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    scottalanmillerS

    @gjacobse said:

    @MattSpeller said:

    Just gut instinct but the whole TC saga has given me bad vibes and I don't trust it 100% like I used to

    That is what I am running into Matt.. I like and want to support OpenSource all I can. I need a product I can rely on... but I have reservations...

    What is causing the reservations? TC/VC is not the best product ever, that's certain, but what actual concerns are there versus just fear mongering what SW spread a lot of? I'm not vouching for the product, just saying I've seen nothing of concern yet.

  • Red Hat Focuses on Container Security

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  • Linux Hardening Resources

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  • Ubuntu 15.10 is Out

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    mlnewsM
    General availability of Canonical’s OpenStack Autopilot, the fastest and easiest way to build an Ubuntu OpenStack cloud LXD machine containers: a pure container hypervisor hosting Ubuntu, CentOS and other Linux guests Tech Preview: nova-compute-lxd OpenStack driver for machine containers Tech Preview: DPDK fast network packet processing packaged and ready for testing Ubuntu 15.10 will be available for download from Canonical from today – 22nd October 2015. The new update brings a host of incremental improvements and benefits for business users and Ubuntu developers-alike.

    New in 15.10 (Wily Werewolf)

    Canonical’s OpenStack Autopilot now GA

    Full high availability of all cloud controller services, deployed using best practice architecture based on available hardware resources
    Smart automated scale out that re-architects cloud controller services as hardware resources are added
    Full integration of Open Daylight SDN controller
    Choice of Swift or Ceph for object storage
    New with 15.10, Canonical is debuting its newly launched Ubuntu OpenStack cloud deployer and management tool – OpenStack Autopilot – the most powerful and easiest way to deploy scale and manage Ubuntu OpenStack clouds without the complexity and costs associated with major cloud projects.

    The new service, launched alongside Ubuntu 15.10, has been created to allow businesses to build and manage Ubuntu OpenStack clouds quickly, easily without the need for expensive, hard to find OpenStack cloud architects.

    Autopilot has been built using the insight, experience and tools that reside within the OpenStack Interoperability Lab (OIL), the world’s only Interoperability Lab in which hundreds of OpenStack clouds are built per day using technologies from over 35 Canonical partners. The reference architecture used has been developed over the last 4 years based on Canonical experience supporting more OpenStack clouds in production than any other OpenStack distribution company.

    Autopilot deploys, manages and scales Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and Ubuntu OpenStack Kilo. It has been designed to fully support in place upgrades between releases.

    “One of the biggest issues organisations using OpenStack face is how to scale their clouds in line with expansion without having to employ expensive cloud architects to manually re-design them. Autopilot offers enterprises a smart, way to scale their cloud technically and financially.” said Shawn Madden, Autopilot Product Manager at Canonical, “We have built Autopilot to deliver superior scale and economics in a simple to use package.”

    Ubuntu is the most widely used cloud platform and Ubuntu OpenStack the most widely deployed OpenStack cloud distribution – 57% according the latest Linux Foundation Survey. As such, many companies are looking seriously at OpenStack cloud solutions as the means to simplify cloud deployments whilst allowing them to scale rapidly.

    Ubuntu OpenStack Liberty

    OpenStack Liberty has been built around three key themes of Manageability, Scalability and Extensibility:

    Manageability

    Common library adoption
    Improved configuration management
    More granular Neutron security settings with RBAC support
    Scalability

    Initial version of Nova Cells V2 implementation to improve of single region large scale OpenStack clouds
    Neutron, Nova and Cinder scale improvements
    Extensibility

    Support for OpenStack as the integration engine with ‘Big tent’ model of ancillary project identification
    Support for containers with debut of LXD nova driver to enable workloads to be deployed as LXC containers
    First release of Magnum with support for integration of Kubernetes, Swarm and Mesos
    Ubuntu OpenStack Liberty is included in 15.10 and available for Ubuntu 14.04 LTS via the Ubuntu Cloud Archive.

