My use case for Azure Red Hat OpenShift is for an employee engagement application and HR, and I have also used it for an agentic bot.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift provides enterprises with enhanced cloud-native flexibility and supports efficient multi-cloud migrations, simplifying infrastructure management, security, and patching.


| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| Azure Red Hat OpenShift | 1.3% |
| Amazon AWS | 13.5% |
| Microsoft Azure | 12.4% |
| Other | 72.8% |
| Type | Title | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | PaaS Clouds | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Product | Reviews, tips, and advice from real users | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Azure Red Hat OpenShift vs Microsoft Azure | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Azure Red Hat OpenShift vs Amazon AWS | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Azure Red Hat OpenShift vs Red Hat OpenShift | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Title | Rating | Mindshare | Recommending | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon AWS | 4.2 | 13.5% | 93% | 260 interviewsAdd to research |
| Red Hat OpenShift | 4.2 | 7.0% | 96% | 75 interviewsAdd to research |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 2 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 3 |
| Large Enterprise | 6 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 30 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 12 |
| Large Enterprise | 35 |
Enterprises find Azure Red Hat OpenShift valuable for its advanced GUI, service mesh, automatic scaling, and integration capabilities. It aids regulatory compliance and streamlines application development with its DevOps integration, reducing release cycle times. The platform is appreciated for scalability, accessibility, and resilience. Users highlight its straightforward configuration, though improvements in the licensing model, cost-effectiveness, CLI, and support for data-intensive applications are needed. Orchestration, compatibility with new frameworks, and Azure dependency are areas for refinement. Built-in CI/CD tools are preferred over third-party solutions.
What are the key features of Azure Red Hat OpenShift?Businesses deploy Azure Red Hat OpenShift for pipeline management, containerized applications, and cloud migration. It supports banking operations, corporate integrations, and digital business development. Enterprises use it for Apache deployment in cloud platforms, advised by consultants transitioning from Broadcom to OpenShift.
| Author info | Rating | Review Summary |
|---|---|---|
| CEO, Head of Sales and Business Development at a tech services company with 51-200 employees | 4.0 | I've used Azure Red Hat OpenShift for HR apps and bots; its Azure integration simplifies operations and supports fast releases, though improved security independence is needed. It's stable, scalable, and easy to set up, with decent support. |
| Vice President, Engineering & Principal Architect at Li9 Technology Solutions | 4.5 | Azure Red Hat OpenShift is a comprehensive application delivery platform valued for its automation and integration capabilities, enhancing cloud operations while allowing clients to focus on business. It's a great solution for Azure users, offering time-saving and return on investment benefits. |
| Arquitecto de soluciones at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees | 4.0 | I use Azure Red Hat OpenShift primarily for migrating from on-premise to cloud and deploying environments on VMware. Its flexible interface and scalability are excellent, though it needs better support for newer frameworks like Rust, which currently requires extra configuration. |
| Consultant at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees | 3.5 | I'm a consultant guiding clients in IT migrations, primarily from Broadcom. Azure Red Hat OpenShift offers stability and scalability, effectively integrating with Kubernetes. Despite strong technical capabilities, its marketing lags behind Azure and Nutanix. |
| Sr manager cloud engineering at a retailer with 10,001+ employees | 4.5 | We use Azure Red Hat OpenShift for pipeline management and migration efforts, valuing its enterprise capabilities, abstraction features, and ease of use. However, it can be expensive, and there is a learning curve with its unique CLI. |
| Management Trainee/Digital Infrastructure Operations at Employees Provident Fund of Malaysia | 3.5 | I deploy Azure Red Hat OpenShift to manage our clients' databases efficiently. The platform's key strengths are its accessibility and scalability. However, I believe the support could improve, and additional scalability features and user-friendliness would be beneficial. |
| Technology Lead Analyst at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees | 4.5 | We used Azure Red Hat OpenShift for containerized applications, finding it cost-effective and scalable compared to other solutions. However, its orchestration needs improvement, not matching Kubernetes' capabilities. Azure's governance and security features were attractive for multi-cloud integration. |
| Lead SME at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees | 4.5 | I find Azure Red Hat OpenShift valuable for its flexibility in migrating containers between platforms like Azure and AWS, though it lacks built-in CI/CD tools, relying on third-party solutions. I wish it included native CI/CD capabilities. |
| Senior Engineer at a security firm with 1,001-5,000 employees | 4.0 | We use Azure Red Hat OpenShift for banking security, leveraging its automatic scaling and cloud native flexibility. However, automation requires improvement, and upgrades are time-consuming. Migration to the cloud should be streamlined to support our hybrid environments. |
| IT Specialist | SRE | Cloud Public and Private at Parana Banco | 4.0 | I use OpenShift on Azure as IaaS, but the expensive core licensing is prompting a migration to AKS to reduce costs. While evaluating alternatives, AKS emerged as more suitable for our company's needs compared to OpenShift and Rancher. |

My use case for Azure Red Hat OpenShift is for an employee engagement application and HR, and I have also used it for an agentic bot.
