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The New Age of Virtualization

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Manage episode 390755538 series 2574278
Content provided by The New Stack Podcast and The New Stack. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The New Stack Podcast and The New Stack or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Kubevirt, a relatively new capability within Kubernetes, signifies a shift in the virtualization landscape, allowing operations teams to run KVM virtual machines nested in containers behind the Kubernetes API. This integration means that the Kubernetes API now encompasses the concept of virtual machines, enabling VM-based workloads to operate seamlessly within a cluster behind the API. This development addresses the challenge of transitioning traditional virtualized environments into cloud-native settings, where certain applications may resist containerization or require substantial investments for adaptation.

The emerging era of virtualization simplifies the execution of virtual machines without concerning the underlying infrastructure, presenting various opportunities and use cases. Noteworthy advantages include simplified migration of legacy applications without the need for containerization, thereby reducing associated costs.

Kubevirt 1.1, discussed at KubeCon in Chicago by Red Hat's Vladik Romanovsky and Nvidia's Ryan Hallisey, introduces features like memory hotplug and vCPU hotplug, emphasizing the stability of Kubevirt. The platform's stability now allows for the implementation of features that were previously constrained.

Learn more from The New Stack about Kubevirt and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation:

The Future of VMs on Kubernetes: Building on KubeVirt

A Platform for Kubernetes

Scaling Open Source Community by Getting Closer to Users

  continue reading

301 episodes

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The New Age of Virtualization

The New Stack Podcast

115 subscribers

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Manage episode 390755538 series 2574278
Content provided by The New Stack Podcast and The New Stack. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The New Stack Podcast and The New Stack or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Kubevirt, a relatively new capability within Kubernetes, signifies a shift in the virtualization landscape, allowing operations teams to run KVM virtual machines nested in containers behind the Kubernetes API. This integration means that the Kubernetes API now encompasses the concept of virtual machines, enabling VM-based workloads to operate seamlessly within a cluster behind the API. This development addresses the challenge of transitioning traditional virtualized environments into cloud-native settings, where certain applications may resist containerization or require substantial investments for adaptation.

The emerging era of virtualization simplifies the execution of virtual machines without concerning the underlying infrastructure, presenting various opportunities and use cases. Noteworthy advantages include simplified migration of legacy applications without the need for containerization, thereby reducing associated costs.

Kubevirt 1.1, discussed at KubeCon in Chicago by Red Hat's Vladik Romanovsky and Nvidia's Ryan Hallisey, introduces features like memory hotplug and vCPU hotplug, emphasizing the stability of Kubevirt. The platform's stability now allows for the implementation of features that were previously constrained.

Learn more from The New Stack about Kubevirt and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation:

The Future of VMs on Kubernetes: Building on KubeVirt

A Platform for Kubernetes

Scaling Open Source Community by Getting Closer to Users

  continue reading

301 episodes

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