In my previous post, I described how you can deploy containers on your laptop using Nirmata and boot2docker. While deploying containers on your laptop is great for dev/test, you may want to deploy containers on your cloud resources as your application moves through your deployment pipeline. Nirmata makes this extremely easy via its policy based orchestration. The same application can be deployed on your laptop or on any of the supported clouds without any changes.
Using Nirmata to deploy containerized applications on VMWare vCloud Air
[fa icon="calendar'] Aug 16, 2015 6:08:57 PM / by Ritesh Patel posted in vcloud air, Containers, Nirmata, vmware, Cloud native, Product, microservices, cloud application, Engineering, DevOps, pipeline, cloud platform, Docker
Deploy containerized applications on your laptop using Nirmata in less than five minutes
[fa icon="calendar'] Aug 9, 2015 4:16:51 PM / by Ritesh Patel posted in boot2docker, Containers, Nirmata, Cloud native, microservices, Engineering, DevOps, Docker
If you are using boot2docker on MacOS, it is now easier than ever to deploy containerized applications on your laptop using Nirmata. You can be up and running in less than five minutes. In this post, I will describe the steps.
Microservices Networking with Nirmata and Docker
[fa icon="calendar'] May 14, 2015 12:08:08 PM / by Jim Bugwadia posted in Containers, Cloud native, Product, microservices
Nirmata’s mission is to fully automate the operations and management of multi-cloud applications packaged in containers.
Auto-Recovery, Activity Feeds, Host Details and More
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 13, 2015 2:26:57 PM / by Damien Toledo posted in cloud applications, Containers, Cloud native, Continuous Delivery, resiliency, Product, microservices, DevOps, Orchestration, Cloud Architecture
Nirmata is pleased to announce new features and improvements to our solution. Our focus has been on resiliency and state management:
Cloud Native Application Maturity Model
[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 8, 2015 6:39:10 PM / by Jim Bugwadia posted in Cloud native, microservices, Engineering
Cloud native applications are built to run optimally on cloud infrastructure. Cloud native application architectures are very different than traditional tiered applications which are designed for a data center. In this post I will discuss maturity model, from the Open Data Center Alliance (ODCA), for assessing the cloud nativeness of an application.