Vice President, Engineering & Principal Architect at Li9 Technology Solutions
Real User
Top 20
2024-07-17T22:08:00Z
Jul 17, 2024
I would recommend Azure Red Hat OpenShift for managing large-scale Kubernetes environments. Its smooth deployment process and enhanced automation help reduce the effort needed to deliver, support, and maintain applications on top of OpenShift. I would rate Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine out of ten.
Technology Lead Analyst at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 10
2023-08-31T15:44:06Z
Aug 31, 2023
I would advise you to be a bit cautious but not overly so when utilizing it. Azure products are quite user-friendly as well. So, if you are well-versed with command lines, you can make the best use of them, particularly when working with OpenShift containers. Overall, I would rate the solution a nine out of ten.
Sr manager cloud engineering at a retailer with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 10
2022-12-23T02:42:00Z
Dec 23, 2022
One piece of advice I would give others is don't think OpenShift is just Kubernetes deployed by Red Hat. Look into it more and find out more about what the differences are. If your strategy is to be a multi-cloud or hybrid type cloud environment, then you seriously need to look at how you're going to handle the full stack of Kubernetes, including all the options and support all that without having to do it yourself because that just adds a lot more work to teams like cloud engineering, which I manage. If you don't want to take on all that extra effort, let the vendor take it. They've got a very good product that's been out there for a very long time. Some of the largest companies in the world are using OpenShift and there's a reason why they're doing it. So I would say do your homework; don't just blow the solution off as another Kubernetes that Red Hat charges money for.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift provides highly available, fully managed OpenShift clusters on demand, monitored and operated jointly by Microsoft and Red Hat. Kubernetes is at the core of Red Hat OpenShift. OpenShift brings added-value features to complement Kubernetes, making it a turnkey container platform as a service (PaaS) with a significantly improved developer and operator experience.
I would recommend Azure Red Hat OpenShift for managing large-scale Kubernetes environments. Its smooth deployment process and enhanced automation help reduce the effort needed to deliver, support, and maintain applications on top of OpenShift. I would rate Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine out of ten.
I recommend the product to those who plan to use it. I rate the overall product a seven out of ten.
Overall, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.
I would advise you to be a bit cautious but not overly so when utilizing it. Azure products are quite user-friendly as well. So, if you are well-versed with command lines, you can make the best use of them, particularly when working with OpenShift containers. Overall, I would rate the solution a nine out of ten.
We are currently using version 4.12 of Azure Red Hat OpenShift. Overall, I rate Azure Red Hat OpenShift an eight out of ten.
Based on my experience, I would rate it a seven out of ten. It is a good product.
One piece of advice I would give others is don't think OpenShift is just Kubernetes deployed by Red Hat. Look into it more and find out more about what the differences are. If your strategy is to be a multi-cloud or hybrid type cloud environment, then you seriously need to look at how you're going to handle the full stack of Kubernetes, including all the options and support all that without having to do it yourself because that just adds a lot more work to teams like cloud engineering, which I manage. If you don't want to take on all that extra effort, let the vendor take it. They've got a very good product that's been out there for a very long time. Some of the largest companies in the world are using OpenShift and there's a reason why they're doing it. So I would say do your homework; don't just blow the solution off as another Kubernetes that Red Hat charges money for.