The functions and features in Azure Red Hat OpenShift that I have found most valuable are that it is a platform that is baked into Azure. Since it is baked into Azure, it is managed operation by Azure, which takes out the complexity of the infrastructure management and day two operations when compared with on-premise OpenShift.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift helps to streamline my application development process. When I compare Azure Red Hat OpenShift with ROSA, which is on AWS, Azure Red Hat OpenShift uses the Azure DevOps pipeline, while ROSA uses the AWS GitLab pipeline. My team has used both for application deployment and application release, and we are not using the native features of OpenShift but rather the DevOps feature of Azure, which is one of the unique things about Azure Red Hat OpenShift.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift is integrated well. Prodevans, my company, has built two marketplace products on Azure Red Hat OpenShift, meaning we have also certified our own product on Azure Red Hat OpenShift.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift does help to reduce release cycle time. That is natively built into Red Hat OpenShift, which has the least dependency on Azure, but since we are using the Azure pipeline and the DevOps pipeline, it is well integrated.
A potential area for improvement for Azure Red Hat OpenShift is to see managed identity support and ensure that some of the security features are not conflicting with Azure or Azure product features. I am sure in the future it will be more templatized so that we need not depend on Azure security features. Azure Red Hat OpenShift should be independent of Azure security features with respect to container scan and all that. Why would it use an Azure security feature? That is what I find. It is still yet to be GA and commonly available, but that is a strong reason for improvement.
I have been working with Azure Red Hat OpenShift for five years.
I would rate the stability of Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine, where ten is the best and one is the worst.
I would also rate the scalability of Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine because it depends on the cloud infrastructure.
I would rate the technical support from Microsoft as six.
Positive
The setup process is simple.
My team does not primarily use Azure Red Hat OpenShift service catalog, but they use Azure Red Hat OpenShift catalog for our own product that we have created and certified on Azure Red Hat OpenShift. I am totally satisfied with the functionality of Azure Red Hat OpenShift. I would rate this review as eight overall.

My clients use Azure Red Hat OpenShift mainly for two purposes: as an application delivery platform and as a virtualization platform.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift is very valuable because it is a complete application delivery platform with a lot of automation that developers can utilize. It's a complete solution without building your own on top of Kubernetes.
As a consulting company, we implement Azure Red Hat OpenShift for our clients, who appreciate its integration capabilities for enhancing cloud operations. While we handle implementation, build processes, and automation, the operational responsibility lies with the customer. The service provides basic processes and support from Red Hat and Microsoft, which benefits clients by allowing them to focus on their business rather than regular operations like cluster upgrades.
Regarding room for improvement, there's always room, but it's mainly about Azure itself rather than Azure Red Hat OpenShift. Azure is not as advanced as AWS in terms of supported services. AWS is the leader in this area. However, there's no need for service improvement in Azure Red Hat OpenShift as the service is excellent. I don't need additional features because I can customize it according to the customer's needs.
I have been using Azure Red Hat OpenShift for the past ten years.
OpenShift scales well, and Azure Red Hat OpenShift is no exception. It uses advanced automation, including cluster auto-scaling, which helps. On a scale from one to ten, I would rate the scalability of Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine.
