"Collection+JSON is a JSON-based read/write hypermedia-type designed to support management and querying of simple collections. It is similar to the The Atom Syndication Format (RFC4287) and the The Atom Publishing Protocol (RFC5023) . However, Collection+JSON defines both the format and the semantics in a single media type. It also includes support for Query Templates and expanded write support through the use of a Write Template."
"Red Hat Linux Enterprise Atomic Host."
Por fin redhat le da pelota a docker, al nivel de en unos meses poder calentar la polémica Coreos Vs. Redhat.
Para correr docker, soluciones similares. Pero no vi que o quién reemplaza al manejo que pueda hacer fleet ni como se registran automágicamente los servicios. Habrá que leer y leer.
"Today the OpenShift development team announced a new public Origin repo containing initial commits for our third generation OpenShift platform. This integrates work we've been doing over the past year plus in OpenShift Origin and related projects like Docker, Kubernetes, Geard and Project Atomic - all of which will become integral components of the new OpenShift. This Origin community effort will drive the next major releases of OpenShift Online and OpenShift Enterprise 3."
RHEV and Docker provide fundamentally different use cases, Herold explained. "In fact, we see opportunities for RHEV to run the operating systems, including Atomic Hosts, that ultimately run Docker instances," he said. "Within the oVirt upstream project, we have an initial Docker integration to run Docker instances in VM containers provided by RHEV."
Creo que la estrategia de integración de Docker de RH está equivocada. Siguiéndola obtienen la mitad de los beneficios de Docker (agilidad de empaquetamiento, distribución y deployment) pero dejan de lado la otra mitad (mucho mayor performance y eficiencia de un container versus una vm) que muchos competidores sí ofreceran a sus clientes, abriendo una brecha.
"You may have noticed some new OS releases: CoreOS (August 2013), Project Atomic (April 2014), and more recently Snappy Ubuntu Core (December 2014). These are all minimalist OSs designed to host Docker applications and simplify your infrastructure. If you are interested in the distinguishing features of each and how they differ from traditional Linux distributions, read on."