Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Cloud-Based - Workloads
Do you move workloads between different clouds and/or your data center using Red Hat Enterprise Linux? If yes, how easy or difficult is it for you to move workloads between different clouds and/or your data center using Red Hat Enterprise Linux? Please explain and provide examples, if applicable.
We are able to easily move workloads between the cloud and our data center using Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
View full review »RHEL helps us move workloads between different clouds and data centers. It's pretty smooth and transparent
View full review »Red Hat Enterprise Linux offers easy migration between cloud platforms, a crucial advantage for businesses. For example, we recently helped one client move from AWS to Azure and another implement a VPN solution using both Oracle and Azure to leverage the strengths of each platform.
View full review »The primary use cases involve running interconnected applications with requirements such as low latency and high availability, often achieved through redundant, multi-tenant, and load-balanced architectures. These applications may utilize read or write-optimized instances or be memory or processor-optimized, depending on their specific needs. Optimization is achieved through the processor, RAM, and connected protocols. The foundation for these applications is Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
View full review »Security is important, and it performs efficiently and is confident compared with firewall and WAF or whatever you use for firewall to protect our deployments.
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Sergio-Maurenzi
Founder & Chief Executive Officer at Peperina Software
We move workloads between on-prem and the cloud using Red Hat Enterprise Linux. For this, we are using other tools, such as Divisio, which is also supported by Red Hat. We have Apache NiFi and Kafka for messaging delivery and integration between the services.
View full review »Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) supports our hybrid cloud strategy by allowing us to deploy virtual machines in both clouds without really feeling the difference between a private or public cloud.
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Bern Pluviose
Devops at Proton Technologies
My specialty is architecture, so I've used Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), mostly Ansible and OpenShift. In instances where I'm working with a VPC directly and everything runs Linux and I'm running RHEL, I'll have some workloads. However, I don't manipulate the OS itself. I use the tools built on top of it. My specialty is finance and medical, so with Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), it's all hybrid. Those two sectors have significant compliance requirements, especially medical. I do many hybrid clouds and must build two or three redundancies. That's why all of the nuances of the Red Hat platform stand out to me in a way it wouldn't for someone else. For example, in a hospital system, they have emergency generators for power. The same concept applies to data, HIPAA, and transferring. I notice things that others may not. It means I'm always concurrently running two or three clouds for disaster recovery for compliance.
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