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Tech News - DevOps

82 Articles
article-image-servicenow-partners-with-ibm-on-aiops-from-devops-com
Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
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ServiceNow Partners with IBM on AIOps from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
ServiceNow and IBM this week announced that the Watson artificial intelligence for IT operations (AIOps) platform from IBM will be integrated with the IT service management (ITSM) platform from ServiceNow. Pablo Stern, senior vice president for IT workflow products for ServiceNow, said once that capability becomes available later this year on the Now platform, IT […] The post ServiceNow Partners with IBM on AIOps appeared first on DevOps.com.
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Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
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Why It’s Time for Site Reliability Engineering to Shift Left from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
By adopting a multilevel approach to site reliability engineering and arming your team with the right tools, you can unleash benefits that impact the entire service-delivery continuum In today’s application-driven economy, the infrastructure supporting business-critical applications has never been more important. In response, many companies are recruiting site reliability engineering (SRE) specialists to help them […] The post Why It’s Time for Site Reliability Engineering to Shift Left appeared first on DevOps.com.
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Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
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Best Practices for Managing Remote IT Teams from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
With IT teams around the world adjusting to remote working while still struggling to maintain productivity and workflows, ensuring DevOps and Agile practices are in place has never been more important. And while typical DevOps professionals probably have significantly better remote desktop setups than most of their business peers, it’s how IT leaders manage these […] The post Best Practices for Managing Remote IT Teams appeared first on DevOps.com.
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Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
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Data Measured in Terms of Real Aggregate Value from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
16 Oct 2020
1 min read
The post Data Measured in Terms of Real Aggregate Value appeared first on DevOps.com.
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article-image-opsera-simplifies-building-of-devops-pipelines-from-devops-com
Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
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Opsera Simplifies Building of DevOps Pipelines from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
Fresh off raising $4.3 million in funding, Opsera today launched a namesake platform that enables IT teams to orchestrate both the tools employed by developers as well as the pipelines that make up a DevOps process. Company co-founder Chandra Ranganathan said the Opsera platform automates setup of DevOps pipelines using a declarative approach that doesn’t […] The post Opsera Simplifies Building of DevOps Pipelines appeared first on DevOps.com.
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Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
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Rookout Launches a ‘Live Debugging Heatmap’ To Find Applications On Fire from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
October 15, 2020 13:00 ET | Source: Rookout According to the 2020 State of Software Quality report, two out of three software developers estimate they spend at least a day per week troubleshooting issues in their code, and close to one-third spend even more time. DEJ’s research shows that organizations are losing $2,129,000 per month, on average, due to delays in application […] The post Rookout Launches a ‘Live Debugging Heatmap’ To Find Applications On Fire appeared first on DevOps.com.
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Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
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JumpCloud Launches New Integrations with Slack, Salesforce, GitHub, Atlassian, and AWS from DevOps.com

Matthew Emerick
15 Oct 2020
1 min read
User identity lifecycle management across multiple apps from single cloud directory platform saves IT hours of onboarding / offboarding work  LOUISVILLE, CO – Oct. 15, 2020 – JumpCloud today announced new integrations that provide IT admins easier user identity lifecycle management across multiple applications from a single platform. These new integrations with Slack, Salesforce, Atlassian, GitHub, and AWS provide streamlined user management […] The post JumpCloud Launches New Integrations with Slack, Salesforce, GitHub, Atlassian, and AWS appeared first on DevOps.com.
