Twin Cities Software Symposium - No Fluff Just Stuff

Twin Cities Software Symposium

March 7 - 9, 2014

Deploying Distributed Systems with BOSH

Saturday - Mar 8 9:00 AM CST - Washington

BOSH was originally developed to be the toolchain that installs and manages the Cloud Foundry runtime, which is a large distributed system consisting of multiple components running on multiple virtual machines. In order to deploy and manage such a system, you need elements of:

  • configuration management tools, such as Puppet and Chef
  • orchestration tools, such as Mcollective and RunDeck
  • knowledge of multiple IaaS layers (compute, storage, networking) to support portability
  • health management
  • monitoring and reporting
  • etc.

Fortunately, BOSH was written in such a way that it can be used to deploy not just Cloud Foundry, but any distributed system. Teams in multiple organizations are using it today to deploy:

  • large-scale Jenkins deployments
  • Hadoop clusters
  • Cassandra and other NoSQL store clusters
  • RabbitMQ and other message broker clusters

In this session we'll learn how to develop a BOSH release using the bosh-lite tool. We'll then learn how to create a deployment manifest, which maps our release to a specific infrastructure environment. Finally, we'll deploy our release to Amazon Web Services.

Matt Stine

Matt Stine

I Enable Early-Career Enterprise Software Engineers to Continuously Improve

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About Matt Stine

My passion is taking a metaphysical approach to software engineering: what is the nature of the collaborative game that we continuously play, and are there better, more contextually-aware ways to play that game?

By day I lead a team tasked with taking a first-principles-centric approach to intentionally enabling programming language usage at the largest bank in the United States.

By night I write and teach my way through a masterclass in software engineering and architecture targeting early-career software engineers working in large-scale enterprise technology organizations.

What is the primary goal?

To win the game. More seriously: to get 1% better every day at providing business value through software.

Who am I?

I'm a 22-year veteran of the enterprise software industry. I've played almost every role I can imagine:

  • Software Engineer
  • Software Architect
  • Technical Lead
  • Engineering Manager
  • Consultant
  • Product Manager
  • Field CTO
  • Developer Advocate
  • Conference Speaker
  • Author
  • Technical Trainer
  • Technical Marketer
  • Site Reliability Engineer
  • Desktop Support Specialist

I've worked at Fortune 500 companies, a tenacious teal cloud startup, and a not-for-profit children's hospital. I've written a book, and I've hosted a podcast. I've learned a lot along the way, including many things I wish I'd known when I first got started. And so now I want to pass those learnings on to you, especially if you've only just begun your career.