HomeWinBuzzer NewsRed Hat OpenShift Combines Windows and Linux Container Management

Red Hat OpenShift Combines Windows and Linux Container Management

Users of Red Hat OpenShift will soon be able to run and manage both Linux and Windows 10 containers through the same console.

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has increasingly tried to muscle in on container technology in recent years, despite the concept of containers being mostly thought of as a tool. However, as Microsoft has continued to push towards open-source acceptance, containers are one area of significant interest. Now, some major players are working on solutions for both Linux and Windows, including open-source giant .

In recent years, Microsoft's active interest in Containers on and Azure has meant customers now have a true choice. Of course, Microsoft also allows Linux virtual machines to run in Azure these days.

In other words, many customers are managing containers across both Linux and Windows. However, this is a frustrating experience because there is no service that units those systems and allows users to manage containers from both platforms under one interface.

Red Hate has announced OpenShift to allow the running and management of containers on Linux and Windows.

Coming Soon

This ability is part of the new Red Hat OpenShift 4.6 release. It taps into the Windows Machine Config Operator (WMCO), which is based on the Kubernetes Operate Framework. This is an officially certified operator between Microsoft and Red Hat.

By baking WMCO into OpenShift, Red Hat is allowing users to manage Windows containers on the main console. It's worth pointing out customers could already manage and run Linux containers.

In a blog post, Red Hat OpenShift highlights some of the following abilities of this new feature:

  • “Move Windows containers to Red Hat OpenShift without needing to completely re-architect or write new code.
  • Lower deployment costs for containerized workloads in heterogeneous IT environments.
  • Improve productivity and DevOps agility by providing cloud-native management through a single platform.
  • Greater portability and survivability of applications across hybrid cloud environments, including new public cloud deployments or edge installations.”

It is worth noting the new version of OpenShift is not yet rolling out with Windows Containers support. Instead, Red Hat says it will be available in the coming weeks.

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Luke Jones
Luke Jones
Luke has been writing about all things tech for more than five years. He is following Microsoft closely to bring you the latest news about Windows, Office, Azure, Skype, HoloLens and all the rest of their products.

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