TriggerMesh, a company developing serverless
and FaaS management solutions, announced their official company and product
launch. TriggerMesh is offered as software-as-a-service and enables the deployment
and management of functions on Kubernetes clusters enabled with Knative as well
the management of event triggers across Amazon Web Services, Google Compute
Engine, and Azure.
TriggerMesh Serverless Management Platform allows developers to automate the
deployment and of functions from their favorite version control system on the
TriggerMesh cloud powered by Knative. The developers benefit from:
- Integration with source control
- Bitbucket, GitLab, and GitHub
- CI/CD via Knative build
controller
- Cross-cloud event management
via triggers (e.g. Amazon SQS, Azure Storage queues)
- HashiCorp Terraform plugin
TriggerMesh is accepting users as part of their limited early
adopters' program:
https://triggermesh.com/serverless_eap/
TriggerMesh was founded by cloud veterans with extensive experience in
developing and bringing cloud solutions to market. Co-founder and head of
product, Sebastien Goasguen, was the creator of Kubeless, a successful open
source serverless framework. He previously founded Skippbox (developers of
kompose and Cabin) and is the author of the Docker and Kubernetes O'Reilly
cookbooks.
"As an early adopter of containers and Kubernetes, I have witnessed the move to
a serverless fabric based on Google's Knative that will continue to rapidly
grow." said Goasguen,"I believe that this is the framework that cloud providers
and enterprises alike will standardize on and I believe our product vision is
an ideal complement to developers adopting serverless computing and FaaS."
Mark Hinkle, has a long history in systems management and cloud computing. He
most recently was the Executive Director of the Node.js Foundation and has held
roles as VP at Cloud.com and Zenoss as well as managing the Citrix Open Source
Business Office supporting technology and business alliance efforts.
"Serverless is a vision first manifested in the late 1990s as SOA," said Mark
Hinkle, "With the abundance of high-quality open source software and
pervasiveness of low-cost highly available cloud infrastructure we believe that
the market for this architecture has arrived and will continue to grow. We
intend to provide the tools needed by developers to capitalize on this newly
defined computing model.