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article-image-neuvector-releases-security-policy-as-code-to-help-devops-teams-automate-container-security-by-using-crds
Sugandha Lahoti
19 Nov 2019
2 min read
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Neuvector releases “Security Policy as Code” to help DevOps teams automate container security by using CRDs

Sugandha Lahoti
19 Nov 2019
2 min read
NeuVector has released a new Security Policy as code capability for Kubernetes workloads. This release will automate container security for DevOps teams by using Kubernetes Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs). As security policies can be defined, managed, and automated during the DevOps process, teams will be able to quickly deliver secure cloud-native apps. These security policies can be implemented using CRDs to deploy customized resource configurations via YAML files. As these security policies are defined as code, they are version-tracked and built for easy automation. Teams can easily migrate security policies across Kubernetes clusters (or from staging to production environments) and manage versions of security policies tied to specific application versions. “By introducing our industry-first Security Policy as Code for Kubernetes workloads, we’re excited to provide DevOps and DevSecOps teams with even more control to automate safe behaviors and ensure their applications remain secure from ever-increasing threat vectors,” explains Gary Duan, CTO, NeuVector. “We continue to build out new capabilities sought by customers – such as DLP, multi-cluster management, and, with today’s release, CRD support. Our mission is acutely focused on raising the bar for container security by offering a complete cloud-native solution for the entire application lifecycle.” Features of NeuVector’s Security Policy as code Captures network rules, protocols, processes, and file activities that are allowed for the application. Permits allowed network connections between services enforced by application protocol (layer 7) inspection. Allows or prevents external or ingress connections as warranted. Sets the “protection mode” of the application to either Monitor mode (alerting only) or Protect mode (blocking all suspicious activity). Supports integration with Open Policy Agent (OPA) and other security policy management tools. Allows DevOps and security teams to define application policies at different hierarchies such as per-service rules defined by DevOps and global rules defined by centralized security teams. It is extensible so as to support future expansion of security policy as code to admission control rules, DLP rules, response rules, and other NeuVector enforcement policies. Head on to Neuvector’s blog for more details on Security Policy as Code feature. Further details about this release will be shared at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America 2019. Chaos engineering comes to Kubernetes thanks to Gremlin CNCF announces Helm 3, a Kubernetes package manager and tool to manage charts and libraries. StackRox Kubernetes Security Platform 3.0 releases with advanced configuration and vulnerability management capabilities.
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Savia Lobo
13 Nov 2019
2 min read
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Red Hat open sources Project Quay container registry

Savia Lobo
13 Nov 2019
2 min read
Yesterday, Red Hat introduced the open source Project Quay container registry, which is the upstream project representing the code that powers Red Hat Quay and Quay.io. Open-sourced as a Red Hat commitment, Project Quay “represents the culmination of years of work around the Quay container registry since 2013 by CoreOS, and now Red Hat,” the official post reads. Red Hat Quay container image registry provides storage and enables users to build, distribute, and deploy containers. It will also help users to gain more security over their image repositories with automation, authentication, and authorization systems. It is compatible with most container environments and orchestration platforms and is also available as a hosted service or on-premises. Launched in 2013, Quay grew in popularity due to its focus on developer experience and highly responsive support and added capabilities such as image rollback and zero-downtime garbage collection. Quay was acquired by CoreOS in 2014 with a mission to secure the internet through automated operations. Shortly after the acquisition, the company released the on-premise offering of Quay, which is presently known as Red Hat Quay. The Quay team also created and integrated the Clair open source container security scanning project since 2015. It is directly built into Project Quay. Clair enables the container security scanning feature in Red Hat Quay, which helps users identify known vulnerabilities in their container registries. Open-sourced as part of Project Quay, both Quay, and Clair code bases will help cloud-native communities to lower the barrier to innovation around containers, helping them to make containers more secure and accessible. Project Quay contains a collection of open-source software licensed under Apache 2.0 and other open-source licenses. It follows an open-source governance model, with a maintainer committee. With an open community, Red Hat Quay and Quay.io users can benefit from being able to work together on the upstream code. Project Quay will be officially launched at the OpenShift Commons Gathering on November 18 in San Diego at KubeCon 2019. To know more about this announcement, you can read Red Hat’s official blog post. Red Hat announces CentOS Stream, a “developer-forward distribution” jointly with the CentOS Project Expanding Web Assembly beyond the browser with Bytecode Alliance, a Mozilla, Fastly, Intel and Red Hat partnership After Red Hat, Homebrew removes MongoDB from core formulas due to its Server Side Public License adoption
