I've tried a few strategies (aside from rebooting and changing the setting in the bios, which I would have to do for a few hundred servers) but I'm getting weird results from cpufreq-info. Therefore your Fedora Classroom session would come in pretty handy for me to gain at least a basic understanding and some first steps practice to get me started in that topic.I have a server and I want to ensure it's always running at maximum speed, never in energy-saving mode. Linux 4.19.86_64 #1 SMP Wed Nov 14 19:05: x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/LinuxĪt my work place they run an OpenShift cluster installation for PaaS,īut unfortunately I am not part of this cluster’s admin team, and thus lack hands-on experience in Linux containerization. Grep -c processor /proc# grep -om1 svm /proc/cpuinfo Model name : AMD A8-7410 APU with AMD Radeon R5 Graphics Would you mind confirming to me that the hw|sw prerequisites of my low tech hw to take part are met? I read in your FC calendar that the FC about the containers 101 with Podman is scheduled for 13th December 2018, and that it stays available for a week.ĭoes this mean that I could join any time during this period?īecause I can only afford cheap commodity hardware for my private usage, I merely posses a budget lenovo laptop with a fedora29 xfce spin installed on it.Īlthough I think that the virtualization features of the cpu aren’t required for tinkering with Linux containers, my laptop’s cpu supports the svm extensions (as for the AMD family) Is the FC a video stream, or an interactive hands-on kind of online workshop? I was notified about this Fedora Classroom by a news letter from the Fedora Magazine feed, which I subscribed to a while ago.Īs I haven’t taken part in a FC yet, I wonder how this works and what are the requirements (i.e. If you have any feedback about the sessions, have ideas for a new one, or want to host a session, feel free to comment on this post or edit the Classroom wiki page. We hope you attend, learn from, and enjoy this session. Joining the sessionĮdit: The session has been recorded and is available on YouTube: He’s now working on distributed cloud environments via PaaS (OpenShift), IaaS (OpenStack) and process management (CloudForms), container building, instance creation, HA services management, and workflow building. He works with tools for automating Enterprise IT, configuration management, and continuous integration through virtual platforms. Introduction to container networks, logs, security and persistent storageĪlessandro Arrichiello is a Solution Architect for Red Hat. He has a passion for GNU/Linux systems, which began at age 14 and continues today. Here’s the agenda for the Classroom session: Containers 101 with Podman This classroom will explain the basics of containers technology and its implementation in Fedora 29 using new open source tools like podman and buildah. As with every new technology, there are different applications and services available for adopting it. Fedora as a modern operating system already supports container use by default. Topic: Containers 101 with PodmanĬontainers are becoming the de facto standard for building and distributing applications. That link allows you to convert the time to your timezone. Here are details about this week’s session on Thursday, December 13 at 1600 UTC. You can also find resources and recordings from previous sessions there. The general schedule for sessions appears on the wiki. Fedora Classroom sessions continue next week with a session on containers with Podman.
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