Fedora Overview and Update
The Fedora Project is a Red Hat and community-supported open source project. Join us to learn more about Fedora and how new technologies are developed, integrated, and tested in the community before making their way into tomorrow's enterprise products.
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Reducing the Costs of Management with Stateless Linux
Historically, administrators of large, uniform deployments have faced many difficulties in managing their deployments. With Stateless Linux, the configuration and content are divorced from the physical machine. Gain insights into how Stateless Linux may be expanded in future releases including the next version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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Enterprise Service Oriented Architecture with JBoss Enterprise Service Bus
This presentation describes how to put together an Enterprise Service Bus using JEMS (JBoss Enterprise Middleware Suite). Today, the IT budget is shrinking, while the demand for service and growth is ever growing! With more and more delivery channels introduced, features asked for, uniformity of business and maintenance is becoming more and more exposed! SOA can breathe in new life to existing assets making them ready for the future. This also means that we don't have to duplicate business logic making them easier to manage and modify. Also this introduces a complex problem of how disparate and distributed services can be consumed by clients that are distributed and away. This dictates and even with enterprises, Software has to be delivered as a Service rather than an isolated installation!
The only solution today for such a problem is to implement a Service Bus across the Enterprise with services that can be attached and detached, addressed like any objects, and with well defined and sufficiently granulated messages for interaction.
This highly technical presentation goes into the Goals and Requirements of the ESB citing real life examples, discusses the architecture and finally explains the current state and the road map of the JBoss ESB.
Various products that are part of JEMS and their features are described and this talk shows how they all work together to provide the Enterprise Service Fabric.
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Security Enhancements in Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Bugs in programs are unavoidable. Programs developed using C and C++ are especially in danger. If bugs cannot be avoided, the next best thing is to limit the damage. Let's look at the improvements in Red Hat Enterprise Linux which achieve just that.
Dynamic Linux Kernel Instrumentation with SystemTap
SystemTap allows developers and administrators to write and reuse simple scripts for deep examinations of live Linux system activities. Data may be extracted, filtered, and summarized quickly and safely to enable diagnoses of complex performance or functional problems. This talk will introduce the SystemTap tool, discuss the types of problems it may help solve, and outline how the tool works. Experience a taste of the SystemTap scripting language with several increasingly complex live demonstrations during the session.
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Reducing the Costs of Management with Stateless Linux
Historically, administrators of large, uniform deployments have faced many difficulties in managing their deployments. With Stateless Linux, the configuration and content are divorced from the physical machine. Gain insights into how Stateless Linux may be expanded in future releases including the next version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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Red Hat 108: Contribute. Collaborate.
Open Source is forming the foundation of your software tools, testing, and deployment. Where do you look to find the tools to help you build these solutions? Where can you get support from the community? Or if you just want to learn? Start with Red Hat 108. Learn how you can benefit from our Red Hat 108 portal to contribute and collaborate with the open source community.
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Xen and the State of Open Source Virtualisation
The advent of virtualisation for commodity systems delivers the ability to lower costs by improving system utilisation and flexibility in the management of hardware and software. This session will delve into the current state of the Xen project and its inclusion in Fedora Core and the future release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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Measuring Resource Demand in Linux
In order to drive utilisation with virtualisation, it is important that the right amount of resources are assigned to each virtual machine. Find out why resource demand is not the same as resource use, what is to be expected when virtualisation becomes more common, and what infrastructure should be added to the Linux kernel to measure resource demand.
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Enterprise Service Oriented Architecture with JBoss Enterprise Service Bus
This presentation describes how to put together an Enterprise Service Bus using JEMS (JBoss Enterprise Middleware Suite). Today, the IT budget is shrinking, while the demand for service and growth is ever growing! With more and more delivery channels introduced, features asked for, uniformity of business and maintenance is becoming more and more exposed! SOA can breathe in new life to existing assets making them ready for the future. This also means that we don't have to duplicate business logic making them easier to manage and modify. Also this introduces a complex problem of how disparate and distributed services can be consumed by clients that are distributed and away. This dictates and even with enterprises, Software has to be delivered as a Service rather than an isolated installation! The only solution today for such a problem is to implement a Service Bus across the Enterprise with services that can be attached and detached, addressed like any objects, and with well defined and sufficiently granulated messages for interaction.
This highly technical presentation goes into the Goals and Requirements of the ESB citing real life examples, discusses the architecture and finally explains the current state and the road map of the JBoss ESB. Various products that are part of JEMS and their features are described and this talk shows how they all work together to provide the Enterprise Service Fabric.
back to top
Xen and the State of Open Source Virtualisation
The advent of virtualisation for commodity systems delivers the ability to lower costs by improving system utilisation and flexibility in the management of hardware and software. This session will delve into the current state of the Xen project and its inclusion in Fedora Core and the future release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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Cluster Infrastructure with Red Hat Enterprise Linux
This session will provide a general overview of the Red Hat high-availability products, including the Red Hat Cluster Suite and Red Hat Global File System. Topics will include the architecture and components of these products, as well as a performance overview of the Global File System compared to Ext3 and raw devices. The talk will include a walk-through on how you can implement Red Hat Cluster Suite in the Shared Storage Model.
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Accountability through Proactive Vulnerability Management
Take a look at how Red Hat adds accountability to open source vulnerability management. The talk will explain CVE and OVAL initiatives and the Red Hat severity ranking system, as well as show the best practices to keep machines running Red Hat products up-to-date. Explore Red Hat policies on backporting security fixes, the differences with Fedora, how we deal with embargoed and "0-day" issues, and how some popular open source projects find and deal with vulnerabilities.
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