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Container Management 2.0

Container Management 2.0

Next-Gen Platforms Package Management, Orchestration and Services for a Streamlined User Experience

RELEASE DATE
18-Dec-2019
REGION
North America
Research Code: 99E4-00-38-00-00
SKU: IT03981-NA-SF_23886
$3,000.00
In stock
SKU
IT03981-NA-SF_23886
$3,000.00
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Description

As enterprises execute their hybrid cloud strategies, they are looking to simplify critical functions, such as:

--moving applications across various infrastructures
--optimizing legacy applications
--introducing new functionality and services to legacy and cloud applications

Increasingly, they are choosing to build and deploy applications in containers, rather than virtual machines. Containers package all the code and dependencies needed to run a workload (including microservices, data, runtime environment, and system tools and settings) into a single, self-contained image. By abstracting the application from the underlying infrastructure, containers can be easily moved across infrastructures. Containers are also lightweight, consuming less of the server’s processing capacity than a virtual machine.

As container usage has grown, so has the complexity associated with orchestrating, provisioning, and managing container clusters. Scaling production workloads, ensuring consistent security profiles across clusters, and managing networking and storage can be difficult for users. And the most popular container management service, open-source Kubernetes, can actually make it more difficult to manage containers. In answer to user challenges, IBM and HPE recently launched new platforms to simplify container deployment and management.

In this report, we will examine the need for improved container management. We will also look at the two new container management platforms introduced by IBM and HPE.

Table of Contents

Introduction

The Draw of Containers

Managing Containers

New Offerings Ease Management Burdens

The HPE Container Platform

Enterprise Benefits of the HPE Container Platform

IBM Cloud Paks

Enterprise Benefits of IBM Cloud Paks

Frost & Sullivan - The Last Word

About Frost & Sullivan

As enterprises execute their hybrid cloud strategies, they are looking to simplify critical functions, such as: --moving applications across various infrastructures --optimizing legacy applications --introducing new functionality and services to legacy and cloud applications Increasingly, they are choosing to build and deploy applications in containers, rather than virtual machines. Containers package all the code and dependencies needed to run a workload (including microservices, data, runtime environment, and system tools and settings) into a single, self-contained image. By abstracting the application from the underlying infrastructure, containers can be easily moved across infrastructures. Containers are also lightweight, consuming less of the server’s processing capacity than a virtual machine. As container usage has grown, so has the complexity associated with orchestrating, provisioning, and managing container clusters. Scaling production workloads, ensuring consistent security profiles across clusters, and managing networking and storage can be difficult for users. And the most popular container management service, open-source Kubernetes, can actually make it more difficult to manage containers. In answer to user challenges, IBM and HPE recently launched new platforms to simplify container deployment and management. In this report, we will examine the need for improved container management. We will also look at the two new container management platforms introduced by IBM and HPE.
More Information
No Index No
Podcast No
Author Karyn Price
Industries Information Technology
WIP Number 99E4-00-38-00-00
Is Prebook No
GPS Codes 99E4-C1,9455