Red Hat Pushes the
Edge Further with Updates to Red Hat OpenShift and
Red Hat Advanced Cluster
October 13, 2021
Red Hat announced Red Hat
OpenShift 4.9 and Red Hat Advanced Cluster
Management for Kubernetes 2.4, both designed to
drive consistency of the open hybrid cloud to the
furthest reaches of the enterprise network. The new
capabilities, which include the general availability
of single node OpenShift for the small, full
featured enterprise Kubernetes cluster, help
organizations scale existing development, deployment
and management workflows to meet increased interest
in information and services.
According to IDC, 50% of new
enterprise IT infrastructure deployed will be at
edge sites rather than in corporate datacenters, up
from less than 10% in 2021. By 2024, IDC predicts an
800% increase in the number of applications deployed
in edge sites.1 Organizations across industries are
using edge computing to deploy latency sensitive
applications - not only to deliver the best
application experience to users, but also to make
faster data-driven decisions to benefit their
business.
With increased demand for
applications to run in remote locations,
organizations need tools that not only enable them
to more easily deploy at the edge, but also enable
them to manage those applications at scale. The
latest updates available in Red Hat OpenShift 4.9
and Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management 2.4 provide
organizations with the flexibility and management
capabilities needed to deploy workloads wherever it
makes sense.
Full Kubernetes capabilities
for the small deployment footprint As organizations
move to take advantage of edge computing, the
physical nature of edge sites can cause challenges
for architects who need to deploy hardware in
confined spaces or where network connectivity may be
intermittent. With enhancements in Red Hat OpenShift
4.9, the industry’s leading enterprise Kubernetes
platform can provide users a more consistent
experience across all of their sites, regardless of
the size of the deployment.
Red Hat OpenShift 4.9
introduces single node OpenShift, the 3rd topology
option available for edge sites alongside 3-node
clusters and remote worker nodes. Single node
OpenShift puts both control and worker capabilities
into a single server to help fit into
space-constrained environments. Additionally, single
node OpenShift provides operational independence for
edge sites as there is no dependency on a
centralized Kubernetes control plane - making it far
easier for edge sites that may experience lapses in
connectivity, like remote cell towers or
manufacturing facilities.
1 IDC Presentation. “Future of
Operations – Edge and IoT,” July 2021.
Manage Red Hat OpenShift
everywhere, from bare metal to the edge
Edge deployments can range from hundreds to hundreds
of thousands of Kubernetes clusters, and often need
to be managed in locations with minimal to no IT
personnel. Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management
provides a single, consistent view from edge
locations to datacenters and cloud environments,
allowing organizations to more consistently manage
across sites and clusters without requiring the
connection between Red Hat Advanced Cluster
Management and the edge site to be permanent.
The latest version of Red Hat
Advanced Cluster Management provides full management
capabilities for an organization’s entire
application landscape, including across single node
OpenShift, remote worker nodes and 3-node clusters.
This helps to ease the operational strain of
managing a scaled out architecture.
Additional edge-focused
capabilities include:
• Edge management at scale,
provides users the ability to manage close to 2,000
single node Openshift clusters by a single Red Hat
Advanced Cluster Management hub (available as a
technology preview) along with IPv6 dual stack
support for the managed fleet. This helps deliver
scalability in low bandwidth, high-latency
connections and disconnected sites.
• Hub-side policy templating
which reduces the number of policies needed for high
scale management scenarios by reading a single
policy on the hub and applying it to varied cluster
scenarios.
• Zero touch provisioning,
available as a technology preview, enables users to
use an assisted installer with Red Hat Advanced
Cluster Management on-premises, simplifying the
starting complexities of high scale cluster
deployments.
Simplified, reproducible
complete edge stacks Most edge deployments today are
complex to design and implement, and require
multiple products to work together. To help simplify
the process of building a complete edge stack, Red
Hat is introducing Red Hat validated patterns.
Red Hat validated patterns for
edge bring together the necessary components to
architect an edge stack, helping to reduce
complexity and save time. Delivering “edge stacks as
code,” Red Hat validated patterns defines, builds
and validates the software configurations needed for
edge deployments. As new software versions are
introduced, the templates are re-validated to work
as designed, minimizing the risk to customers and
enabling them to take advantage of any new
capabilities that are introduced. Additionally, the
validated patterns are open, enabling contributors
to collaborate and suggest improvements.
Availability
Red Hat OpenShift 4.9 is
expected to be generally available later this month.
Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes
2.4 is expected to be available in November. Both
products are available as part of Red Hat OpenShift
Platform Plus, which helps customers scale across
multiple clusters and clouds and provides
capabilities to protect the software supply chain,
infrastructure and workloads across the entire
software lifecycle.
Stefanie Chiras, senior vice
president, Platforms Business Group, Red Hat, “Edge
computing is fundamentally changing how businesses
are using and interacting with data and, as edge use
cases grow exponentially, consistency is imperative
to managing the scale of these distributed workloads
and infrastructure. The new capabilities in Red Hat
OpenShift and Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management
help further extend what the open hybrid cloud is
capable of - providing a common foundation for
innovation from on-premises datacenters to the
furthest reaches of enterprise networks.”
Dennis Gatens, CEO and
president, LEOcloud
"Red Hat OpenShift will allow us to speed up
processing of satellite-sourced data at our Space
Edge cloud facilities for our customer’s business
critical applications, while reducing latency and
data transport costs. And, single node OpenShift is
the perfect container platform for our Space Edge
LEO constellation of satellite data centers. It
allows customers to seamlessly move their
applications from a terrestrial cloud environment to
a LEOcloud satellite. Single node OpenShift will
accelerate the deployment of applications to space
where mission critical data can be analyzed as close
as possible to the sources and users of data.