Showing headlines posted by tk21

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Real-time Ubuntu Linux chooses Amazon EKS for open RAN deployments

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Mar 2, 2024 4:46 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Cloud, Ubuntu
With Mobile World Congress (MWC) in full swing, there has been no shortage of news about open radio access networks (open RANs) and the multitude of vendors racing to provide services to support that technology.

Canonical, the lead commercial sponsor behind the Ubuntu Linux operating system (OS), is now entering the market with a new offering available on the Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service Anywhere (EKS Anywhere) that is designed specifically for open RAN deployments.

Linux Foundation's Nephio R2 pushes open-source cloud-native network automation

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Feb 23, 2024 9:11 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
The Linux Foundation’s Nephio project hit a major milestone this week with its release 2 (R2) update. Nephio R2 builds upon the success of R1 with additional automation capabilities. While R1 provided the core automation foundations, Nephio R2 advances network automation with a focus on radio access network (RAN) and multicloud frameworks.

SUSE’s ATIP 3.0 brings automation, control to 5G deployments

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Feb 14, 2024 10:33 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux, SUSE
Linux and open-source technology provider SUSE today is announcing the latest iteration of its Adaptive Telco Infrastructure Platform (ATIP) 3.0 that offers better control over 5G network deployments using automation and better coverage for hardware. ATIP is based on SUSE’s edge stack with the addition of telco-specific optimizations.

Linux 6.7: Hello Intel IFS and Meteor Lake, goodbye Itanium

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Jan 9, 2024 1:31 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
It took just a bit longer than usual for Linux 6.7 to be released, thanks in part to the fact that there were eight release candidates and the Christmas holiday period. It’s also worth noting that Linux 6.7 is one of the largest kernel releases.

Linux Foundation and Meta expand open-source connectivity projects for network service providers

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Dec 21, 2023 10:10 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud, Linux
The Linux Foundation is expanding its LF Connectivity project with the addition of two new subprojects: Magma and ISP Toolbox. Launched in May, LF Connectivity got its start with three networking projects contributed by Meta. The overall goal of LF Connectivity is to create a sustainable ecosystem of technologies to enable communication service providers to meet emerging connectivity requirements.

Open Networking Foundation merges open source networking portfolio into Linux Foundation

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Dec 15, 2023 11:28 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
The Open Networking Foundation (ONF) announced today that it is merging its portfolio of open source networking projects into the Linux Foundation as independent projects.Founded in 2011, ONF has been the driving force behind many open source innovations in software-defined networking, network disaggregation, and network programmability.

How Kubernetes 1.29 improves open source cloud native production readines

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Dec 15, 2023 9:44 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Cloud
The Kubernetes 1.29 milestone is the final release for 2023 for the open source cloud native technology and introduces a range of new features and enhancements. Kubernetes has multiple updates this year, the new release follows the Kubernetes 1.28 update that came out in August.

OpenSSF details top 10 secure software development principles

What does it take to make secure software? The Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) has a few ideas (10 of them, in fact). This week at the OpenSSF Day Japan event in Tokyo, the nonprofit group run by the Linux Foundation issued the release of ten guiding principles that aim to help organizations develop more secure software. OpenSSF, which focuses on improving open source security, developed the principles to provide a framework for companies to follow best practices throughout their development lifecycles.

FreeBSD 14 delivers Major Upgrades for Cloud, Security, and Performance in open source operating system

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Nov 22, 2023 3:49 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux isn’t the only open-source operating system (OS). There are also a number of Unix-like open-source BSD operating systems, including FreeBSD, that are still in active development. “FreeBSD 14 represents a combination of some new features and a lot of updates to various subsystems to improve performance, stability and security,” Ed Maste, senior director of technology for the FreeBSD Foundation, told SDxCentral.

