Latest From IBM's redhat.com
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Red Hat Official ☛ 9 essential questions to ask before a virtual machine migration: Challenges, strategies, and real-world insights
Migrating to OpenShift Virtualization offers the flexibility to modernize applications and infrastructure at your own pace, provides an opportunity to connect and centralize environments, and helps you retire your legacy systems faster. In turn, you can reduce infrastructure costs, increase efficiency, and accelerate innovation2.
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From AI to 6G, Here Are My Predictions for 2025 [Ed: Red Hat Official ☛ Red Hat us scattering mindless buzzwords and hype instead of technical substance]
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Red Hat Official ☛ Red Hat Reaches Key Milestone in Push to Functional Safety Certification for Red Hat In-Vehicle Operating System [Ed: IBM really wants to get into your car]
Red Hat, Inc., the world's leading provider of open source solutions, today announced the achievement of functional safety certification of mixed criticality; a key group of subsystems within Red Hat In-Vehicle Operating System, marking another critical step towards ISO 26262 Automotive Safety Integrity Level B (ASIL-B) functional safety certification of the operating system. This milestone underscores Red Hat’s commitment to delivering innovative and native Linux functional safety for road vehicles.
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Red Hat ☛ Implement remediation strategies with Event-Driven Ansible
Event-Driven Ansible is a powerful extension to Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform that leverages the automation infrastructure to provide the ability to react to change or problems. In short, Event-Driven Ansible can trigger Ansible playbooks (or Ansible Automation Platform's Job Templates) if a certain event is detected.
In this article, we will provide a series of examples on how to use Event-Driven Ansible to implement several remediation strategies based on activities in the environment. We'll use Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform (JBoss EAP), part of Red Hat Runtimes, as a reference implementation.
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Red Hat ☛ Dumping packets from anywhere in the networking stack
Dumping traffic on a network interface is one of the most performed steps while debugging networking and connectivity issues. On Linux, tcpdump is probably the most common way to do this, but some use Wireshark too.