As a consulting company, we hardly ever use technical support because customers usually come to us, and we solve their problems. However, in cases of vendor escalations, Red Hat support is good. There is much of the waiting time and sometimes unhelpful minimal information vendors provide. This feedback comes from our clients.
Deployment is always an easy step to move forward and start
using the platform efficiently. It's not an issue at all.
We automate everything, so deployment usually takes a couple of hours to provision all the related resources. The deployment process involves downloading a command line utility, creating some resources using this utility, and customizing OpenShift according to your needs, such as installing security agents and inventory versions.
Neutral
On a scale of one to ten, I would rate the initial setup of Azure Red Hat OpenShift as ten because it's always easy for us as a consulting company. The initial setup is straightforward; even my junior engineers can figure it out and deliver.
When discussing return on investment, it depends on the cloud customer. For clients using Azure, Azure Red Hat OpenShift can save time and provide value. However, clients usingAWS would use Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA), and different considerations apply to those on GCP oron-prem solutions. My answer is limited to our clients who use Azure, as some use Azure, some use GCP, and others use AWS or on-prem solutions. So,focusing on Azure Red Hat OpenShift does save time and provides a good return oninvestment.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift is not a low-price solution; it's expensive. Pricing depends on the strategy and whether you buy it directly from Red Hat or the Azure portal.
Additionally, some customers may need a complete disaster recovery solution, which requires additional licensing and software products for implementation, such as backups.
I would recommend Azure Red Hat OpenShift for managing large-scale Kubernetes environments. Its smooth deployment process and enhanced automation help reduce the effort needed to deliver, support, and maintain applications on top of OpenShift. I would rate Azure Red Hat OpenShift as nine out of ten.
Neutral
I am a consultant advising customers who want to migrate from Broadcom to solutions like Red Hat OpenShift, Nutanix AHV, and VMware Essentials. My role involves keeping all options open for IT system migration.
Red Hat is a very stable product with good integration with products such as Kubernetes, and it also offers migration tools. Moving from VMware to Red Hat OpenShift requires different in-house skills. Azure Red Hat OpenShift is scalable and stable, benefiting from Red Hat's longstanding presence.
Technically, Azure Red Hat OpenShift is fine. However, its marketing could be improved, especially when compared to the robust marketing efforts of Azure, HPE, and Nutanix.
I have worked with Red Hat for over twenty years, mainly with Red Hat OpenShift in recent years.
The product is stable, as Red Hat has been established for a long time.
Azure Red Hat OpenShift is scalable.
Technical support from Red Hat is very good. I have used Red Hat products for over 20 years, and their support has always been excellent.
Neutral
I have customers moving from Broadcom VMware to other options like HPE VMware Essentials, which might be easier in terms of administration due to its virtual machine compatibility.
Red Hat OpenShift is cheaper than Broadcom VMware. Pricing discussions typically follow considerations of functionality, efficiency, and strategy.
I deal with Red Hat OpenShift, Nutanix AHV, and VMware Essentials. If customers are open to open source, I recommend Proxmox.
Based on customer preferences for on-prem environments and geopolitical concerns, I do not recommend Azure Red Hat OpenShift to government customers. For commercial enterprises, the situation differs.
I would rate Azure Red Hat OpenShift a seven out of ten.

We are currently using Azure Red Hat OpenShift for our pipeline management. We use Jenkins. We have some small Kubernetes apps that are currently running there. We also use it for helping with migration efforts from people that use on-prem, can't go to the cloud yet, but want to use Kubernetes. They deploy to OpenShift on-prem and once they divorce themselves of some of the monolithic apps that they have on-prem, they'll be able to easily move to a cloud provider like Azure using our OpenShift.
The OpenShift features I find most valuable are the additional ones it has provided to make life a little bit easier for people either adapting to Kubernetes or trying to be cloud-agnostic or platform agnostic. Some of those features include their GUI, which is much easier to navigate compared to an open source package. It is called Lens, which is what Kubernetes uses.
