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Cloud Foundry for Developers

You're reading from   Cloud Foundry for Developers Deploy, manage, and orchestrate cloud-native applications with ease

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788391443
Length 306 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (3):
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David Wu David Wu
Author Profile Icon David Wu
David Wu
Rick Farmer Rick Farmer
Author Profile Icon Rick Farmer
Rick Farmer
Rahul Kumar Jain Rahul Kumar Jain
Author Profile Icon Rahul Kumar Jain
Rahul Kumar Jain
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Cloud Foundry Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Cloud Foundry CLI and Apps Manager 3. Getting Started with PCF Dev 4. Users, Orgs, Spaces, and Roles 5. Architecting and Building Apps for the Cloud 6. Deploying Apps to Cloud Foundry 7. Microservices and Worker Applications 8. Services and Service Brokers 9. Buildpacks 10. Troubleshooting Applications in Cloud Foundry 11. Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment

What is PaaS?

Platform as a Service (Paas) is one of a number of terms in the taxonomy of cloud computing including Infrastructure as a Service (Iaas) and Software as a Service (Saas).

While, generally, IaaS is server focused and SaaS is user focused, PaaS is developer focused. PaaS enhances developer productivity by enabling application virtualization, so there is a significant reduction in the need for developers to perform the undifferentiated heavy lifting associated with the plumbing that detracts from the actual work on application code and concerns. Often this is called yak shaving. For instance, it may include everything from installing application runtimes, dependencies, app packaging, staging, and deployment, to configuring deeper down the stack into infrastructure concerns such as configuring load balancers, networking, security, provisioning VMs—nearly anything that takes your focus off building a great application.

According to Jeremy H. Brown while at MIT around the year 2000, yak shaving is what you are doing when you're doing some stupid, fiddly little task that bears no obvious relationship to what you're supposed to be working on, but yet a chain of twelve causal relationships links what you're doing to the original meta-task. The term was coined by Carlin Vieri. The original email on the subject can be found at http://projects.csail.mit.edu/gsb/old-archive/gsb-archive/gsb2000-02-11.html.
The logo for the Twelve-Factor App at https://12factor.net  © 2017 Salesforce.com. All Rights Reserved.

Heroku (https://www.heroku.com) is the name of one of the original trailblazers in PaaS. Available since 2007, Heroku is a cloud platform that enables developers to push applications into a hosted service on the internet. The idea was to focus developers on building applications, not infrastructure. Using insights gained by the Heroku team from operating a large platform with diverse applications running on it, Adam Wiggins and team formed the basis for what are now called cloud-native applications through their original Twelve-Factor App (https://12factor.net) patterns. They were motivated to raise awareness of some systemic problems seen in modern application development, to provide a shared vocabulary for discussing those problems, and to offer a set of broad conceptual solutions to those problems with accompanying terminology. We will discuss cloud-native apps, and further developments since the original Twelve-Factor App methodology was written, in future chapters. Additionally, Heroku's buildpack model is used for Cloud Foundry and will also be discussed a bit later in the book.

The Cloud Foundry definition of PaaS

In the cloud era, the application platform is delivered as a service, often described as PaaS. PaaS makes it much easier to deploy, run, and scale applications. Some PaaS offerings have limited language and framework support, do not deliver key application services, or restrict deployment to a single cloud. Cloud Foundry is the industry’s open PaaS and provides a choice of clouds, frameworks, and application services.

You have been reading a chapter from
Cloud Foundry for Developers
Published in: Nov 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788391443
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