Rancher Labs build innovative, open source software that makes it easy to deploy and manage containers in production on any infrastructure. We enable organizations to accelerate all aspects of their software development pipeline, from writing and testing code to running complex microservices-based applications.
There is an annual subscription. The price of the solution should be cheaper and have better pricing flexibility.
The solution is free and open source but there is a fee for support.
There is an annual subscription. The price of the solution should be cheaper and have better pricing flexibility.
The solution is free and open source but there is a fee for support.
Portworx is the solution for running stateful containers in production, designed with DevOps in mind. With Portworx, users can manage any database or stateful service on any infrastructure using any container scheduler, including Kubernetes, Mesosphere DC/OS, and Docker Swarm. Portworx solves the five most common problems DevOps teams encounter when running stateful services in production: persistence, high availability, data automation, security, and support for multiple data stores and infrastructure.
I'm not sure how the licensing was broken out, but I don't think our offering of the Portworx was more than USD $20,000.
The price of Portworx Enterprise is high.
I'm not sure how the licensing was broken out, but I don't think our offering of the Portworx was more than USD $20,000.
The price of Portworx Enterprise is high.
Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation
Storage for hybrid cloud and multicloud container deployments
Red Hat® OpenShift® Data Foundation—previously Red Hat OpenShift Container Storage—is software-defined storage for containers. Engineered as the data and storage services platform for Red Hat OpenShift, Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation helps teams develop and deploy applications quickly and efficiently across clouds.
The catalog list price is very expensive, but if you can directly negotiate with Red Hat, it's relatively well-priced.
The catalog list price is very expensive, but if you can directly negotiate with Red Hat, it's relatively well-priced.