Rocky Linux 8.6 Has Been Released
Rocky Linux 8.6 features major changes listed in the following sections in the Security, Programming, Identity Management, Infrastructure and Development tools categories.
Rocky Linux 8.6 features major changes listed in the following sections in the Security, Programming, Identity Management, Infrastructure and Development tools categories.
In this webinar, we will be demonstrating how to trust containers with signing using Apptainer (formerly Singularity). We will also be discussing key generation and exchange, SIF, Apptainer Execution Control List, and building, signing, and publishing a container from a CI pipeline.
Don’t miss this exciting and informative webinar!
In the first post of this series, we showed how to create a Rocky Linux 8.5 virtual machine from CIQ’s Rocky Linux 8.5 image using Microsoft Azure’s web portal. This is the quickest way to get a running virtual machine since no software need be installed locally and the portal can be used to create (or name) key material, e.g. a .pem file. You get convenience and speed to an outcome, but you sacrifice repeatability and customization. In the second post of this series, we addressed repeatability not by creating new virtual machines from the portal, but – wait for it! – from the command line. This required installing some client side software, specifically the Azure CLI toolkit, but the installation and configuration can be done in less than an hour and is done once and for all as was shown in the previous article.
We are so excited to announce our Series A funding round closed at $26 million! Tune in and find out what’s next for CIQ. View the entire press release here: Software Infrastructure Leader CIQ Closes $26 Million Series A Led by Two Bear Capital
RENO, Nev., May 11, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — CIQ, a software infrastructure leader that works in every part of the technology stack to develop stable, scalable, and secure solutions for customers and communities, today announced they have secured $26 million in Series A venture capital funding led by Two Bear Capital.
A previous article covered how to quickly launch a Rocky Linux instance using the web interface on the Azure portal. In this article, I summarize how to do a similar thing using the Azure CLI tools. A follow-on post will spin up virtual machines and immediately customize them with cloud-init, an interesting and rich topic in its own right.
In this webinar, we will dive deep into the origins and changes to Singularity and Apptainer. Singularity (now Apptainer), was created by our founder Gregory Kurtzer, to bring the benefits of container computing to HPC use-cases and system architectures. Within months of release, Singularity was installed on the majority of HPC systems worldwide and facilitated new and innovative non-traditional HPC use-cases.
In this blog post, I’ll show you how to spin up a Rocky Linux virtual machine in Azure. Subsequent posts will explain how to do similar actions in code starting with the bash command line. Future posts will explain the journey Rocky Linux takes from the Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation’s build service to generalized cloud images to cloud specific and vendor specialized images that you can spin up at a moment’s notice online with a web browser or via the vendor’s command line interface.
Using Ansible To Install Kubernetes On Rocky Linux
Installing Kubernetes on Rocky Linux
Log management using Graylog on Rocky Linux
How to set up SNORT to report to Graylog
Golden images/image customization
Using Ansible To Install Kubernetes On Rocky Linux
Installing Kubernetes on Rocky Linux
Log management using Graylog on Rocky Linux
How to set up SNORT to report to Graylog
Golden images/image customization