The nice thing is that everything goes back to code. So if you don't really need the GUI, you can use the CLI, the code, and APIs to do the same thing, and then it shows up in the GUI. So both sides see it. That makes your life easier.
Another thing is that OpenShift provides routing. Kubernetes does not provide routing, so there are other things you have to do with Kubernetes to get into your applications.
In Kubernetes, when traffic goes out of a pod, it has to have its own IP address. Every service that's going out requires another IP. But with OpenShift, you don't have to deal with any of those IPs because they use NAT. It has its own network internal and that makes it a lot easier to manage those clusters on the infrastructure side because you're not worried about running out of IPs because of all the applications that get deployed.
Also, how the data comes into the pod is abstracted with OpenShift. You don't get that with Kubernetes. In Kubernetes, you have to have a load balancer, like Nginx, to manage your service coming in to get to the pods. You have to set all of that up yourself in Kubernetes. OpenShift, which comes built-in, uses HAProxy. You use URL load balancing so you don't have to worry about setting up any of that. As an app developer, you don't have to reach out to infrastructure people like me to have them set it up.
Also, many applications want to use SSL certificates, they want to be encrypted and you don't want to have this data open. So in Kubernetes, you have to create all these certificates and put them in there. A lot of people don't like self-signed certificates because you get the pop-ups. So that means you have to use real certificates either from your company or from something external. With OpenShift, all of that is handled by a wildcard cert. The apps are later managed by that wildcard cert. If you do want a special URL that customers see, you can also add that. But if you don't care, you just want the traffic to get to your application, the platform takes care of it. So that makes life easier for application developers.
Another problem is on Kubernetes if you're using different Kubernetes providers, be it like an on-prem Kubernetes or Azure or Google or AWS, you can move the pods around in any Kubernetes, they'll work anywhere, but the storage is going to look different. As a developer, you have to develop towards that provider so that it knows which storage to use if your pod needs storage. With OpenShift, it abstracts the storage so you don't have to worry about it. As long as it's set up the same by the infrastructure people when you deploy out a pod and you say, it doesn't care if it's AWS or Azure, on-prem, or Google. That's a benefit that you get from OpenShift that you would not with Kubernetes.
In addition, as your applications mature, you want to be able to take advantage of things that make life easier for developers. One of them is service mesh. Service mesh is how you're handling traffic between pods in the same Kubernetes cluster. That gets to be a problem, especially with security and networking because they really don't have exposure to that network internal to Kubernetes. So when developers want to create or add features to their product, but they don't want all the traffic to go to those new features yet, they want to slowly bleed it in, sometimes they call them blue-green type deployments, there is a lot of work that you have to do in Kubernetes to make that happen there. Depending on your applications, it can be very complicated and service mesh is not easy either, but it allows you to do that stuff a lot easier. It also handles firewalls between pods, which normally, you don't get straight out of the box.
Kubernetes is very open, which allows you to do what you want without the hindrance of a lot of security stuff. But that's not the best solution for enterprises. One of the things that you can do in Kubernetes is run your pods as a user root, which is the highest level user, and that has problems. Just like on a virtual machine or a server, you don't want things to run as root because that allows security hacks to get in and it makes their life easier. However, in Kubernetes, unless you have policies in place that you create and manage, you will be running as root. In OpenShift, by default, you cannot run as root. If you have to do it, there are ways around it by service accounts and doing some other stuff and you can make that happen, but by default, it's going to block you from running as root. It also isolates all the namespaces, every namespace has its own internal IPs. In Kubernetes, you use the IPs directly from your network and assign your IPs yourself.
Another thing OpenShift has is SELinux. This feature makes it even harder to manipulate the backend in order to get around things. Kubernetes, Azure, and GCP use a Linux distro like Ubuntu, or Red Hat. If you want to put that SELinux in, you can, but you have to manage it yourself. If you're patching and using something like Azure, AWS, or even Google, the control plane part of Kubernetes is managed by the vendor, but the nodes that you use to run your processes, and compute nodes, you will have to manage yourself. You will have to patch them yourself and keep on top of everything because you can't just skip releases. If something breaks, then you will need to pull in support and try to get that fixed. OpenShift takes care of all of that for you. It controls everything internally and the operating system underneath. When you do patching with it, not only does it patch Kubernetes or OpenShift, but it also patches the underlying operating system because if you're using something like CoreOS, which is a container-based operating system, it can manage it in Kubernetes and so everything is patched at the same time and Red Hat manages all the patching.
