Home Blog Page 178

Facebook releases its ‘Blender’ chatbot as an open-source project

Facebook has released a startlingly lifelike chatbot, dubbed Blender, as an open-source resource for AI research. The company claims that Blender is the single largest open-source chatbot created to date. It’s been trained on a whopping 9.4 billion parameters — nearly 4x as many as Google’s Meena.

Read More at

Making Linux The ‘Most Secure’ OS For Remote Working

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the challenges that are already in place. How will this pandemic change the way many industries operate? How polymorphic technologies by Polyverse protect Linux-powered systems to keep remote work secure? Don Maclean, Chief Cyber Security Technologist at DLT Solutions, has answers to these questions.

Read More at TFiR

Linux and Kubernetes: Serving The Common Goals of Enterprises

For Stefanie Chiras, VP & GM, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Unit at Red Hat, aspects such as security and resiliency have always been important for Red Hat. More so, in the current situation when everyone has gone fully remote and it’s much harder to get people in front of the hardware for carrying out updates, patching, etc.

“As we look at our current situation, never has it been more important to have an operating system that is resilient and secure, and we’re focused on that,” she said.

The recently released version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8.2 inadvertently address these challenge as it makes it easier for technology leaders to embrace the latest, production-ready innovations swiftly which offering security and resilience that their IT teams need.

RHEL’s embrace of a predictable 6-month minor release cycle also helped customers plan upgrades more efficiently.

“There is value for customers in having predictability of minor releases on a six-month cycle. Without knowing when they were coming was causing disruptions for them. The launch of 8.2 is now the second time we have delivered on our commitment of having minor releases every six months,” said Stefanie Chiras.

In addition to offering security updates, the new version adds insights capabilities and forays into newer areas of innovation.

The upgrade has expanded the earlier capability called ‘Adviser’ dramatically. Additional functionalities such as drift monitoring and CVE coverage allow for a much deeper granularity into how the infrastructure is running.

“It really amplifies the skills that are already present in ops and sysadmin teams, and this provides a Red Hat consultation, if you will, directly into the data center,” claimed Charis.

As containers are increasingly being leveraged for digital transformation, RHEL 8.2 offers an updated application stream of Red Hat’s container tools. It also has new, containerized versions of Buildah and Skopeo.

Skopeo is an open-source image copying tool, while Buildah is a tool for building Docker- and Kubernetes-compatible images easily and quickly.

RHEL has also ensured in-place upgrades in the new version. Customers can now directly in-place upgrade from version 7 to version 8.2.

Chiras believes Linux has emerged as the go-to-platform for innovations such as Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and Artificial Intelligence.

“Linux has now become the springboard of innovation,” she argued. “AI, machine learning, and deep learning are driving a real change in not just the software but also the hardware. In the context of these emerging technologies, it’s all about making them consumable into an enterprise.”

“We’re very focused on our ecosystem, making sure that we’re working in the right upstream communities with the right ISVs, with the right hardware partners to make all of that magic come together,” Chiras said.

Towards this end, Red Hat has been partnering with multiple architectures for a long time — be it an x86 architecture, ARM, Power, or mainframe with IBM Z. Its partnership with Nvidia pulls in capabilities such as FPGAs, and GPU.

Synergizing Kubernetes and Linux 

Kubernetes is fast finding favor in enterprises.  So how do Linux and Kubernetes serve the common goals of enterprises?

“Kubernetes is a new way to deploy Linux. We’re very focused on providing operational consistency by leveraging our technology in RHEL and then bringing in that incredible capability of Kubernetes within our OpenShift product line,” Chiras said.

The deployment of Linux within a Kubernetes environment is much more complicated than in a traditional deployment. RHEL, therefore, made some key changes. The company created Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS — an optimized version of RHEL for the OpenShift experience.

“It’s deployed as an immutable. It’s tailored, narrow, and gets updated as part of your OpenShift update to provide consistent user experience and comprehensive security.

