Red
Hat, Inc., the world's leading provider of open source
solutions, today launched Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7, the
latest version of Red Hat's enterprise-grade Kubernetes container
application platform. As application complexity and cloud
incompatibility loom, Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7 helps IT
organizations to build and manage applications that use services from
the datacenter to the public cloud. The newest iteration of the
industry's most comprehensive enterprise Kubernetes platform includes
native integrations with Amazon Web Services (AWS) Service Brokers that
enable developers to bind services across AWS and on-premise resources
to create modern applications while providing a consistent, open
standards-based foundation to drive business evolution.
Cloud-native
enterprise applications can consume services from multiple locations,
including from the data center and multiple public clouds. Also, according to 451 Research,
more than 60 percent of enterprises implementing cloud strategies are
using two (or more) different cloud environments -- on-premises private
clouds, hosted private cloud, and multiple public clouds. Increasingly,
modern applications built for digital transformation rely on a mesh of
loosely-coupled component and microservices, making consistency across
cloud providers a significant challenge, but one that Red Hat OpenShift
Container Platform 3.7 helps to address.
Red
Hat OpenShift Container Platform unites developers and IT operations on
a single platform to build, deploy, and manage applications
consistently across hybrid cloud infrastructures. This helps businesses
achieve greater value by delivering modern and traditional applications
with shorter development cycles and increased efficiencies. The platform
is built on open source innovation and industry standards, including
Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Kubernetes, and is trusted by many
companies around the world.
Bringing hybrid cloud applications to life
With
modern applications reliant upon disparate services and components from
on-premise and cloud-based resources, being able to effectively stitch
these pieces together in a consistent manner can be critical to
delivering business innovation. Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7
helps to answer this need with the OpenShift Service Catalog,
a fully-supported feature that enables IT organizations to connect any
application running on the OpenShift platform to a wide variety of
services, regardless of where that service runs.
The
OpenShift Service Catalog helps users search for, provision, and bind
application services to OpenShift applications while providing a more
secure and consistent way for administrators to provide new services to
end users. This helps to free development teams from having to deeply
understand service creation or consumption, and places more emphasis on
building applications to deliver business value rather than sourcing
services.
Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7 will ship with OpenShift Template Broker, which
turns any OpenShift Template into a discoverable service for
application developers using OpenShift. OpenShift Templates are lists of
OpenShift objects that can be implemented within specific parameters,
making it easier for IT organizations to deploy reusable, composite
applications comprised of microservices.
Also included with Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7 is OpenShift Ansible Broker for
provisioning and managing services through the OpenShift Service
Catalog by using Ansible to define OpenShift Services. OpenShift Ansible
Broker enables users to provision services both on and off the
OpenShift platform, helping to simplify and automate complex workflows
involving varied services and applications across on-premise and
cloud-based resources.
Production
support for Service Catalog in OpenShift Container Platform builds upon
Red Hat's strong hybrid cloud technology portfolio, which includes:
- Red Hat OpenShift Application Runtimes,
a collection of supported runtimes to lower the entry barrier for
building and deploying cloud-native applications (now in beta).
- Red Hat Container-Native Storage 3.6,
an enterprise-grade software-defined storage solution built from Red
Hat Gluster Storage that serves storage out of containers, both
on-premises and in the cloud.
AWS Service integration
First
announced at Red Hat Summit 2017, Red Hat now makes popular AWS
services accessible directly from Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform.
This integration enables AWS users to configure and deploy these
services from OpenShift, and provides a single path of enterprise-grade
support for customer needs.
At launch, accessible AWS services through Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7 include:
- Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS)
- Amazon Relational Database Services (RDS)
- Amazon Route 53
- Amazon Simple Storage Services (S3)
- Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS)
- Amazon ElastiCache
- Amazon Redshift
- Amazon DynamoDB
- Amazon Elastic MapReduce (EMR)
Additional features
Red
Hat OpenShift Container Platform 3.7 also adds additional features and
capabilities to help improve user experience and enhance platform
security. These features include:
- Network Policy is
now out of Technology Preview and generally supported, enabling project
administrators to apply network rules and policies to inbound traffic
for specific OpenShift pods.
- Prometheus (Tech Preview) is
being introduced for monitoring and alerting in Red Hat OpenShift
Container Platform 3.7, building the popular monitoring solution (and
CNCF project) directly into the OpenShift platform.