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Fatema Patrawala
08 Nov 2019
4 min read
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Fastly announces the next-gen edge computing services available in private beta

Fatema Patrawala
08 Nov 2019
4 min read
Fastly, a San Francisco based startup, providing edge cloud platform, yesterday announced the private beta launch of Compute@Edge, its new edge computing services. Compute@Edge is a powerful language-agnostic compute environment. This major milestone marks as an evolution of Fastly’s edge computing capabilities and the company’s innovation in the serverless space.  https://twitter.com/fastly/status/1192080450069643264 Fastly’s Compute@Edge is designed to empower developers to build far more advanced edge applications with greater security, more robust logic, and new levels of performance. They can also create a new and improved digital experience with their own technology choices around the cloud platforms, services, and programming languages needed.  Rather than spend time on operational overhead, the company’s goal is to continue reinventing the way end users live, work, and play on the web. Fastly's Compute@Edge gives developers the freedom to push complex logic closer to end users. “When we started Fastly, we sought to build a platform with the power to realize the future of edge computing — from our software-defined modern network to our point of presence design, everything has led us to this point,” explained Tyler McMullen, CTO of Fastly. “With this launch, we’re excited to double down on that vision and work with enterprises to help them build truly complete applications in an environment that offers new levels of stability, security, and global scale.” We had the opportunity to interview Fastly’s CTO Tyler McMullen a few months back. We discussed Fastly’s Lucet and the future of WebAssembly and Rust among other things. You can read the full interview here.  Fastly Compute@Edge leverages speed for global scale and security Fastly’s Compute@Edge environment promises to offer 100x faster startup time at 35.4 microseconds, than any other solution in the market. Additionally Compute@Edge is powered by its open-source WebAssembly compiler and runtime, Lucet and supports Rust as a second language in addition to Varnish Configuration Language (VCL).  Other benefits of Compute@Edge include: Code can be computed around the world instead of a single region. This will allow developers to reduce code execution latency and further optimize the performance of their code, without worrying about managing the underlying infrastructure The unmatched speed at which the environment operates, combined with Fastly’s isolated sandboxing technology, reduces the risk of accidental data leakage. With a “burn-after-reading” approach to request memory, entire classes of vulnerabilities are eliminated With Compute@Edge, developers can serve GraphQL from its network edge and deliver more personalized experiences Developers can develop their own customized API protection logic With manifest manipulation, developers can deliver content with a “best-performance-wins” approach— like multi-CDN live streams that run smoothly for users around the world Fastly has operated in the serverless market since its founding in 2011 through its Edge Cloud Platform, including products like Full Site Delivery, Load Balancer, DDoS, and Web Application Firewall (WAF). Till date, Fastly’s serverless computing offering has focused on delivery-centric use cases via its VCL-powered programmable edge. With the introduction of Compute@Edge, Fastly unlocks even more powerful and widely-applicable computing capabilities. To learn more about Fastly’s edge computing and cloud services, you can visit its official blog. Developers who are interested to be a part of the private beta can sign up on this page. Fastly SVP, Adam Denenberg on Fastly’s new edge resources, edge computing, fog computing, and more Fastly, edge cloud platform, files for IPO Fastly open sources Lucet, a native WebAssembly compiler and runtime “Rust is the future of systems programming, C is the new Assembly”: Intel principal engineer, Josh Triplett Wasmer introduces WebAssembly Interfaces for validating the imports and exports of a Wasm module
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Vincy Davis
25 Oct 2019
3 min read
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GitLab retracts its privacy invasion policy after backlash from community

Vincy Davis
25 Oct 2019
3 min read
