Docker have quickly emerged as key open source application packaging and delivery technologies, combining lightweight application isolation with the flexibility of an image-based deployment method. This can provide several benefits, including:
· Application portability, allowing for the deployment of the application container across a variety of container hosts.
· Minimal footprint, which reduces the overhead of deploying new application containers.
· Simplified maintenance, reducing the effort and risk of patching applications and their dependencies.
· Lowered development costs, as enterprises need only develop, test and certify applications against a single container runtime.


Open source container technologies also pave the way for an application-optimized infrastructure for the open hybrid cloud, one that can simplify the entire application lifecycle, from development and deployment to maintenance and management. As an increasing number of enterprises embrace DevOps philosophies, Red Hat expects container technologies will play a significant role in how organizations deliver and manage applications.


With the growing popularity of both Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), application containers also help prevent cloud lock-in. By separating infrastructure services from the application, containerized applications can move freely between not only different clouds, but also physical and virtual environments, consuming only the needed services and delivering upon the extreme flexibility promised by the open hybrid cloud.


With these new container initiatives, Red Hat seeks to bring the transparency and standardization with which it has codified so many other technology ecosystems, from virtualization to the cloud, to containers. By offering an enterprise class, container-specific host along with new container capabilities in the world’s leading enterprise Linux platform and a certification program for containerized applications, along with an extensive ecosystem of support and services, Red Hat is the first and only IT leader to offer a comprehensive vision of containerized application delivery for the open hybrid cloud, including portability across bare metal systems, virtual machines and private and public clouds.


“Atomic” Container Hosts
Project Atomic aims to provide technologies to create lightweight host operating systems for containerized applications that can be applied to Fedora, CentOS and Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The “Atomic” container host provides the essential functionality for running application containers like Docker, while maintaining a small footprint and allowing for atomic updates. This means simplified maintenance, but also enables higher levels of verification, control, and even roll-backs of applied updates.


Project Atomic will provide the upstream community for Fedora and CentOS Atomic hosts, along with a new Red Hat Enterprise Linux offering: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host. Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host couples the flexible, lightweight and modular capabilities of Linux Containers with the reliability and security of Red Hat Enterprise Linux in a reduced image size that will enable easy movement of Red Hat Enterprise Linux-certified applications across bare metal systems, virtual machines and private and public clouds.


Key Red Hat Enterprise Linux features are inherited by Red Hat Enterprise Linux Atomic Host, including:
· systemd, a powerful, flexible process manager that will help manage the administration of containers.
· Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux), which offers military-grade security and isolation to a container environment.
· compatibility with the forthcoming Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 as well as Red Hat’s certified Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Container ecosystems.


Developer and Application Services
With the GearD project, Red Hat further enables customers to tap the power of containerized applications. Red Hat expects that new developer and application services resulting from GearD in OpenShift Origin, the open source project that forms the community for Red Hat’s suite of OpenShift PaaS offerings, will drive future innovations in both OpenShift Enterprise and OpenShift Online.


GearD was created to provide:
· Integration between application containers and deployment technologies like Git, enabling developers to quickly go from application source code to containerized application stacks deployed onto production systems.
· The ability to connect and orchestrate multiple application containers spanning multiple container hosts, enabling developers to deploy complex, composite applications while making efficient use of infrastructure resources.
· Flexible and dynamic routing of network traffic to the composite applications.
· Additional services to address the needs of both application developers and IT operations administrators as they deploy and leverage containerized application platforms and DevOps practices.

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