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So are ya open source or aren t ya?
Tim Anderson Thu 21 Jan 2021 // 10:15 UTC Share
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Elastic CEO and co-founder Shay Banon has attacked AWS for what he claims is unacceptable use of the open-source Elasticsearch product and trademark.
Banon s post is part of the company s defence of its decision to drop the open-source Apache 2.0 licence for its ElasticSearch and Kibana products and instead use the copyleft SSPL or restrictive Elastic licence – though the plan is to add provisions to mitigate this by having code revert to the Apache 2.0 licence after a period of up to five years.
The new rant makes explicit that the purpose of the licence change is to make it harder for AWS to use Elastic s code. According to Banon, AWS has been doing things that we think are just NOT OK since 2015. Banon said that we ve tried every avenue available including going through the courts, presumably a reference to this lawsuit [PDF], the outcome of which is not ye
Key Takeaways
Although we can find case studies about microservices migrations, there are still a lot of companies in the industry that haven’t touched the microservices strategy yet.
The current microservices approaches are more complex than they used to be. We build more complex systems, with a more complex architecture, so we have a more complex landscape and a deeper learning curve as consequence.
Monitoring and tracing microservices are some of the biggest challenges, besides its complexity.
The event-driven architecture is a great way to build microservices, especially in terms of communication between different services.
Wes Reisz moderated an InfoQ Live roundtable on the impact of microservices, dealing with operational complexity, and alternatives to the microservices model. The participants were Leif Beaton (NGINX senior solutions architect), Yan Cui (independent AWS and serverless consultant), and Nicky Wrightson (Skyscanner principal engineer).
Introducing Chaos Carnival, a virtual conference focused on all things Chaos Engineering
Chaos Carnival is a vendor-neutral conference founded by MayaData
SAN JOSE, Calif., Dec. 22, 2020 /PRNewswire/ Chaos Carnival is a global two-day, free to attend virtual conference taking place on February 10 - 11, 2021. The conference is a vendor-neutral event, dedicated to bringing together practitioners, experts, innovators and industry leaders that are shaping the Chaos Engineering and Cloud-native ecosystem. Achieving resilience is too important to ignore in this dynamic cloud-native space, said Uma Mukkara, Co-founder & COO at MayaData, and also a maintainer of the LitmusChaos project. Helping cloud native developers and SREs to practice Chaos Engineering in a cloud native way is our approach to achieve resilience on Kubernetes. With this goal, we created the LitmusChaos project and we are very fortunate to have a vibrant community around this project under CNCF App-Delivery SIG lea
Plus: Managed Grafana service for observability
Tim Anderson Wed 16 Dec 2020 // 16:28 UTC Share
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re:Invent Amazon Web Services CTO Dr Werner Vogels has opened up on CloudShell, a Linux environment accessed through the browser which gives users a command-line and scripting environment for all AWS services.
At a re:Invent keynote yesterday, the exec also described Fault Injection Simulator - chaos engineering as a service, intended to help customers build resilient applications.
Dr Werner Vogels expounding the benefits of observability at an ancient food processing factory near his home town of Amsterdam, NL
Vogels’ keynote was a welcome relief from the relentless marketing that has characterised many other re:Invent keynotes, focusing mainly on technology and software engineering. Speaking from a 19th century sugar beet processing plant in Haarlem in the Netherlands, he used the industrial background to discuss matters such as operations, observab