Yesterday, GitLab retracted its earlier decision to implement user level product usage tracking on their websites after receiving negative feedback from its users. https://twitter.com/gitlab/status/1187408628531322886 Two days ago, GitLab informed its users that starting from its next yet to be released version (version 12.4), there would be an addition of Javascript snippets in GitLab.com (GitLab’s SaaS offering) and GitLab's proprietary Self-Managed packages (Starter, Premium, and Ultimate) websites. These Java snippets will be used to interact with GitLab and other third-party SaaS telemetry services. Read More: GitLab 12.3 releases with web application firewall, keyboard shortcuts, productivity analytics, system hooks and more GitLab.com users were specifically notified that until they accept the new service terms condition, their access to the web interface and API will be blocked. This meant that users with integration to the API will experience a brief pause of service, until the new terms are accepted by signing in to the web interface. The self-managed users, on the other hand, were apprised that they can continue to use the free software GitLab Core without any changes. The DevOps coding platform says that SaaS telemetry products are important tools to understand the analytics on user behaviour inside web-based applications. According to the company, these additional user information will help in increasing their website speed and also enrich user experience. “GitLab has a lot of features, and a lot of users, and it is time that we use telemetry to get the data we need for our product managers to improve the experience,” stated the official blog. The telemetry tools will use JavaScript snippets that will be executed in the user’s browser and will send the user information back to the telemetry service. Read More: GitLab faces backlash from users over performance degradation issues tied to redis latency The company had also assured users that they will disclose all the whereabouts of the user information in the privacy policy. They also ensured that the third-party telemetry service will have data protection standards equivalent to their own standard and will also aim for their SOC2 compliance. If any user does not wish to be tracked, they can turn on the Do Not Track (DNT) mechanism in their GitLab.com or GitLab Self-Managed web browser. The DNT mechanism will not load the  the JavaScript snippet. “The only downside to this is that users may also not get the benefit of in-app messaging or guides that some third-party telemetry tools have that would require the JavaScript snippet,” added the official blog. Following this announcement, GitLab received loads of negative feedback from users. https://twitter.com/PragmaticAndy/status/1187420028653723649 https://twitter.com/Cr0ydon/status/1187380142995320834 https://twitter.com/BlindMyStare/status/1187400169303789568 https://twitter.com/TheChanceSays/status/1187095735558238208 Although, GitLab has rolled backed the Telemetry service changes for now, and are re-considering their decision, many users are warning them to drop the idea completely. https://twitter.com/atom0s/status/1187438090991751168 https://twitter.com/ry60003333/status/1187601207046524928 https://twitter.com/tresronours/status/1187543188703186949 DevOps platform for coding, GitLab reached more than double valuation of $2.75 billion than its last funding and way ahead of its IPO in 2020 GitLab goes multicloud using Crossplane with kubectl Are we entering the quantum computing era? Google’s Sycamore achieves ‘quantum supremacy’ while IBM refutes the claim PostGIS 3.0.0 releases with raster support as a separate extension Electron 7.0 releases in beta with Windows on Arm 64 bit, faster IPC methods, nativetheme API and more
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Savia Lobo
10 Oct 2019
2 min read
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Amazon EKS Windows Container Support is now generally available

Savia Lobo
10 Oct 2019
2 min read
A few days ago, Amazon announced the general availability of the Windows Container support on  Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS). The company announced a preview of the Windows Container support in March this year and also invited customers to try it out and provide their feedback. With the Windows Container Support, development teams can now deploy applications designed to run on Windows Servers, on Kubernetes alongside Linux applications. It will also bring in more consistency in system logging, performance monitoring, and code deployment pipelines. “We are proud to be the first Cloud provider to have General Availability of Windows Containers on Kubernetes and look forward to customers unlocking the business benefits of Kubernetes for both their Windows and Linux workloads,” the official post mentions. A few considerations before deploying the Worker nodes include: Windows workloads are supported with Amazon EKS clusters running Kubernetes version 1.14 or later. Amazon EC2 instance types C3, C4, D2, I2, M4 (excluding m4.16xlarge), and R3 instances are not supported for Windows workloads. Host networking mode is not supported for Windows workloads. Amazon EKS clusters must contain 1 or more Linux worker nodes to run core system pods that only run on Linux, such as coredns and the VPC resource controller. The kubelet and kube-proxy event logs are redirected to the Amazon EKS Windows Event Log and are set to a 200 MB limit. In a demonstration, Martin Beeby, a principal evangelist for Amazon Web Services has created a new Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service cluster, which works with any cluster that is using Kubernetes version 1.14 and above. He has also added some new Windows nodes and deploys a Windows application. For a complete demonstration and to know more about the Amazon EKS Windows Container Support, read AWS’ official blog post. Amazon EBS snapshots exposed publicly leaking sensitive data in hundreds of thousands, security analyst reveals at DefCon 27 Amazon is being sued for recording children’s voices through Alexa without consent Amazon Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka (Amazon MSK) is now generally available
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Amrata Joshi
23 Sep 2019
3 min read
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GitLab 12.3 releases with web application firewall, keyboard shortcuts, productivity analytics, system hooks and more

