Mirantis,
the open cloud company, today announced the general availability of
Docker Enterprise 3.1, the first major release since the company acquired the Docker Enterprise business in November 2019.
Docker
Enterprise customers can now further expand their container and
Kubernetes adoption to include their most valuable use cases and
applications. Now, administrators of a Docker Enterprise cluster can
easily join Windows Server 2019 nodes to a Docker Enterprise cluster and
enable end users to use Kubernetes to orchestrate Windows containers.
Docker Enterprise 3.1 also
adds greater stability and additional features, with an updated version
of Kubernetes and Nvidia GPU integration for AI/Machine Learning, IoT,
and Big Data applications. It also allows users to easily enable Istio
ingress for a Kubernetes cluster with the click of a button.
At
the same time, Mirantis is introducing new support options for all
Docker Enterprise customers: LabCare, ProdCare, and OpsCare. Previously,
the highest level of support available was 24x7 for Severity 1 cases;
with Mirantis ProdCare, customers have 24x7 support for all cases. With
Mirantis OpsCare, customers get remote managed operations for their
environment with enhanced SLAs, a designated customer success manager,
proactive monitoring and alerting, and dedicated resources with ongoing
health checks and reviews.
"Seven
hundred and fifty customers adopted Docker Enterprise as the fastest
way to build and run modern apps at enterprise scale," said Adrian
Ionel, co-founder and CEO of Mirantis. "Docker Enterprise 3.1 doubles
down on that promise with the only production-ready Kubernetes for
Windows capability and SLAs for mission critical applications."
The latest capabilities of Docker Enterprise 3.1 include:
- Certified Kubernetes 1.17
The
upstream Kubernetes included in Docker Enterprise has been incremented
to the 1.17 release, bringing greater stability and various features
introduced after release 1.14, such as Windows support and scheduler
improvements.
- Kubernetes on Windows
Kubernetes
clusters managed by the Universal Control Plane (UCP) in Docker
Enterprise can now include nodes running Windows Server. Additionally,
pods can interoperate when running on nodes in a mixed cluster
consisting of Windows Server and Linux nodes.
- GPU Orchestration
Nvidia
GPU integration is now included in Docker Enterprise, with a
pre-installed device plugin. Users can view GPU nodes inside Docker UCP,
request GPUs through standard YAML pod specifications, and create
policies for GPUs around access control and shared resources.
- Istio Ingress for Kubernetes
Developers
can enable Istio Ingress for a Kubernetes cluster with the click of a
button. Istio will be automatically added to the cluster with
intelligent defaults to get started quickly. Users can additionally
configure proxies, add external IPs, and more - all from a simplified,
user-friendly interface. Users can also create and review traffic
routing rules, with virtual services supported out of the box.
- New
Mirantis Launchpad CLI Tool for Deployment & Upgrades on any
infrastructure (all major public clouds, on-prem operating systems and
VMware)
A new Command Line Interface (CLI) tool deploys a cluster in minutes with ready-to-use Docker Engine - Enterprise, Kubernetes, and Universal Control Plane.
"The
market leadership of the Docker Enterprise platform combined with
Mirantis' reputation for customer care and technical expertise makes the
Docker 3.1 release a compelling fit for our customers in support of
their app modernization journey," said Glen Tindal, Solutions Business
unit leader, Capstone IT. "Adding Windows Server support with Kubernetes
gives Capstone IT's customers greater business flexibility and choice
based on their use cases."
Docker
Enterprise is the only platform that enables developers to seamlessly
build, share and safely run any applications anywhere - from public
cloud to hybrid cloud to the edge. One third of Fortune 100 companies
use Docker Enterprise as their high-velocity innovation platform.