KubeCon NA23, Google Cloud Anthos on Dell PowerFlex and More
Sun, 05 Nov 2023 23:26:43 -0000
|Read Time: 0 minutes
KubeCon will be here before you know it. There are so many exciting things to see and do. While you are making your plans, be sure to add a few things that will make things easier for you at the conference and afterwards.
Before we get into those things, did you know that the Google Cloud team and the Dell PowerFlex team have been collaborating? Recently Dell and Google Cloud published a reference architecture: Google Cloud Anthos and GDC Virtual on Dell PowerFlex. This illustrates how both teams are working together to enable consistency between cloud and on premises environments like PowerFlex. You will see this collaboration at KubeCon this year.
On Tuesday at KubeCon, after breakfast and the keynote, you should make your way to the Solutions Showcase in Hall F on Level 3 of the West building. Once there, make your way over to the Google Cloud booth and visit with the team! They want your questions about PowerFlex and are eager to share with you how Google Distributed Cloud (GDC) Virtual with PowerFlex provides a powerful on-premises container solution.
Also, be sure to catch the lightning sessions in the Google Cloud booth. You’ll get to hear from Dell PowerFlex engineer, Praphul Krottapalli. He will be digging into leveraging GDC Virtual on PowerFlex. That’s not the big thing though, he’ll also be looking at running a Postgres database distributed across on-premises PowerFlex nodes using GDC Virtual. Beyond that, they will look at how to protect these containerized database workloads. They’ll show you how to use Dell PowerProtect Data Manager to create application consistent backups of a containerized Postgres database instance.
We all know backups are only good if you can restore them. So, Praphul will show you how to recover the Postgres database and have it running again in no time.
Application consistency is an important thing to keep in mind with backups. Would you rather have a database backup where someone had just pulled the plug on the database (crash consistent) or would you like the backup to be as though someone had gracefully shut down the system (application consistent)? For all kinds of reasons (time, cost, sanity), the latter is highly preferable!
We talk about this more in a blog that covers the demo environment we used for KubeCon.
This highlights Dell and Google’s joint commitment to modern apps by ensuring that they can be run everywhere and that organizations can easily develop and deploy modern workloads.
If you are at KubeCon and would like to learn more about how containers work on Dell solutions, be sure to stop by both the Dell and Google Cloud booths. If it’s after KubeCon, be sure to reach out to your Dell representative for more details.
Author: Tony Foster