Spectro Cloud announced version 3.0 of its Palette platform.
With Palette 3.0, Spectro Cloud is transforming the Kubernetes operating
model for IT operations and development teams, enabling them to thrive
even as their application infrastructures enter a new phase of
complexity and scale, spanning multiple K8s distributions and execution
environments from the datacenter and cloud to the edge.
A recent study by Dimensional Research
found that the vast majority of organizations expect to increase their
use of Kubernetes over the next 12 months, making it their preferred
destination for new and existing apps, from a growing number of
development teams.
-
71% say they will have more development teams deploying applications to Kubernetes in the next 12 months.
-
90% said they will build new applications for Kubernetes in the next 12 months.
-
79% said they will migrate more existing applications in the next 12 months.
With Kubernetes rapidly evolving from a dev-centric experimental
playground to becoming the enterprise-wide platform for production apps,
it's clear that operations and platform engineering teams need to:
-
Evolve from a few large, shared dev/test clusters to many smaller
clusters, in order to better support different dev teams and improve
isolation, app availability and security - but without adding excessive
cost and complexity.
-
Consolidate accumulated Kubernetes clusters across diverse distributions
and environments in order to simplify management visibility and control
- without a painful and disruptive migration.
-
Support their developers with quick, easy access to the environments and
tools they need to innovate on Kubernetes - while also enforcing
corporate guardrails and standards to manage risk.
To solve these challenges, the Palette 3.0 release includes three new powerful integrated capabilities:
Nested Clusters: accelerate "time to cluster," increase utilization, dramatically reduce costs
Ops teams face a difficult challenge when provisioning clusters for
different development teams and applications: give each developer or
team their own isolated cluster, with all the cost overhead and delays
that entails, or operate shared clusters that have potential
consequences in terms of availability and security.
With Nested Clusters, there is a better alternative. Nested Clusters is a
feature that enables the partitioning of a host Kubernetes cluster and
deploying lightweight virtual clusters on top, similar to how
virtualization creates logically isolated virtual servers on top of
physical machines.
These lightweight virtual clusters are very fast to fire up, which means
they're ideal to give developers the access they need to a ‘sandbox'
environment without delays. They are much more secure than using
namespaces. And they look and feel just like a production environment
with all the tooling and policies, unlike running a home lab on your
laptop. Best of all, they can be oversubscribed on host clusters and
torn down on demand, so ops teams can keep cost and complexity under
control and maximize utilization.
Palette's Nested Cluster sandbox feature
enables teams to deploy and manage these virtual clusters coupled with
Palette's enterprise-grade orchestration, visibility, day-2 operations,
and the fine-grained role-based access control (RBAC) as well as
security normally provided for conventional clusters.
Spectro Cloud Nested Clusters can work with any existing CNCF conformant
host K8s clusters including distributions such as Spectro Cloud Palette
eXtended Kubernetes (PXK), AKS/EKS/GKE, VMware Tanzu, Rancher, and
more.
Modern fleet management for new and existing environments: unify
cluster lifecycle management, access innovation and escape the potential
of vendor lock-in
Already 89% of Kubernetes users run multiple distributions in
production, with almost all businesses running clusters in multiple
clouds and other environments. Yet only 18% say they can manage all
their clusters from a single control plane.
Palette has always provided unified control over the clusters it has
deployed, regardless of K8s distribution or target environment. Now, it
enables operations teams to extend visibility and control over their
Kubernetes estate, bringing existing "brownfield" clusters across many
different distributions and environments under consistent management.
Customers can:
-
Attach, monitor and manage existing clusters within Palette,
importing clusters from VMware Tanzu and PKS, Rancher (RKE), OpenShift,
AWS EKS, Azure AKS and Google GKE. This allows operations teams to
benefit from Palette's granular namespace-level visibility over
resources, health and cost that may not otherwise be easy to get from
other dashboards.
-
Deploy add-on layers on top of existing clusters (service mesh,
logging/monitoring, etc.) and perform day-2 operations like
self-healing, backup/restore, GitOps and compliance scans, or configure
granular RBAC, across the full stack. Nested Cluster sandboxes can be
also deployed, extending the value and providing developers access to
tools of their choice on top of any existing Kubernetes.