The launch of the Red Hat Universal Base Image (UBI) offers users greater security, reliability, and performance of official Red Hat container images where OCI-compliant Linux containers run.

“Kubernetes is a new way to deploy Linux. It really is a tight collaboration but what we’re really focused on is the customer experience. We want them to get easy updates with consistency and reliability, resilience and security. We’re pulling all of that together. With such advancements going on, it’s a fascinating space to watch,” added Chiras.

 

Microsoft open-sources in-house library for handling QUIC connections

Microsoft has open-sourced this week the source code of MsQuic, the company’s in-house library for handling network connections established via the new QUIC protocol. QUIC stands for “Quick UDP Internet Connections.” It is a new data transfer protocol that is currently being standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).

Read More at ZDNet

Red Hat Summit: Linux Is The Foundation, OpenShift The Future

Red Hat leaders on Tuesday laid out a strategy for cloud dominance that relies on empowering enterprises with open, highly integrated infrastructure software enabling development and deployment of modern applications across all environments. Building on the foundation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the company sees containers as the crucial technology.

Read More at CRN

Linux home directory management is about to undergo major change

Prior to systemd every system and resource was managed by its own tool. Now, controlling and managing systems on Linux is incredibly easy. One of the creators, Leannart Poettering, always considered systemd to be incomplete. With upcoming release of systemd 245, Poettering will take his system one step closer to completion.

Read More at TechRepublic

Choosing an Open Source Stack – And Avoiding a False Economy

While more organisations are adopting open source software (over 95 percent), selecting and building an open source stack can be overwhelming, writes Justin Reock, Chief Architect OpenLogic, Perforce Software. There are thousands of open source solutions from which to choose, and it can be hard to know what questions to ask.

Read More at Computer Business Review

Open source steps up as COVID-19 forces instant digital transformations

Businesses that were behind on the cloud journey before the novel coronavirus-19 are really feeling the heat right now. Whether it’s scaling up or down, a lot of businesses are in the middle of a crisis. And true to its open-source ethos, Red Hat is there to help.

Read More at SiliconANGLE

LiFT Scholarship Success Story: IT Certifications Bring Demonstrable Benefits

Back in 2015, Kevin Barry was studying for a Ph.D. in music and was teaching himself programming in his spare time. Inspired by a lecture given by Linux Foundation Fellow Greg Kroah-Hartman, he submitted his first patch for LilyPond. Kevin proceeded to complete the free Intro to Linux course with edX and put that knowledge to use by automating some of his work with shell scripts. He then heard about the Linux Foundation Training (LiFT) Scholarship program and decided to submit an application.

Read More at Linux Foundation Training »

Sam Ramji’s Growth Strategy for DataStax 

DataStax Chief Strategy Officer Sam Ramji believes software startups in the NoSQL space have ‘crossed a very important boundary.’ He feels the market is at a tipping point, and DataStax is all set to make the most of this opportunity. “Once you’re generating $100 billion in revenue per year, that’s pretty substantial,” Ramji said.

A couple of years ago, the NoSQL market was about $4 billion. Last year, it shot up to $6.5 billion. According to IDC, the market is expected to grow at about 35% a year for the next few years. “By 2023, we think NoSQL as a market would be about $21-$22 billion,” he said.

Ramji is making sure the large enterprises that are succeeding with Cassandra, an open source project, continue to succeed given the enormous additional market pressure they’re facing as the world goes digital really fast this year.

DataStax-Casandra-Kubernetes ecosystem 

A big trend Ramji witnessed last year has been the emergence of Kubernetes as the defacto standard for container management. “Trends for Kubernetes of data are a lot harder to see because mostly the big movement with Kubernetes is the standardization of workflow in application development,” Ramji opined. Not to be left behind, DataStax is releasing a new Kubernetes operator for Cassandra.

When asked, how would DataStax differentiate its operator from others already out in the market, Ramji said that ‘differentiation’ is a word he believed open source communities should stop using.