It does run on every platform. It can run on bare metal, it can run on AWS, Azure, and Google. So it's not really bogged down by the underlying platform.
Patching is really a single button click and everything can be updated, and if there are problems, it can roll back those updates including the changes to the underlying operating system. These are some of the things that you get with OpenShift and its Enterprise Kubernetes platform, it takes Kubernetes to the next enterprise level, things that enterprises usually want to have to succeed.
One of the things to notice is that this product can be expensive.
Another thing is that OpenShift has its own CLI, it has features in it that you don't have under normal Kubernetes. So if you're just a plain Kubernetes developer, you either don't know about these other features and you don't take advantage of them so you're basically treating it like a normal Kubernetes or there's a slight learning curve as you start to learn how the new CLIs work, the other options that are not available in Kubernetes. There is a learning curve; it's not high, but it's still there. That's another negative against OpenShift.
If you're purchasing OpenShift on their OpenShift container platform, you will have to manage the master nodes. If you are using Kubernetes in AWS, Google, and Azure, you don't manage master nodes. It's not really a big deal. It's all part of the patching in OpenShift. People will start to say, "Well, I don't want to manage the masters." But I think if they actually see the process of patching an OpenShift, they would say, "Okay, it's not even worth arguing because it's so simple." Alternatively, the main three cloud vendors can provide OpenShift as a service.
I have been using this solution since 2016, so six years.
I've been using OpenShift since 2016, and I've been in production since 2017, both at Kohl's department stores and at Foot Locker. I have yet to see a production problem due to OpenShift issues. In other words, where we lost money. I've seen UI patch issues and we have had to get the patch fixed. But we have not had a large outage where we considered burning Red Hat down because their product isn't doing what it's supposed to do.
I had problems with scalability on-prem with VMware, but not recently. This was years ago, but that's been corrected. I haven't had any issues recently. We do use scale sets. We are doing auto-scaling, meaning that if the load increases, it scales up and when it doesn't, it scales back down. That works fine. And I do have tests to run to verify that it works and I have not had any issues with that.
Currently, there are around three dozen people using this solution with plans to expand.
I have had many encounters with their technical support team including enhancement requests, feature enchantments, or fixes. I even supplied Red Hat with RFPs.
I would rate their technical support a six, on a scale from one to 10, with one being the worst and 10 being the best. The reason for this rating is that when I open a new support case, it normally gets assigned to someone in Asia or a European time zone. This only delays responses and I normally request the case be assigned to my region so I can work directly during my working hours.
Neutral
Previously, we used plain open-source Kubernetes, and currently, we use Azure’s AKS. We started to use Openshift additionally in the last few years.
We are interested in the enterprise capabilities and the ability to migrate your application between different platforms without having to deal with IP addresses, certificates, storage backends, and the security side of it.
I have had a lot of experience with the initial setup of this solution and got an award from Red Hat themselves. Back when they didn't have an automated install of OpenShift, you had to do everything manually; you had to set up all the VMs and run certain scripts. And over a course of a year, I was working with a few other people and Red Hat too onsite to develop an automated way, this was in Google Cloud Platform, to deploy OpenShift and on VMware. We used Ansible mainly to develop this. And I know everything from manually deploying OpenShift. I started to use the solution with the 3.4. release. That was in 2016 and that was all manual to the current 4.11. And I'm just doing the fully automated install and I've done it for both VMware and Google.
A basic OpenShift cluster takes about an hour to implement. This includes deploying three master nodes, which is usually a minimum for anybody, and then three worker nodes on their automated process in Azure.