Amrata Joshi
23 Sep 2019
3 min read
Yesterday, the team at GitLab released GitLab 12.3, a DevOps lifecycle tool that provides a Git-repository manager. This release comes with Web Application Firewall, Productivity Analytics, new Environments section and much more. What’s new in GitLab 12.3? Web Application Firewall In GitLab 12.3, the team has shipped the first iteration of the Web Application Firewall that is built in the GitLab SDLC platform. The Web Application Firewall focuses on monitoring and reporting the security concerns related to Kubernetes clusters.  Productivity Analytics  From GitLab 12.3, the team has started releasing Productivity Analytics that will help teams and their leaders in discovering the best practices for better productivity. This release will help in drilling into the data and learning insights for improvements in future. Group level analytics workspace can be used to provide performance insight, productivity, and visibility across multiple projects. Environments section This release comes with “Environments” section in the cluster page that gives an overview of all the projects that are making use of the Kubernetes cluster. License compliance  License Compliance feature can be used to disallow a merger when a blacklisted license is found in a merge request.  Keyboard shortcuts This release comes with the new ‘n’ and ‘p’ keyboard shortcuts that can be used to move to the next and previous unresolved discussions in Merge Requests. System hooks System hooks allow automation by triggering requests whenever a variety of events in GitLab take place. Multiple IP subnets This release introduces the ability to specify multiple IP subnets so instead of specifying a single range, it is now possible for large organizations to restrict incoming traffic to their specific needs. GitLab Runner 12.3 Yesterday, the team also released GitLab Runner 12.3, an open-source project that is used for running CI/CD jobs and sending the results back to GitLab. Audit logs In this release, the audit logs for push events are disabled by default for preventing performance degradation on GitLab instances. Few GitLab users are unhappy as some of the features of this release including Productivity Analytics are available to Premium or Ultimate users only. https://twitter.com/gav_taylor/status/1175798696769916932 To know more about this news, check out the official page. Other interesting news in cloud and networking Kubernetes 1.16 releases with Endpoint Slices, general availability of Custom Resources, and other enhancements DevOps platform for coding, GitLab reached more than double valuation of $2.75 billion than its last funding and way ahead of its IPO in 2020 Istio 1.3 releases with traffic management, improved security, and more!    
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Fatema Patrawala
19 Sep 2019
4 min read
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DevOps platform for coding, GitLab reached more than double valuation of $2.75 billion than its last funding and way ahead of its IPO in 2020

Fatema Patrawala
19 Sep 2019
4 min read
Yesterday, GitLab, a San Francisco based start-up, raised $268 million in a Series E funding round valuing the company at $2.75 billion, more than double of its last valuation. In the Series D round funding of $100 million the company was valued at $1.1 billion; and with today’s announcement, the valuation has more than doubled in less than a year. GitLab provides a DevOps platform for developing and collaborating on code and offers a single application for companies to draft, develop and release code. The product is used by companies like Delta Air Lines Inc., Ticketmaster Entertainment Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc etc. The Series E funding round was led by investors including Adage Capital Management, Alkeon Capital, Altimeter Capital, Capital Group, Coatue Management, D1 Capital Partners, Franklin Templeton, Light Street Capital, Tiger Management Corp. and Two Sigma Investments. GitLab plans to go public in November 2020 According to Forbes, GitLab has already set November 18, 2020 as the date for going public. The company seems to be primed and ready for the eventual IPO. As for the $268 million, it gives the company considerable time ahead of the planned event and also gives the flexibility to choose how to take the company public. “One other consideration is that there are two options to go public. You can do an IPO or direct listing. We wanted to preserve the optionality of doing a direct listing next year. So if we do a direct listing, we’re not going to raise any additional money, and we wanted to make sure that this is enough in that case,” Sid Sijbrandij, Gitlab co-founder and CEO explained in an interview for TechCrunch. He further adds, that the new funds will be used to add monitoring and security to GitLab’s offering, and to increase the company’s staff to more than 1,000 employees this year from 400 employee strength currently. GitLab is able to add workers at a rapid rate, since it has an all-remote workforce. GitLab wants to be independent and chooses transparency for community Sijbrandij says that the company made a deliberate decision to be transparent early on. Being based on an open-source project, it’s sometimes tricky to make the transition to a commercial company, and sometimes that has a negative impact on the community and the number of contributions. Transparency was a way to combat that, and it seems to be working. He reports that the community contributes 200 improvements to the GitLab open-source