-
Provision new clusters with Rancher's RKE, AWS EKS and Azure AKS
distributions or Palette's PXK and manage their complete day-0 to day-2
lifecycle, including scaling, RBAC, auto-healing, configuration drift
control, rolling upgrades, cost management, certification rotation and
OS patching.
-
Automate migration of existing clusters from Rancher's RKE, AWS
EKS, Azure AKS and VMware's Tanzu environments to Palette's
CNCF-conformant, hardened PXK distribution, with zero downtime and no
manual work involved. This gives ops teams a way to escape vendor
lock-in from proprietary or legacy distributions and environments that
may not have a clear or non-disruptive upgrade path.
Customers can do all this at their own pace, meaning they have a path to
consolidate, migrate away from legacy distributions or cloud provider
lock-in, and easily scale out the power and flexibility of Nested
Cluster sandboxes across existing running clusters.
Palette Dev Engine: accelerate developers' ability to build and deploy apps to K8s quickly, efficiently and safely
Operations and development teams have a shared goal: maximize app
feature velocity. To achieve this, developers need to be able to get
access to the infrastructure they need, without having to waste time
managing it.
Palette Dev Engine is a new feature set and user experience within
Palette that ops teams can provide directly to their development teams.
This gives them self-service access to Kubernetes resources, while
avoiding burdening ops with trouble tickets and questions or risking
infrastructure security or availability.
Palette Dev Engine includes:
-
App Profiles: a reusable blueprint for app components that can be shared across development teams
-
App Services: an easy way to incorporate common functions like databases and message buses into an application
-
Kubernetes Sandbox: an on-demand cluster experience, delivered
through Palette's Nested Cluster capability, that developers can use to
deploy the App Profile for testing or small-scale use
-
Developer Dashboard: a simple view to monitor the health of all
their running applications, inspecting for errors, backing up their
workloads, adding new parameters, etc.
PDE is designed to free developers from having to be responsible for the
"care and feeding" of the whole Kubernetes infrastructure - even to the
level of having to maintain a cluster on their laptop. Instead, they
get the self-service access they need. PDE is designed so developers can
quickly integrate it into their existing workflows and tooling: PDE can
integrate via an API with vscode (support for other IDEs coming soon),
and authentication occurs via existing credentials using SSO.
Ops teams can configure PDE to the specific needs of their development
teams: specifying the maximum size of app sandboxes, pre-loading default
app profiles and app services, defining the underlying infrastructure
where the nested clusters run, and setting policies and governance
around security, access, and other enterprise requirements.
Additionally, they can reduce operating and capital costs through
innovative cluster pause-and-resume functionality. With this control
framework in place, developers can safely and easily self-serve clusters
for their applications, while ops teams can look after the underlying
Kubernetes infrastructure.
Palette 3.0 transforms how operations teams manage and deliver application infrastructure
Together, these three announcements of Nested Cluster sandboxes, Fleet
Management for Existing Environments and Palette Dev Engine empower
enterprise ops teams to streamline their Kubernetes infrastructure and
processes even in times of rapid growth: bringing all clusters together,
consolidating host clusters through the use of Nested Clusters and
giving all their developer teams easy access to sandbox environments and
tooling to reduce manual rework when building and deploying all kinds
of apps to Kubernetes clusters.
"This is a powerful feature set for our enterprise customers, who are
constantly trying to streamline infrastructure operations and improve
the experience for their developers, who are ultimately the consumer of
Kubernetes," said Spectro Cloud co-founder and CEO Tenry Fu. "In order
to truly enable app development teams to innovate at the speed of
business, you have to simplify the developer experience to learn and use
Kubernetes. In this major version of Palette 3.0, we have created an
environment where dev teams can quickly model and deploy apps using
curated services without being Kubernetes experts, while dramatically
increasing efficiency and cost benefits for IT."
The new version 3.0 of Palette follows last year's Palette 2.0 launch and last month's Palette Edge announcement,
which included the 1.0 GA release of the Kairos immutable edge factory.
Spectro Cloud continues to innovate rapidly in the areas that matter
for enterprises today: core Kubernetes management, edge computing and
security, plus now the developer experience.