Gateway API improves networking and connectivity in Kubernetes

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Nov 11, 2023 7:42 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud
At the KubeCon NA 2023 conference this week, developers celebrated the general availability (GA) of the Gateway API, which literally opens up a new gateway to how Kubernetes networking and connectivity will be enabled in the future. Gateway API is intended to replace the Ingress API, which has long been one of the primary ways that a cloud native environment gains access to services outside of a cluster. Gateway API aims to solve numerous shortcomings in Ingress API and already benefits from the broad participation of many vendors.

Tetragon adds visibility to Kubernetes with open-source runtime security platform

One of the best ways to properly secure a cloud-native environment is to have full visibility, and that begins at the Linux kernel level. That’s one of the basic ideas behind the open-source Tetragon project, which celebrated its 1.0 release at the Kubecon NA 2023 event this week.

SUSE’s brings new PRIME benefits to Rancher cloud native effort

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Nov 8, 2023 10:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud, SUSE
At KubeCon North America today, SUSE announced several updates to its container and edge computing platforms. The new offerings aim to help customers manage and secure diverse cloud-native environments.

Open Source lakeFS data version control levels up to 1.0

  • VentureBeat; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Oct 24, 2023 2:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud
The lakeFS project got its start back in 2020 and has been steadily improving in the years since, providing an open source technology to help organizations with version control for object storage based data, stored in data lakes.

Linux Foundation jumps into infrastructure-as-code with OpenTofu

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Sep 23, 2023 10:30 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud
There is yet another new project coming to the Linux Foundation, and though the name might imply otherwise, it isn’t about food. At the Open Source Summit Europe event in Bilbao, Spain, this morning the Linux Foundation announced that the OpenTofu project is coming under its wing. Previously code-named OpenTF, OpenTofu aims to create an open, community-driven successor to the Hashicorp Terraform infrastructure-as-code technology, under a neutral governance model.

PostgreSQL 16 brings more performance, security to open-source database

  • VentureBeat; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Sep 16, 2023 5:17 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Community
The open-source PostgreSQL 16 database is out today, adding new features that will help improve performance for all types of workloads, including AI. PostgreSQL, also sometimes referred to as Postgres, is one of the most widely used and deployed open-source database technologies and has been steadily iterated since its first release back in 1996.

Kubernetes 1.28 improves open-source cloud-native compute and networking

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Aug 18, 2023 12:29 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud, Linux
The open-source Kubernetes cloud-native platform is out with its second major update of 2023, introducing a long list of enhancements for operators in the new 1.28 release.Kubernetes is an open-source project, originally started by Google and now developed under the Linux Foundation’s Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), benefiting from the contributions of more than 900 companies.

Cilium 1.14 expands Linux networking beyond Kubernetes, offers higher speeds

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Jul 28, 2023 2:18 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Cloud
Cilium, an open-source networking, security and observability project, has released version 1.14 with an array of connectivity, security and observability updates. The Cilium 1.14 update also introduces new mesh capabilities, high-speed networking and security enhancements.

Istio Service Mesh hits milestone (years after the open source project should have)

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Jul 14, 2023 5:05 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Cloud
The open source Istio service mesh project is hitting a major milestone today as it officially graduates to be a full project at the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).

How Linux 6.4 Kernel improves Wi-Fi 7 and IPv6 networking

  • SDxCentral.com; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on Jul 1, 2023 8:37 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Kernel
The recently released Linux 6.4 kernel is making some big networking strides that end users, enterprises and service providers will benefit from in the months to come.Among the key networking features in Linux 6.4 are multiple improvements to improve traffic flow, extended support for Wi-Fi 7 wireless networking, new eBPF (extended Berkeley Packet Filter) features and IPv6 optimizations.

Want to easily deploy an open-source LLM? Anyscale’s Aviary project takes flight

  • VentureBeat; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tk21 on May 31, 2023 4:20 PM EDT)
Getting an open-source LLM model deployed onto infrastructure has often been a bespoke process of trial and error as developers figure out the right compute resources and configuration parameters. It’s also not easy for developers to simply compare one model with another. These are some of the challenges Anyscale is looking to help solve with Aviary.

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