
Existing developer tooling does not adequately address the evolving needs of containerized development, a challenge that we’re pleased to answer with Red Hat CodeReady Workspaces. “The rise of cloud-native applications and Kubernetes as the platform for modern workloads requires a change in how developers approach building, testing and deploying their critical applications. Red Hat CodeReady Workspaces is available at no cost with an OpenShift subscription and can be downloaded by joining the Red Hat Developer Program.īrad Micklea, senior director, Developer Experience and Programs, Red Hat Use Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) or Active Directory (AD) authentication for single sign-on.
#Codeready workspaces code

Red Hat CodeReady Workspaces is an ideal platform for organizations moving to a DevOps philosophy. Team members can use any device with a browser, any operating system (OS) and any IDE to access their own or shared workspaces. Factories enable development teams to get up and running with a Kubernetes-native developer environment in a couple of minutes. A Factory is a template containing the source code location, runtime and tooling configuration and commands needed for a project. Red Hat CodeReady Workspaces introduces a powerful sharing feature called Factories. CodeReady Workspaces is designed to handle the management of Kubernetes artifacts behind the scenes so that developers can get started developing containerized applications in OpenShift with ease.

Developers do not need to be Kubernetes or OpenShift experts to use the IDE. Where traditional tools may only take advantage of Kubernetes during the final phase of testing and deployment, CodeReady Workspaces brings the developer into OpenShift from the start, addressing issues that developers often face when moving applications from development platforms to production systems. Red Hat CodeReady Workspaces is the market’s first IDE that runs inside a Kubernetes cluster and manages the developer’s code, dependencies and artifacts inside OpenShift pods and containers. Traditional tools have not been built with Kubernetes and containers, which forces development teams to manually manage the environment, taking them away from writing code. Leading companies are using Kubernetes and containers to build and deploy applications and services however, container-based development represents a major change in the tooling and process for development teams. Senior director, Developer Experience and Programs, Red Hat
