Cloudify provides infrastructure automation using ‘Environment as a Service’ technology to deploy and continuously manage any cloud, private data center, or Kubernetes service from one central point while leveraging existing toolchains; Terraform, Ansible, and more. Use Cloudify to import existing automation templates and scripts and automatically convert them into certified environments. Manage them using the Cloudify console or export these environments to ServiceNow and enable users to deploy, continuously manage and maintain them as part of approval workflows.
Key Values: - Speed up deployments of your Test/Dev/Production environments. - Manage customers' heterogeneous cloud environments. - Enable Continuous Updates (Day-2) for your Production environments. - A clean API to work on top of all your tools that can easily be used within ServiceNow. - Manage Kubernetes clusters at scale.
No features have been listed yet.
Based on our record, KeyDB should be more popular than Cloudify. It has been mentiond 9 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Cloudify looks interesting if you can stand the price, depends how badly you need the features it offers. Source: almost 2 years ago
Cloudify is a platform that automates and manages entire lifecycles of an application or network service. Source: over 2 years ago
The LMS Moodle Operator serves as a meta-operator, orchestrating the deployment and management of Moodle instances in Kubernetes. It handles the entire stack required to run Moodle, including components like Postgres, Keydb, NFS-Ganesha, and Moodle itself. Each of these components has its own Kubernetes Operator, ensuring seamless integration and management. - Source: dev.to / 10 days ago
Congrats on the funding and getting production ready, it's good that KeyDB (and Redis) get some competition. https://docs.keydb.dev/ Open question, how does Dragonfly differ from KeyDB? - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
See: Distroless images[0] This is one of the huge benefits of recent systems languages like go and rust -- they compile to single binaries so you can use things like scatch[1] containers. You may have to fiddle with gnu libc/musl libc (usually when getaddrinfo is involved/dns etc), but once you're done with it, packaging is so easy. Even languages like Node (IMO the most progressive of the scripting languages)... - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
Interesting project. Very similar to KeyDB [1] which also developed a multi-threaded scale-up approach to Redis. It's since been acquired by Snapchat. There's also Aerospike [2] which has developed a lot around low-latency performance. 1. https://docs.keydb.dev/ 2. https://aerospike.com/. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
How does this compare to other multithreaded redis protocol compatibles? KeyDB is one key player https://docs.keydb.dev/. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
OpenShift - OpenShift gives you all the tools you need to develop, host and scale your apps in the public or private cloud. Get started today.
Redis - Redis is an open source in-memory data structure project implementing a distributed, in-memory key-value database with optional durability.
Heroku - Agile deployment platform for Ruby, Node.js, Clojure, Java, Python, and Scala. Setup takes only minutes and deploys are instant through git. Leave tedious server maintenance to Heroku and focus on your code.
memcached - High-performance, distributed memory object caching system
Kubernetes - Kubernetes is an open source orchestration system for Docker containers
Skytable - Skytable is a free and open-source realtime NoSQL database that aims to provide flexible data modelling at scale.