In terms of complexity, there are different ways to do it. So it can be more complex depending on your environment. Our implementation is only slightly complex because we do use our own networks in Azure. We can't use Microsoft's network. However, there is a single file, a config file, it's a YAML file and in there, they have a template and you put in the variables that you have in there for us. You answer one flat file, and then you just run a single command, and that's it. It picks up that file and deploys and then you just sit back and wait for it to get finished. I did the implementation myself.
We saw a return on investment at my previous company, Kohl's. Everything went to OpenShift; we decreased our data centers and tried to move everything into the cloud. We used OpenShift to do that so they definitely got a return on their investment. Foot Locker has yet to materialize the use of OpenShift and that's something I'm still working on. We haven't had it that long. There's been a lot of changes going on here. I think the changes are going to facilitate possibly using OpenShift as a platform because of some of the decisions that are trying to be made. But I can't predict the future so I don't know. So I would say at this point, Foot Locker has not seen the ROI but that's not due to the product, that's due to the user, and that's due to us.
When it comes to pricing, I would say Red Hat has a lot of flexibility. You can work with them and they are very flexible on pricing. Especially if you're new at it, they're extremely aggressive to let you try the product and they bring their prices way down. The one problem with that can be – and something a lot of companies worry about – that if you get it really cheap, they will nail you two years down the road because you can't get rid of it easily and it can get very expensive.
I have not seen that in the two companies I've worked for with OpenShift. For us, the price has gone up because we used it more but they didn't kill us on the pricing. So I think they're quite flexible on their pricing and they're competitive and they know you can choose other vendors to do your Kubernetes with besides OpenShift. So I would say to other people that are looking at getting it: be aggressive on the pricing and do your homework, see what else it would cost to you somewhere else, and then hammer that salesperson to get you the best price.
We previously evaluated Tanzu and Rancher.
One piece of advice I would give others is don't think OpenShift is just Kubernetes deployed by Red Hat. Look into it more and find out more about what the differences are. If your strategy is to be a multi-cloud or hybrid type cloud environment, then you seriously need to look at how you're going to handle the full stack of Kubernetes, including all the options and support all that without having to do it yourself because that just adds a lot more work to teams like cloud engineering, which I manage. If you don't want to take on all that extra effort, let the vendor take it. They've got a very good product that's been out there for a very long time. Some of the largest companies in the world are using OpenShift and there's a reason why they're doing it. So I would say do your homework; don't just blow the solution off as another Kubernetes that Red Hat charges money for.

I use Azure Red Hat OpenShift in our company to store our clients' databases and their statements and transactions that need to go through the containers.
The most valuable features of the solution are accessibility and scalability.
In terms of the support, improvements would be great.
The solution should attempt to offer ease of use to its new users.
I would like the product to offer more scalability features.
I have been using Azure Red Hat OpenShift for about a year. My company is a customer of the product.
There have been some issues related to glitches and bugs in the solution, but they were not so major and were quite manageable.
Stability-wise, I rate the solution a seven out of ten.
Scalability-wise, I rate the solution a four out of ten.
The product is meant for very large enterprises with 1,00,000 employees.
I rate the technical support a five out of ten.
Neutral
I rate the initial setup phase around six or seven on a scale of one to ten, where one is a difficult setup phase, and ten is an easy setup process.
Our company has deployed the solution on a hybrid cloud model, so it is deployed on the cloud and on an on-premises model. Whenever our company's clients want to read or see something via the solution, we connect them to the product through an on-premises setup, and whenever they want to do some transaction, then it is done through the cloud.
The solution can be deployed in less than an hour.
I rate the product's price an eight on a scale of one to ten, where one is cheap, and ten is expensive. The product is expensive.
I recommend the product to those who plan to use it.
I rate the overall product a seven out of ten.
We have used it for containerized applications. Recently, we migrated six applications. One of them was Microsoft Office 365 SharePoint. And we are migrating our HVD environment. So, for that, we had prepared a separate HVD environment. HVD, in terms of, like, we call it as a Bank of America, call it as an HVD. HVD, in layman's terms, we can call it a VM.
