2-minute read + demos
Check out the below recap of this week’s open source related product announcements, popular docs, and demos from around Microsoft.
Anything else you’d like to hear about? Let us know in the comments.
Microsoft Jenkins Solution Template for Azure Government Cloud: Since the launch of Microsoft Jenkins offer in Azure Marketplace in mid-2017, there has been a growing number of customers using the solution template to run Jenkins on Azure. With the solution template, you can stand a Jenkins master running on a Linux (Ubuntu 16.05 LTS) VM up on Azure in as fast as 20 minutes. As of this week, users can now deploy the solution template to Azure Government cloud. Check out the full announcement.
Open Source Show – Create a Web Application and push it into Docker Hub: The new Open Source Show, featuring the Microsoft Cloud Developer Advocates, debuted earlier this month. This week, Lena Hall launches a four-part series, “Exploring Azure Container Instances and Azure Web App for Containers.” In this episode, you’ll learn to create a container image, by example of a Scala web application created with Play Framework, and push it to Docker Hub.

Get started with the Azure SDK for Go: The Azure SDK for Go provides Go packages for managing and using Azure services using the Go language. Deploy your Go app to Azure Web Apps and take advantage of managed services, such as PostgreSQL, storage, identity, and more.


Here are a couple recent open source updates to docs.microsoft.com:
Running Apache Spark jobs on Azure Container Service (AKS): Apache Spark is a fast engine for large-scale data processing. As of the Spark 2.3.0 release, Apache Spark supports native integration with Kubernetes clusters. Azure Container Service (AKS) is a managed Kubernetes environment running in Azure. This document details preparing and running Apache Spark jobs on an Azure Container Service (AKS) cluster. Check out the recently updated docs.
Azure Service Fabric: Azure Service Fabric is a distributed systems platform that makes it easy to package, deploy, and manage scalable and reliable microservices and containers. It’s open source and on GitHub. Developers and administrators can avoid complex infrastructure problems and focus on implementing mission-critical, demanding workloads that are scalable, reliable, and manageable. Learn how to use Azure Service Fabric with our quickstarts, tutorials, and samples.
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