Discussion:
[HEADS UP] Camel K is here!
Nicola Ferraro
2018-10-16 22:24:20 UTC
Permalink
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.

For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.

With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed to
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!

So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!

Links follow..

Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k

Nicola
Andrea Cosentino
2018-10-17 05:23:45 UTC
Permalink
YAY!

--
Andrea Cosentino 
----------------------------------
Apache Camel PMC Chair
Apache Karaf Committer
Apache Servicemix PMC Member
Email: ***@yahoo.com
Twitter: @oscerd2
Github: oscerd






On Wednesday, October 17, 2018, 12:24:37 AM GMT+2, Nicola Ferraro <***@gmail.com> wrote:





Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.

For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.

With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed to
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!

So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!

Links follow..

Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k

Nicola
Claus Ibsen
2018-10-17 08:50:04 UTC
Permalink
Hi

Yay this is really great and its awesome to see Apache Camel becoming
even more awesome on containers.
And when we get the ball rolling even more on Camel 3 then combined
its gonna be fantastic for Camel and its community.

And even James Strachan must be proud, with Camel K on Kubernetes and
that its supports Groovy DSL so nicely.
That are the two best of his creations working together in synergy.
Post by Nicola Ferraro
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.
For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.
With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed to
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!
So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!
Links follow..
Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k
Nicola
--
Claus Ibsen
-----------------
http://davsclaus.com @davsclaus
Camel in Action 2: https://www.manning.com/ibsen2
Ashwin Karpe
2018-10-17 14:39:02 UTC
Permalink
I love it. Great to see Camel truly delivering on its "integrate
everything" mission.

- Ashwin...
--------------------------------------------------------
Ashwin Karpe
Apache Camel Committer &
Enterprise Integration Practice Lead, North America
Red Hat
http://www.redhat.com

Mobile: (972)-971-1700
Blog: http://opensourceknowledge.blogspot.com
---------------------------------------------------------
Post by Claus Ibsen
Hi
Yay this is really great and its awesome to see Apache Camel becoming
even more awesome on containers.
And when we get the ball rolling even more on Camel 3 then combined
its gonna be fantastic for Camel and its community.
And even James Strachan must be proud, with Camel K on Kubernetes and
that its supports Groovy DSL so nicely.
That are the two best of his creations working together in synergy.
Post by Nicola Ferraro
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.
For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.
With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed
to
Post by Nicola Ferraro
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!
So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!
Links follow..
Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k
Nicola
--
Claus Ibsen
-----------------
Camel in Action 2: https://www.manning.com/ibsen2
Babak Vahdat
2018-10-17 17:48:48 UTC
Permalink
Awesome and very well done, kudos!

Babak
Post by Nicola Ferraro
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.
For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.
With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed to
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!
So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!
Links follow..
Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k
Nicola
Willem Jiang
2018-10-18 02:24:53 UTC
Permalink
Yeah, it's great to see we can use Camel more easily with K8S.
It's awesome that camel-k can be a part of Camel 3 :)

Regards,

Willem Jiang

Twitter: willemjiang
Weibo: 姜宁willem
Post by Nicola Ferraro
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.
For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.
With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed to
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!
So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!
Links follow..
Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k
Nicola
Alex Dettinger
2018-10-19 17:13:53 UTC
Permalink
Whaoo, I've had a look at introducing-camel-k
<https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/> from Nicolas
and that's awesome.
Well done guys !
Post by Willem Jiang
Yeah, it's great to see we can use Camel more easily with K8S.
It's awesome that camel-k can be a part of Camel 3 :)
Regards,
Willem Jiang
Twitter: willemjiang
Weibo: 姜宁willem
Post by Nicola Ferraro
Hi folks,
after some months of brainstorming with the community and a bit more than
one month of development, our Camel K project has reached a good level of
stability and I've published the first blog post about it yesterday.
For those of you who haven't heard of Camel K, it's now a subproject of
Apache Camel (https://github.com/apache/camel-k) with the target of
building a lightweight runtime for running integration code directly on
cloud platforms like Kubernetes and Openshift. It was inspired by
"serverless" principles and it will also target Knative shortly.
With the exception of the runtime code, that remains the good old Camel
Java framework with 200+ components and full of EIPs, most of the
"operator" code in Camel K is written in Go. But the new language has not
stopped many adventurer Camel developers that have actively contributed
to
Post by Nicola Ferraro
the project during last month. We still have a long way in front of us,
let's continue to make Camel great!
So, please.. check the project out! Spread it to the world!
And provide your feedback, so we can make it always better. We love any
kind of contribution!
Links follow..
Announcement: https://twitter.com/ni_ferraro/status/1051872786946363392
Article: https://www.nicolaferraro.me/2018/10/15/introducing-camel-k/
Home: https://github.com/apache/camel-k
Nicola
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