    What’s new in server

    LXD comes of age

    LXD, the machine container hypervisor, is now included by default within every Ubuntu server. That means every Ubuntu Server can now host hundreds of other Linux guest containers. LXD provides all of the key features expected of a modern hypervisor — image management, snapshots, live migration, Fan overlay networking, IPv4 and IPv6 support, and an industry leading security profile. Beyond the usual hypervisor features, LXD also provides an open, RESTful API, the network endpoint that any tool can use to start, stop, clone, and live migrate those containers. The first consumer of that RESTful API is the nova-compute-lxd driver — now available as a Tech Preview in Ubuntu OpenStack Liberty — which uses the LXD hypervisor to provision operating system container instances in an OpenStack private cloud, and integrates with the rest of OpenStack’s core projects (Neutron, Swift, and Ceph).

    MAAS is Ubuntu’s Metal as a Service platform, capable of installing onto physical hardware any Linux or Windows operating system, and of scaling to data centers of thousands of machines. MAAS has a command line interface, a beautiful web user interface, and like LXD, a RESTful API. New for 15.10, the MAAS web interface has been redesigned, and is fully responsive in any browser on any PC or mobile device.

    Ubuntu Server 15.10 ships with a v4.2 based Linux kernel, enabling the latest server hardware and peripherals available from IBM, HP, Dell, and Intel. The 15.10 kernel delivers new features inherited from upstream such as ACPI support for ARM, LSM (Linux Security Module) Stacking, and the new thermal Power Allocator governor. We also see notable Ubuntu specific achievements with fan networking for network address space expansion capability and also the introduction of a DPDK (Data Plane Development Kit) tech preview for faster packet processing in network-heavy applications.

    High performance networking

    New in 15.10 for telcos and enterprises with heavy networking requirements, DPDK (Data Plane Development Kit) previews. DPDK is a set of libraries and drivers for fast packet processing and with a great many high volume OpenStack deployments happening within telecoms companies, DPDK enables virtual network functions to deliver the high performance network throughput required in core network services.

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  • Linux SCP issue

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    scottalanmillerS

    Yeah, you can get that to be pretty simple with a little work (and keys.)

  • Using LVM Striping IO for Performance

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  • Proliant GL360 G5 worth the price?

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    scottalanmillerS

    Awesome. Nothing like the feeling of unboxing your new server.

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    scottalanmillerS

    @Dashrender said:

    Is linux better than it was, sure, is it as good for non techies as Windows, possible I suppose as I haven't installed Mint in ... ever.

    I've tried testing this before and I've never seen any non-techie feel that Windows was better. Literally, never. I've only seen experienced Windows users that did not want to switch. Starting from scratch, Linux has always been found to be easier in the few "greenfield" tests that I've ever seen.

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    MattSpellerM

    We will be waiting quite some time to see how 6.0 shakes out before we touch any of ours

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    Reid CooperR

    Good point. I don't particularly doubt that it is there, just don't want to count unhatched chickens, you know? HP used to sell Proliants with the built in virtualization disabled via BIOS. Not that IBM would pull that, but without knowing that the feature is there for sure, it's something to look into.

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    DustinB3403D

    @scottalanmiller Planning to start it this week.

    I'm still finding parts to use. Trying to be as cost conscious as possible as this is only my home lab. (and the significant other gets testy when I want to "buy toys")

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    DashrenderD

    On one hand this is good news, but per previous discussions this really don't matter because anyone who's here on these forums shouldn't be using these devices. We should be doing real IP using things like the possibly slightly more expensive ERL, etc.

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    scottalanmillerS

    @DustinB3403 said:

    Scott have you ever looked at this, http://zfsonlinux.org/

    Quite a bit 🙂

  • SteamOS 2 Goes Stable

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    scottalanmillerS

    Awesome, provide some feedback on how you like it.

  • Canonical is Going After the Internet of Toys

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