We had almost created one for each employee during the pandemic, and we had almost more than one lakh employees. So recently, we decided, like, why should we have that much hardware utilized for all of them because nobody wants it from the developer side, and the people who didn't require it, they are rarely using the HVD, so why can't we make them temporary HVDs. So, we decided to create our resilient HVD infrastructure, and we are moving to the cloud.
So what happens is, like, premature concept Google, there's a similar concept that we are using in our environment. That, like, a user will, whenever they need a profile or are ready to access something, their profile will be created at that time, and we have a buffer of activities that will be allocated, like, in activity will be a number. And at that time, we can allocate those ten HVD designs. As soon as, let's say, we decided to have scaling capabilities, like, out of ten, we have allocated, say, around, all of a sudden, we got a request for seven or five. So, in that case, let's say, as soon as you get two HVDs utilized out of that, it will replace another two HVDs so that you will always have a balanced count always with you.
If you compare it with Kubernetes, it has similar sorts of features. But the only thing is that you are now using open source, which is cost-saving, and that was more likely why the bank has opted and decided to continue with OpenShift as Kubernetes because of cost-saving.
So that's the reason. Because if you want to buy Google Kubernetes or some other AWS or Azure Kubernetes, that will come with a package. But that's the reason we are going to utilize that.
And the main purpose of utilizing Azure will be the, like, we will be utilizing their computing power.
Second, Google, we will have our governance because of the way they have their own applications like YouTube, Gmail, how they are getting secure, and how they scan the junk emails into that. So that feature and the governance features, we are going to utilize, like, those services we have taken from Google, and we will have AWS as an option as our third multi-cloud provider. Because in case we need some multi-cloud identity, in that case, let's say, some features of AWS, like Active Directory or security reasons, and those features are more secure because Microsoft comes over with their product of Active Directory and identity access management. So that helps so that instead of going for Google Cloud, I'll go for security reasons with Azure.
In similar ways, if I power, like, Microsoft is not much into databases, so we also consider the Oracle database service as an option for this one. However, we are considering that Azure is giving more resiliency in database management and records.
The secondary cost-saving is there because Amazon has been in the cloud area for more than ten years. Other partners like Google, Lenovo, and IBM have recently started moving into it, even Cisco.
Back in the years, VMware and Cisco were the core infrastructure providers for any platform; whether you were working or doing, you were preparing for your virtualization or going for the cloud. So they may have been core service providers, but they realized, okay, like, we are providing our services to the big cloud products, like Azure, AWS, and others. So they also came up with, like, why can't we leverage our technology? We could take advantage, and we could also complete the market where we can compete with them. And that's why they came up with themselves as cloud service providers. So they started late instead of. Instead, they should have started earlier, even before Amazon and others started.
There is room for improvement in terms of orchestration. While Azure orchestration offers valuable features, it's worth noting that it may not match the level of orchestration provided by Kubernetes itself.
To illustrate this, let's consider a scenario involving a seller, for instance, Apple. Apple is known for its high-quality products with advanced features, such as video-based camera visibility. Now, imagine if a competitor, like Nokia or another company, wanted to purchase certain components from Apple to incorporate into their own mobile devices. In such cases, Apple might limit the features and functionalities shared with competitors to protect its market position. Consequently, the products derived from these shared components may not offer the same comprehensive features and benefits as Apple's own products, as Apple aims to maintain its competitive edge by not sharing everything.
Our team is using it. I didn't use it that much. I'm guiding the team on whether they want which technology they are comfortable with because we were planning to move to Google Kubernetes, but they have been using OpenShift Kubernetes for more than two years.
So we decided to come to a conclusion to let the developers be in their comfort zone instead of moving directly to a different solution.
I would rate the stability a seven out of ten. There is some room for improvement.
I would rate the scalability an eight out of ten.
A couple of times, we reached out to the vendors. Technical support revolved around licensing and certain packages that we couldn't always locate on GitHub. One particular issue was related to Office 365.
We faced an issue where a few users had trouble with Excel. So, we contacted support to investigate why only a couple of users were affected. It turned out to be related to a recently applied patch and image compatibility, so we coordinated with the vendors.
Most of the time, compared to Azure and Azure VMware, I'd rate them around seven. However, VMware's support is really good at providing complete resolutions and addressing issues effectively.
