Thanks, Keith, for sharing this! That's pretty cool stuff, I guess we'll have to check Shipped out ;)
Thanks for using Mesos! *Marco Massenzio* *Distributed Systems Engineer* On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 1:38 PM, Keith Chambers (kechambe) < [email protected]> wrote: > Hello Adam, > > Yesterday at Cloud Foundry Summit Cisco first discussed our product > called “Shipped” so I guess I can talk about it now. :-) > > Our tag line is “Your idea running in production in 5 minutes.” It’s > developed by developers for developers. Shipped makes it simple to create > on-demand production like dev environments, build applications using > microservices patterns, and deploy them to an instance of the open source > microservices-infrastructure > <https://github.com/CiscoCloud/microservices-infrastructure> container > runtime (multi-dc Marathon). > > Shipped integrates with tool developers *actually like using*. We > leverage GitHub for authentication and source control, Vagrant for > on-demand developer environments, and Bintray for wickedly fast Docker > repos. The Shipped CI service is powered by open source Drone, which we > have 2 full time developers working on. We’re also developing a Drone > framework for Mesos that we will release to GitHub under Apache license. > > Shipped maintains a “timeline” for every project. The timeline is a > chronological history of high value events across Dev and Ops. i.e., pull > requests, failed builds, production failures, etc. One killer feature of > Shipped is that we automatically integrate the project timeline with a room > in Cisco Spark <http://www.webex.com/ciscospark/> (similar to Slack). > This makes it simple for teams to work together and deliver software > quicker — honestly it’s pretty slick! > > Shipped itself runs on top of Marathon in Docker containers. We have a > number of microservices, all written in Go and all using Cassandra for > their backend DB. We use the excellent Kafka framework from Joe Stein for > cross service messaging and event collection. We are interested in > creating a multi-DC Cassandra Mesos framework, but for now Cassandra is on > VMs. > > We’re at 50 Mesos followers nodes now and growing quickly. > > Thanks! > Keith > > > > > > From: Adam Bordelon <[email protected]> > Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> > Date: Monday, May 11, 2015 at 10:50 PM > To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: Cisco is Powered By Mesos > > Glad to hear it Keith! We're very excited to have you in the community. > I've added Cisco to the adopters list, and it will go out with the next > website update. > Can you share any juicy details about how you're using Mesos and at what > scale? > > On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 10:20 AM, Keith Chambers (kechambe) < > [email protected]> wrote: > >> We use Mesos in production at Cisco. >> >> Please add us to the “Powered By Mesos” list too! >> https://mesos.apache.org/documentation/latest/powered-by-mesos/ >> >> Keith :-) >> >> >> >

