I recently sat down with Jean-Louis Vignaud, program manager at IBM, about the new GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service that recently was rolled out on Bluemix. The GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service is a great option for enterprises that, due to compliance or other security requirements, cannot used a shared, public GitHub service.
This GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service is the first of its type available and is hosted on the Bluemix service as both on-premises and hybrid environments. You can get more info on this at:
1. Blog : Introducing the first-ever GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service
2. Video : Benefits of GitHub Enterprise with IBM Bluemix Dedicated
3. SlideShare: IBM Bluemix Dedicated – GitHub Enterprise
Also, we will have a webinar that goes into greater detail on this. More info is at: http://webinars.staging-devopsy.kinsta.cloud/scaling-devops-github/
In the meantime, here is the streaming audio file of this chat, followed below by the transcript of our conversation to follow along.
Alan Shimel: Hi, this is Alan Shimel, staging-devopsy.kinsta.cloud, and I’m here with another DevOps Chat. Today’s guest on DevOps Chat is Jean-Louis Vignaud, Program Manager from IBM. Jean-Louis, I hope I didn’t mess up that name too bad.
Jean-Louis Vignaud: No, that’s fine. Thank you, Alan.
Shimel: Okay. Welcome to DevOps Chat, Jean-Louis, and as I mentioned, you are a Program Manager at IBM, and right now anyway, you’re very involved in working on the GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service offering, and we wanted to talk to you specifically about that.
Vignaud: Okay.
Shimel: So, Jean-Louis, I think everyone listening out here is familiar with Git and GitHub, but they may not be familiar with the concept of GitHub Enterprise as a service, so why don’t we start there, if you can explain to our audience a little bit about what that is.
Vignaud: Okay, so maybe we can start with GitHub first.
Shimel: Okay.
Vignaud: GitHub is very well-known, it has probably 15,000,000 users as of today, it’s a very well-known user experience. It’s a collaboration platform, and it’s based on Git, so it’s running on top of Git, but it has many other services on top of Git. And the purpose of GitHub is to provide this collaboration platform that enables people from all around the world to collaborate on a business project, or even a private project.
And that very well-known collaboration platform is very attractive for enterprises that want to provide the same level of collaboration within their own organization. And so what was introduced by GitHub the end of 2011, early 2012 was GitHub Enterprise. GitHub Enterprise is an on-premises version of GitHub. So, same set of capabilities, but you can install it when it’s on-premises in your—on-premises in your environment, and get it working within your firewall. So that enables teams to—you know, to enable organizations and different teams to collaborate among each other in a safe way.
So that’s the background, and where we were standing before we introduced our offering.
Shimel: Mm-hmm, and [Cross talk]—I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to interrupt.
Vignaud: Yeah, so what I was going to say is that, as usual, inside an organization, as soon as you have to install your product, you have to run it, you have to manage it, you have to provision your infrastructure, you have to have the people set up and standing to manage the GitHub Enterprise offering, meaning doing the backup, doing the upgrade, monitoring its running and doing everything that needs to be done in order to comply with the enterprise security requirements.
And that requires time, and most of an inside organization, you know, people are looking to move to the cloud, benefit of the cloud facilities, which they could find in GitHub today, but it’s a public cloud that does not meet the security requirements of an organization, and they would want the same GitHub experience, but within their organization. And this is where we come with our service offering around GitHub Enterprise—providing the user experience of GitHub within the organization while still managed by IBM.
Shimel: Got it. And just to make clear, Jean-Louis, as far as I know, IBM is the only one actually offering this GitHub Enterprise as a hosted service, correct?
Vignaud: Yes, this is a first-of-its-kind offering. I know if you look into what GitHub provides, GitHub provides GitHub Enterprise so you can run it on premise. You also can install it on infrastructure as a service, so you can run it inside AWS, you can run it inside Azure, but there was no one providing a service offering around GitHub Enterprise. So, with IBM, it’s hosted and managed by IBM so the “and managed” is unique.
Shimel: Got it. And another thing I just want to emphasize, because as we were speaking about before we started today’s broadcast was, you know, this is in partnership with Git, right?
Vignaud: Yes, that’s a partnership with GitHub, yes. We announced the partnership at InterConnect early this year in February, and so since the announcement, we have been working and creating this offering. So it took us 12 months to build it and to release it.
Shimel: Understood. And I think that’s important, because you know, it’s one thing to just take some open-source project and offer it as a hosted service, right? Anyone could do that, it’s open source.
Vignaud: Yes.
Shimel: But to really have the cooperation with Git behind this really gives, I think, the best chance for enterprises to have their own Git environment really, truly as a hosted service.