We are currently deploying, and we are looking for some different tools to automate our CI/CD. Currently, we are thinking of, instead of Dataform, using some other tools; we have Jenkins as well, CI/CD tools for deployment.
But to automate that, we are also looking at a couple of projects in which we have used Dataform. But we feel like some other platform will help us to automate our CI/CD as well as infrastructure deployment.
The tool is open-source.
I would advise you to be a bit cautious but not overly so when utilizing it. Azure products are quite user-friendly as well. So, if you are well-versed with command lines, you can make the best use of them, particularly when working with OpenShift containers.
Overall, I would rate the solution a nine out of ten.

Most clients working on container technology want to move to the public cloud. With container technology, they can deploy Apache on Azure, AWS, GCP, or any other cloud platform.
The best part of OpenShift is you can migrate any OpenShift provider's container to any platform. If you want to migrate your containers from Azure to AWS or from on-premises to Azure, you can do so easily.
We can build a complete CI/CD pipeline on Azure using Azure tools or third-party tools. Azure Red Hat OpenShift does not include all CI/CD pipeline tools, so third-party software can be used. Red Hat builds some of the CI/CD pipelines sold on the Red Hat Platforms, which are used for any cloud platform, such as AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud Platform. Red Hat should provide this because we don't want to use third-party tools like Jenkins or other automation platforms.
I have been using Azure Red Hat OpenShift for one and a half years. We are using V4.12 of the solution.
I rate the solution’s stability a ten out of ten.
We cater this solution to high-end customers.
I rate the solution’s scalability a ten out of ten.
We have to wait sometime for the support engineer for specific issues.
Neutral
The initial setup is not easy or not difficult. Azure Red Hat OpenShift is a complex platform, but it is also very powerful. We need to use some Azure resources, such as certificates and routes, to run it effectively. This means that we have some dependencies on the Azure platform.
Deployment takes two and three hours to complete.
I rate the initial setup a six or seven out of ten, where one is difficult and ten is easy.
The product is affordable.
I rate the product’s pricing a three out of ten, where one is cheap, and ten is expensive.
Overall, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.

We use this solution for internal and external security for a banking environment. We control the user environment and develop codes.
I'm using version 4.4. It's deployed on a private cloud. We also have physical servers.
It has a feature to automatically scale up or scale down. If my application is running in peak hours, it will automatically increase.
OpenShift provides us with the flexibility and efficiency of cloud native stacks, while enabling us to meet regulatory constraints.
Automation could be improved. It has a major dependency problem with IBM products. It takes too much time to upgrade one portion to the next portion. We faced a lot of issues with upgrading our DC and DR environment to version 4.10.
It should be easier to migrate our environment into the cloud to easily maintain our revenues on-premises, hybrid, and in the cloud.
I have used this solution for one year.
The server stability is fine for the OCP cluster.
We're in direct contact with OpenShift and we're an IBM partner, so we have two-way communication for any issues we face in the OCP cluster. We also have a strong internal team in our company.
I would rate technical support as nine out of ten. We're not facing any upgrading in our OCP cluster, but we're facing it in our IBM product.
Red Hat gives us excellent support as a partner.
We have to download all the images into a single point of contact. We have to load all of the images into a booster and push the images to a cluster for installation. You can directly get the images on the cloud implemented, so it's easy.
Deployment takes a week. We have had a lot of internal issues and internal firewall port communication.
For master server creation, it doesn't take more than an hour.
We're using other Red Hat products.
I would rate this solution as eight out of ten.

We use OpenShift on Azure as IaaS.
The cost of licensing per core is very expensive. I am in the process of migrating to AKS to reduce costs.
They need to improve the core licensing model.
It's expensive compared to a similar product, and we've only used some of its features on Kubernetes. Therefore, we are evaluating whether we will consider the possibility of replacing OpenShift, but nothing is certain yet.
We evaluated Rancher and AKS, and in the comparison, AKS proved to be more suitable for the company's needs.
Based on my experience, I would rate it a seven out of ten. It is a good product.