products every month, and that’s double the amount of just a year ago, so the community is still highly active. He did not ignore the fact that Microsoft acquired GitHub last year for $7.5 billion. And GitLab is a similar kind of company that helps developers manage and distribute code in a DevOps environment. He claims in spite of that eye-popping number, his goal is to remain an independent company and take this through to the next phase. “Our ambition is to stay an independent company. And that’s why we put out the ambition early to become a listed company. That’s not totally in our control as the majority of the company is owned by investors, but as long as we’re more positive about the future than the people around us, I think we can we have a shot at not getting acquired,” he said. Community is happy with GitLab’s products and services Overall the community is happy with this news and GitLab’s products and services. One of the comments on Hacker News reads, “Congrats, GitLab team. Way to build an impressive business. When anybody tells you there are rules to venture capital — like it’s impossible to take on massive incumbents that have network effects — ignore them. The GitLab team is doing something phenomenal here. Enjoy your success! You’ve earned it.” Another user comments, “We’ve been using Gitlab for 4 years now. What got us initially was the free private repos before github had that. We are now a paying customer. Their integrated CICD is amazing. It works perfectly for all our needs and integrates really easily with AWS and GCP. Also their customer service is really damn good. If I ever have an issue, it’s dealt with so fast and with so much detail. Honestly one of the best customer service I’ve experienced. Their product is feature rich, priced right and is easy. I’m amazed at how the operate. Kudos to the team” Other interesting news in programming Microsoft open-sources its C++ Standard Library (STL) used by MSVC tool-chain and Visual Studio Linux 5.3 releases with support for AMD Navi GPUs, Zhaoxin x86 CPUs and power usage improvements NVIM v0.4.0 releases with new API functions, Lua library, UI events and more!
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Savia Lobo
12 Sep 2019
3 min read
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StackRox App integrates into the Sumo Logic Dashboard  for improved Kubernetes security

Savia Lobo
12 Sep 2019
3 min read
Today, StackRox, a company providing threat protection for containers and Kubernetes, announced the availability of the StackRox App for the Sumo Logic Continuous Intelligence Platform. The StackRox App for Sumo Logic provides customers with critical insights into misconfigurations and security events for their container and Kubernetes environments directly within their Sumo Logic Dashboard. Using this app, different security teams can view StackRox data regarding vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, runtime threats, and other policy violations within Sumo Logic and streamline their remediation efforts. John Coyle, vice president of business development for Sumo Logic, said, "We're excited to launch our Kubernetes security integration with StackRox since it will enable customers to gain unparalleled insights and operational metrics in a single dashboard to ensure their cloud-native environments are continuously protected.” "The StackRox Kubernetes-native container security platform provides unique context on misconfigurations, risk profiling, and runtime incidents that will enable our joint customers to more quickly identify and address security issues," Coyle further added. The StackRox App for Sumo Logic provides several key metrics such as vulnerabilities, runtime threats, and compliance violations across container and Kubernetes environments through the following dashboards: StackRox Overview:  This offers a snapshot of key metrics about an organization’s overall Kubernetes and container security posture StackRox Image Violations: These display information from StackRox’s image scanning and vulnerability management capabilities and prioritizes security issues in container images based on rich context derived from Kubernetes StackRox Kubernetes Violations: These highlight prioritized list of misconfigurations of Kubernetes components based on more than 70 DevOps and Security best practices StackRox Runtime Violations: These provide insights into threats and other suspicious activity at runtime based on continuous monitoring of every single container within Kubernetes environments Richard Reinders, manager of security operations for Looker, a joint StackRox and Sumo Logic customer said, “StackRox gives us a Kubernetes-centric single pane of glass view into the security posture of our multi-cloud infrastructure. Having StackRox’s unique Kubernetes security insights available directly on our Sumo Logic Dashboard provides us with a single place to view security and compliance details alongside our operational analytics for our cloud-native infrastructure. This integration also allows us to use a single, consistent, security event detection and response pipeline.” To more about the StackRox App for Sumo Logic head over to its official website. Other interesting news in security CNCF-led open-source Kubernetes security audit reveals 37 flaws in Kubernetes cluster; recommendations proposed Over 47K Supermicro servers’ BMCs are prone to USBAnywhere, a remote virtual media vulnerability Espressif IoT devices susceptible to WiFi vulnerabilities can allow hijackers to crash devices connected to enterprise networks
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