NetEnrich
announces the results of a survey of 200 IT professionals. The survey,
which ran online in June, focused on the use of containers and related
technologies by US companies. The key takeaway from the survey was that
companies appear to be moving quickly to deploy container technologies,
with 70 percent of respondents using containers today and another 21
percent indicating they plan to do so soon.
Container technology represents an opportunity for developer
and operations teams to increase efficiency and flexibility in the
delivery of software applications. Containers enclose pieces of code in a
layer of software that can be transported easily between computers.
While not new, container technology is gaining steam as companies look
for ways to speed software delivery and leverage emerging technologies
such as public cloud infrastructure.
According to the results of NetEnrich's survey, the primary
benefit, cited by 63 percent of respondents, of using container
technology was the improved flexibility it provides in terms of a
company's IT infrastructure. The second most common benefit (53 percent
of respondents) was overall IT cost savings. Increased
speed/productivity for developers launching code (51 percent) and
greater responsiveness to business needs (40 percent) were the third and
fourth most often experienced benefits, respectively. Interestingly, 46
percent of respondents said they expected to save as much as 30 percent
in annual IT costs through the use of containers, whether in developer
productivity, infrastructure expenses or other efficiencies.
Still, companies are experiencing some growing pains
associated with the use of containers. The biggest issue, called out by
55 percent of persons responding to NetEnrich's survey, has been
integrating containers into their existing IT environments. Security (53
percent) and managing containers to avoid sprawl and cost overruns (47
percent) were the next biggest hurdles, followed by a lack of experience
with container tech among internal staff (42 percent).
Indeed, a whopping 66 percent of IT pros described the
difficulty in learning how to effectively use container tech such as
Docker, Kubernetes and Mesos as "moderately challenging," while 21
percent described it as "highly challenging." Some 58 percent of
respondents said they are using third-party management tools and
services to address these challenges, and the same percentage said
they're finding services and consultants "competitively priced" and of
"good value."
Other key findings from the NetEnrich June 2016 Container Survey include:
- 33 percent of respondents said they are using CoreOS as
their main container technology. Another 32 percent are using Google
Kubernetes, 25 percent are using Docker, and 11 percent are using
Joyent.
- In addition to containers, 76 percent of respondents said they're
using microservices, 69 percent are using public cloud services, 56
percent have adopted DevOps, and 48 percent have adopted automation for
code deployments.
- 30 percent of respondents said they're running containers at an IT
hosting provider's facility or third-party data center. An additional 27
percent are using containers in their internal data centers, while 27
percent are running on Microsoft Azure and 17 percent are running on
Amazon Web Services.
- 44 percent of respondents said containers would help them reduce
virtualization costs "significantly," while 41 percent said the savings
would be "minimal to moderate."
- 53 percent of respondents are using Docker containers in conjunction
with Apache and/or Docker Swarm, while 27 percent are using Docker with
DCOS and 18 percent are using Docker with Mesos.
- The greatest percentage of respondents (45 percent) are using
AppDynamics to monitor their container environment. Another 31 percent
are using Prometheus or DataDog. Splunk was the fourth most popular
monitoring tool at 27 percent, followed by Vistara at 23 percent.
"The results of our survey indicate that container adoption
is on the rise and leading to cost savings and efficiency gains for many
IT organizations," says Chris Joseph, vice president of product
management and marketing at NetEnrich. "However, companies are still
grappling with issues such as integration, security and management when
it comes to container tech. This will likely continue until the
skillsets of internal IT staff catch up to the market. In the meantime,
companies are benefiting from the support of outside consultants and
service providers."