Jean-Louis, I wanted to talk about another aspect of this offering, and that is, as it’s part of an Integrated Bluemix Dedicated offering as well, right?
Vignaud: Yes.
Shimel: So let’s start off with, what is Bluemix Dedicated?
Vignaud: Okay, so IBM platform-as-a-service offering is Bluemix. So, Bluemix, it consists of a huge set of services, for mobile application, for cognitive applications, so about more than 150 APIs organizations can use to build a cloud-native application, to integrate these applications with a back-end system. And so Bluemix is available in the public cloud, but as well, it’s available as a single-tenant dedicated cloud for the customer.
So that’s Bluemix Dedicated. So, meaning, it’s a Bluemix for our customer with all this API, all these platforms that enable you to build and run your application. It’s based on Cloud Foundry, it supports containers, Dockers and so on. So it provides a very extensive set of technology that enables organizations to quickly build applications.
As part of Bluemix, there are a set of DevOps services, so tools we provide to help organizations build those Bluemix applications. And this is where our GitHub Enterprise offering sits. It’s a DevOps offering, part of Bluemix Dedicated.
Shimel: Got it. So, Jean-Louis, this is—I mean, unfortunately, we only have 12 to 15 minutes here, but there’s a lot of layers that we can peel back it of what one can do with this GitHub Enterprise offering, you know? And especially, in my mind—look, if you’re developing applications and you just want to have your whole platform as a service with best-of-breed stuff such as a Git, such as a Cloud Foundry, all of these elements that give you a best-of-breed application development in platform as a service forum, it seems that all the pieces are here to come together. And it’s a great time to be alive. It’s a great time to have to—you know, if you wanna develop applications, to have that at your fingertips.
Vignaud: Yes, and in the context of Bluemix Dedicated, single-tenant, completely integrated with your enterprise network, so it enables you to safely integrate with your back-end system. So you really have a very advanced platform enabling you to develop in a safe way; you know, very innovative applications.
Shimel: Yeah. So, Jean-Louis, two questions for you. No. 1, in terms of advantages of using the GitHub Enterprise hosted versus the public Git, that GitHub that so many of us, I think 50 million is the number of people use—the obvious advantage is, this is a more secure environment, it’s yours only. But are there any downsides? Is there any kind of features not available in the hosted service that would be available in the public service?
Vignaud: No, not really. You know, the GitHub Enterprise has been designed to provide the same user experience as GitHub. I would say that the value of GitHub Enterprise, it’s the user experience of GitHub, but you can run it for you, so it’s a single-tenant for you as a customer, leveraging the cloud infrastructure from IBM, you can run it in a data center where you want to, geographically you can localize it in the country where you belong. So if you have compliance requirements requiring you to host your source code in-country, you can do that.
So, I would say, no limitation and much more flexibility when it comes to the deployment of the offering.
Shimel: Excellent. Next question, I just wanna make sure—is this publicly available today? Because I remember—
Vignaud: It is, yes. It is available today. We announced it on the 17th of June. We officially announced it on the 17th of June, so yes, it is available today, and any Bluemix Dedicated customers can use it as part of the offering.
Shimel: Oh, excellent. And I should also mention, Jean-Louis, that in the near future, actually—I think we’re finalizing scheduling right now—we’re actually gonna do a full webinar with GitHub and IBM, where we’re gonna explore a little deeper into this offering and for those of you listening who may be interested, I strongly, strongly encourage you to attend that webinar.
But Jean-Louis, if people don’t want to wait for the webinar, I know IBM has put up several content pieces where people can get more information from this. One is a blog introducing the GitHub Enterprises service, there’s a video that shows the benefits, and I think there’s also something up on SlideShare about IBM Bluemix Dedicated and GitHub Enterprise. I will try to—
Vignaud: Yes.
Shimel: — yes, I will try to include the links to those when we publish this chat, but again, I strongly—if you have questions about his, if you’re a Git user and thinking you’d like your own GitHub Enterprise dedicated service, I’ll try to put those in there.
You know what, Jean-Louis, unfortunately we’re just about out of time. Is there anything you want to add?
Vignaud: I think this is fine. Thank you very much, Alan, for the interview here.
Shimel: Thank you.
Vignaud: I really look forward to have many customers for this offering.
Shimel: You know, I think it’s something the market needs. It’s good to have that. As I said, it’s a great time to be a developer today, right? So many tools, so easy to use.
Vignaud: Yes.
Shimel: Anyway, Jean-Louis Vignaud, Program Manager at IBM, thanks so much for joining us today, and we look forward to hearing more about GitHub Enterprise as a service.
This is Alan for staging-devopsy.kinsta.cloud. Thank you for listening in, and we’ll see you on the next DevOps Chat.
Vignaud: Thank you.