article thumbnail

Harness releases open version of continuous delivery product with access to source code

TechCrunch

In 2020, the company made its first foray into open source when it bought continuous integration tool Drone. Today, they embraced openness further with the release of a free and open version of the company’s continuous delivery product.

article thumbnail

Harness Acquires Armory Continuous Delivery Assets

DevOps.com

Harness has acquired the assets of Armory, a provider of CD platforms based on the open source Spinnaker platform and a cloud service based on a proprietary platform.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

The Practicalities of Open Sourcing

DevOps.com

If you're contemplating the daring act of open sourcing your projects, here are some things to know before you set out.

article thumbnail

Continuous Delivery Foundation Adds Interoperability Project

DevOps.com

At a CDEventscon event this week, the Continuous Delivery Foundation (CDF) announced it is hosting a CDEvents project through which it hopes to create a vendor-neutral specification for defining the format of event data across multiple services, platforms and systems.

article thumbnail

How to Migrate an Observability Platform to Open Source

DevOps.com

Migrating to an open source stack gives you control over telemetry data and reduces observability costs. Here's how to do it with open source.

article thumbnail

Armory Aims to Turn Continuous Delivery Into a Service

DevOps.com

Armory this week made generally available a continuous delivery-as-a-service (CDaaS) offering that promises to make it simpler for a much wider range of organizations to programmatically deploy applications. The Armory Continuous Deployment-as-a-Service platform has been available in beta since March.

article thumbnail

Armory nabs $40M Series C as commercial biz on top of open-source Spinnaker project takes off

TechCrunch

As companies continue to shift more quickly to the cloud, pushed by the pandemic, startups like Armory that work in the cloud-native space are seeing an uptick in interest. Armory is a company built to be a commercial layer on top of the open-source continuous delivery project Spinnaker. Odio told TechCrunch.