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.NET on Cloud Foundry

As a consultant on the Cloud Foundry platform I regularly get asked if CF can host .NET applications. The answer is yes. However, it depends on the application how much we as platform engineering have to do to make it possible.

SteelToe 1.0 GA

Netflix is a pioneer in microservices land, and had to develop tools to run microservices efficiently as none existed at the time. They were largely open-sourced as Netflix OSS tools, and include components such as:

Container confusion

These days I’m working at a client creating workflows for their state of the art private cloud platform. It’s really quite nice: internal clients can use a webportal to request machines, which are then customized with Puppet runs and workflows to install additional software and perform custom tasks like registering the machine in a CMDB.

Deploying Cloud Foundry

Note: This post is outdated: while the concepts are still the same, deploying CF has become much more easy over the last years, so don’t use this text to do an actual deployment unless you want to deploy like it’s 2015.

VMworld 2015: beyond virtualization

What do you base your selection on when buying some piece of technology? Is it the core functionality, or the added features? As Kit Colbert aptly stated in his VMworld DevOps program Keynote, customers at this point implicitly assume the core functionality of almost any given product will be alright, and base their choices on the extras:

.NET on Pivotal Cloud Foundry

In my latest post, I tested Lattice.cf, the single VM smaller brother of Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF). Considering a full installation of PCF has a footprint of about 25 Virtual Machines (VM) requiring a total of over 33Gb RAM, 500+ Gb storage, and some serious CPU power, it’s not hard to see why Lattice is more developer friendly.