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Helm is a package manager for Kubernetes. [1] [2] It uses 'charts' as its package format, which is based on YAML. Helm was accepted to Cloud Native Computing Foundation on June 1, 2018 at the Incubating maturity level and then moved to the Graduated maturity level on May 1, 2020. [3]
Company CEO Sheng Liang says that as organizations increasingly operationalize Kubernetes there is now a lot more focus on lifecycle management and scalability. Version 2.4 of Rancher provides access to a set of tools that makes it easier for IT teams to manage a fleet of Kubernetes clusters even when network connectivity is limited, says Liang.
Apache Maven – Software tool for managing build dependencies; ASDF – de facto standard build facility for Common Lisp; Bazel – Software tool that automates software builds and tests; BitBake – Build automation tool tailored for building Linux distributions; written in Python
Microsoft today announced two new open-source projects: Dapr, a portable, event-driven runtime that takes some of the complexity out of building microservices, and the Open Application Model (OAM ...
The following package management systems distribute the source code of their apps. Either the user must know how to compile the packages, or they come with a script that automates the compilation process. For example, in GoboLinux a recipe file contains information on how to download, unpack, compile and install a package using its Compile tool ...
Provision and clusters management actively developed v4.4.1 July 6, 2023; 18 months ago () HPC Open Source Linux Free xCAT Provision and clusters management actively developed v2.16.5 March 7, 2023; 22 months ago () HPC Eclipse Public License Linux Free Software Maintainer Category Development status Latest release
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In computing, Podman (pod manager) is an open source Open Container Initiative (OCI)-compliant [2] container management tool from Red Hat used for handling containers, images, volumes, and pods on the Linux operating system, [3] with support for macOS and Microsoft Windows via a virtual machine. [4]