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Knative 1.0: Run serverless workloads on Kubernetes

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Google

Today we join the Knative community to celebrate the biggest milestone of the project. Knative 1.0 is generally available. In this blog post, we briefly retrace the history of Knative, discuss 1.0 features, highlight IBM and Red Hat contributions, and imagine possible future directions.

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Knative as a project started at Google in 2018 to create a serverless substrate on Kubernetes. In addition to dynamic scaling (with the ability to scale to zero in Kubernetes), other original goals of the project include the ability to process and react to CloudEvents, and to build (create) the images for the components of your system.

While the two initial big components survived, the build aspect of Knative was folded into what is now the Tekton CI/CD open source software (OSS) pipelining project part of the CD Foundation. The rest of Knative continued to grow over the past two years, reaching 1.0 today.

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Knative 1.0: Simplify serverless on Kubernetes

  • Knative 1.0: Simplify serverless on Kubernetes

    Knative, the enterprise-grade serverless platform, has just hit a significant milestone with the release of version 1.0. To celebrate this achievement, let's explore how Knative simplifies the developer experience on Kubernetes. We'll also discuss how you can use Red Hat OpenShift Serverless Functions to deliver serverless, event-driven applications.

Google Unveils Knative 1.0 Serverless Computing Platform

  • Google Unveils Knative 1.0 Serverless Computing Platform

    Google has stable release of the platform announced a Knative 1.0 , designed to create a infrastructure serverless computing deployed on top of a container isolation system based on the Kubernetes platform. In addition to Google, companies such as IBM, Red Hat, SAP and VMware are also involved in the development of Knative. The release of Knative 1.0 marked the stabilization of the API for application development, which from now on will not change and will remain backward compatible. The project code is written in the Go language and is distributed under the Apache 2.0 license.

    The Knative platform launches prepared containers as needed (the application is not tied to any specific container), organizes management and provides scaling of environments required to perform functions and applications. The platform can be deployed at its own facilities without being tied to external cloud services. Only Kubernetes is required to run. Tools are provided to support a variety of common frameworks, including Django, Ruby on Rails, and Spring. The can be used to control the operation of the platform command line interface .

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