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IBM makes Razee open source and wants to give organizations worldwide a more flexible way to roll out and update applications fast but focused and flexible.

A traditional pipeline for application development is quite monolithic. From development to testing to staging and roll-out, there is little flexibility. Historically, this has not been a disaster, especially for smaller companies with a limited IT footprint. It’s different when, like IBM, you roll out applications consisting of dozens of microservices to tens of thousands of container clusters all over the world.

Maybe you want to roll out an update for an application in a geographically small region first, or a large customer is just undergoing a critical migration, which makes a change to an app very inconvenient. IBM ran into the limitations of the traditional production pipeline, and therefore built Razee.

Three pillars

At KubeCon 2019 in Barcelona, the software giant will be making that project open source. Razee is based on three pillars, says Jason McGee, VP and CTO of IBM’s cloud platform to Techzine. First and foremost, we are switching from a traditional push model in which applications are pushed into production, to a pull model in which clusters themselves receive updates. Compare it to the update model of your smartphone.

IBM built Razee to facilitate a roll-out to scale and is now making the project open source.

Razee then links an extensive rule system to this pull model. This way you can define which versions of applications belong where, and where updates are not desired yet, says McGee. This allows an organisation to send new apps or new versions of microservices very flexibly into the wild in phases. This makes it easy to start the roll-out in less critical regions, and to save large customers as much as they have asked for, for example.

Overview

The approach contrasts with a monolithic roll-out for fragmentation, as a result of which Razee also contains a third pillar. The tool draws up an inventory on the basis of reports from the clusters themselves. They let you know which app or service is on which version, after which you have a handy overview.

IBM developed Razee out of necessity to flexibly roll out microservices to scale, but it is convinced that the Razee project will also find something to be desired outside the company. Even in smaller organisations, it is useful to roll out fragmented applications and to have a handy version overview available, McGee predicts.

This news article was automatically translated from Dutch to give Techzine.eu a head start. All news articles after September 1, 2019 are written in native English and NOT translated. All our background stories are written in native English as well. For more information read our launch article.