Pivotal, IBM, Hewlett Packard, and others are building Cloud Foundry
together—and using it as a weapon against each other. Just another day at the
open-source corral.
It’s getting harder for large companies to write the custom software
they need to run and prosper in an era where they need to connect to customers
(and potentially devices) worldwide. If you log into an online system to pay
bills or select healthcare benefits, you’re likely using the new-age
applications that these companies need to design, build, test, and deploy
quickly and with minimal hassle.
This week in Santa Clara, Calif., a gaggle of tech vendors will gather
to sing the praises of Cloud Foundry, a common set of tools called a “platform
as a service” that aims to enable this modern type of development. Like the
Linux operating system and OpenStack cloud framework before it, Cloud Foundry
is an open-source project, meaning that the software and documentation is available
to anyone as long as changes made are submitted back to the broader group.
“Most enterprises have developed systems that are difficult and
expensive to deploy and operate, where cloud-native companies have invested in
automation and architectures to make those problems go away,” says Andrew Clay
Shafer, senior director of technology for Pivotal, a spin-out of EMC EMC -1.12%
and VMware VMW -1.96% that offers a commercial version of Cloud
Foundry.
“Cloud native” companies use modern tools to build software that is a
set of tiny components or microservices that work together as opposed to the
big, monolithic applications of yesteryear. These new companies are not bound
by decades-old processes and gear.
“You can’t hope to continuously deliver software or operate
microservices at scale if deployment is time-consuming and error-prone,” Shafer
says. “Standardizing the platform and architectures which adhere to that cloud
native platform contract makes deploying software a boring non-event so organizations
can focus more resources on creating value and less on undifferentiated heavy
lifting.”
All these Cloud Foundry vendors—Pivotal, IBM, Hewlett-Packard HPQ -2.31% , ActiveState and others—pledge to
support that core foundation but also add their own secret sauce to their
branded version.
“We will cooperate on interoperability and compete on execution,” said
Angel Diaz, IBM IBM -0.33% Software Group’s vice president of cloud
architecture and technology. In theory, that means that IBM’s Bluemix version
of Cloud Foundry will work with Pivotal’s Pivotal CF, which will work with the
HP Helion Development Platform. As always, the proof will be in the pudding.
The Cloud Foundry Summit will showcase many of these vendors but, more
importantly, several actual users of Cloud Foundry, including Pivotal customers
Allstate Insurance, Garmin, Humana, and Comcast. IBM customers Gamestop,
Mindjet, and Cognitive Scale will also be in attendance.
In other words, there will be a lot of posturing in Santa Clara, with competing
vendors talking up the generic platform while also stressing that their
particular version is the best, prettiest, or most cost-effective.
IBM claims that Bluemix is attracting 8,000 new developers every week.
IBM and HP both tout new support of Microsoft Windows-oriented, or .Net,
applications although that support, along with new support for the
popular Docker container
technology, was added to the core Cloud Foundry code. Since many companies run
a ton of Microsoft as well as Java software; if they want to meld the old with
the new, this support in Cloud Foundry is important.
Also among the announcements: Mirantis will re-sell Pivotal CF and make
sure it works well with the OpenStack framework, and Dell Digital
Services will offer professional support for the Pivotal
product.
As many players as there are stirring the Cloud Foundry pot, there are
other contenders for this business. Red Hat RHT -0.31% backs its own
OpenShift for enterprise cloud development. And Salesforce CRM 0.80% ownsHeroku, a trail-blazer in this market, as
well as its own Force.com. Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services offer some
of these capabilities as do a handful of smaller companies like Apprenda. Two
weeks ago, Microsoft announced plans to
support Cloud Foundry on Azure.
Use of these platforms may be gaining steam as more big companies
realize they need to be faster and more nimble, but also want very tight
control over when and if critical applications go into production, said Steve
Hendrick, principal analyst at research firm ESG.
This article was originally published here: Reinventing software
development isn't easy, but Cloud Foundry is trying
Related article: Hyper
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