“I actually don’t think differentiation versus open source or open source communities is a sensible thing,” he said. There are going to be multiple solutions Kube operators for Cassandra. Each of these operators are written by different companies to solve their problem of operating Cassandra at scale in their environment, automatically. Each environment has its own very specific needs. It’s not about differentiation, it’s about solving different problems leveraging the same open-source solution.

“As we’re a commercial provider of an open source project, we have to go towards generalization. Generalization and specificity exist in dynamic harmony.  Who cares who wrote the Kube operator for Cassandra that becomes the most popular? What I care about is that users grab both. They install it in their environment and away they go with scalable data. It’s an invitation for the whole community to participate and build a great common operator,” he said.

Why betting on Cassandra?

When asked, what makes Cassandra uniquely suited for cloud native workloads, when the project itself predates all these kinds of technologies, Ramji said Cassandra’s uniqueness stems from two attributes — how applications experience Cassandra and how does Cassandra scale.

“If you’re talking to a relational database or you’re talking to a less scalable database, you’re always going to end up in a state of needing to shard the data. This is a huge cyclical burden for the entire system. Cassandra is shardless. Once you’ve written your application and talked to Cassandra, you’d never have to change how you talk to Cassandra,” he explains.

Cassandra’s ability to scale out, which is its other differentiator, is based on its master list or multi-master architecture. There’s no single point of failure.

“Therefore, the ability to scale Cassandra — from a few nodes to many nodes, from one cluster to multiple clusters, or multiple clusters to multiple regions — is all tested and proved. This was exactly the problem that Cassandra was built to solve for Facebook in the first place,” says Ramji.

Three Pillars of Growth

Ramji firmly believes Cassandra and DataStax offer the opportunity of a lifetime to understand data better, to be able to serve the community by linking a really well-proved open source database with a really well-proved open source cloud native technology.

Putting his money where his mouth is, Ramji is building three pillars — open source, scale-out, and cloud native — that will help DataStax deliver on its promise.

In 2016, there was a loss of focus as different parties imposed requirements for Cassandra. The first pillar aims at bringing back the focus and restoring the vibrancy of Cassandra as an open source community.

“Netflix, Instagram, Apple, DataStax, and others were going in different directions. That scattered the tribes. Now, we’re trying to gather the tribes back together. Apple is leading the way to get Cassandra 4.0 released this year. We’ll probably see the beta in Q2 and we’ll see the GA later this year,” said Ramji.

DataStax, which has a small team, has allocated about 25 engineers to work on nothing but open source.

“For us to allocate such a high percentage of our engineering force, which is a quarter of our engineering team, tells you that open source is absolutely vital to us,” he said.

The second pillar, scale-out, is a core of what Cassandra is really meant for and that’s what it’s been pushed on for a decade. Ramji intends to continue delivering on what makes Cassandra special.

Cassandra is hardened to scale. It’s not just about a lot of nodes. It’s about a lot of nodes in a cluster. It’s about a lot of clusters in a multi-cluster and a lot of multi-clusters in multiple regions. All is one addressable data fabric. “That’s what it’s really good at,” he said.

Ramji believes the third, and final pillar – cloud native – will be the big stretch.

“To be able to get a proper cloud native database, you want something that will ride along with Kubernetes, Istio, Envoy, and Prometheus. It will also have to expand and contract and fit the application workload that’s being directed through Kubernetes. That’s a super interesting area,” he said.

Working towards a perfect pairing of data and compute for a cloud native world, DataStax will be releasing a Kubernetes operator management API this year.

In conclusion

Going forward, Ramji believes designing the storage engine interface would receive a lot of attention this year.

“There’s so much advancement happening in storage, networking, network block storage and large scale environments for AI, for ML as well as for just mainstream deployment of large scale applications. As we build the storage engine interface as part of the architecture for participation for Cassandra, we will see a lot more different experts and companies come to bear so that we can plug into all of their differentiated awesome environments,” he concluded.