I have been working in my current field for the last five and a half years. I have been evaluating Chainguard Containers for the last three months. I was looking for security and compliance, supply chain integrity in our containers. We have heavy workloads which require security maintenance, and we wanted to reduce the burden on it. That is why we need something for debugging, traceability, and auditable builds. That is why we use Chainguard Containers. I am currently using this tool and testing the log integrity and having all the security monitoring of the containers to ensure that there is no unusual case happening within containers. We are always using the container processing all the right traffic for us. Apart from it, I am just checking how much processing power it requires to handle the concurrency accordingly. I am also evaluating other tools, but Chainguard Containers is kind of becoming a permanent tool in our evaluation right now. For security monitoring, I am using Chainguard Containers right now as an adapter functionality to my respective pod. What is happening is that we are basically pulling the logs of all the containers and auditing those logs with the help of Chainguard Containers and basically understanding exactly how our containers are behaving. A few things I liked about it are how easily Chainguard Containers documentation is to go through, and the integration was a bit seamless compared to other monitoring tools. Comparatively, I have tested a lot of tools such as DataDog, Snyk, and Wiz, and I found Chainguard Containers documentation a bit more comfortable. Apart from it, there are a lot of places where I found Chainguard Containers could have improvised, but throughout my experience right now, it felt a bit seamless compared to others. I am basically using it for logging and metrics or basically understanding of the auditing.
Container Security ensures the protection of software containers from threats and vulnerabilities. By securing the containerization process, organizations can maintain robust, scalable, and reliable application performance.
Container Security focuses on the challenges of securing containerized environments. It involves various strategies such as vulnerability scanning, access controls, and runtime protection. Solutions in this space cater to identifying and mitigating risks specific to...
I have been working in my current field for the last five and a half years. I have been evaluating Chainguard Containers for the last three months. I was looking for security and compliance, supply chain integrity in our containers. We have heavy workloads which require security maintenance, and we wanted to reduce the burden on it. That is why we need something for debugging, traceability, and auditable builds. That is why we use Chainguard Containers. I am currently using this tool and testing the log integrity and having all the security monitoring of the containers to ensure that there is no unusual case happening within containers. We are always using the container processing all the right traffic for us. Apart from it, I am just checking how much processing power it requires to handle the concurrency accordingly. I am also evaluating other tools, but Chainguard Containers is kind of becoming a permanent tool in our evaluation right now. For security monitoring, I am using Chainguard Containers right now as an adapter functionality to my respective pod. What is happening is that we are basically pulling the logs of all the containers and auditing those logs with the help of Chainguard Containers and basically understanding exactly how our containers are behaving. A few things I liked about it are how easily Chainguard Containers documentation is to go through, and the integration was a bit seamless compared to other monitoring tools. Comparatively, I have tested a lot of tools such as DataDog, Snyk, and Wiz, and I found Chainguard Containers documentation a bit more comfortable. Apart from it, there are a lot of places where I found Chainguard Containers could have improvised, but throughout my experience right now, it felt a bit seamless compared to others. I am basically using it for logging and metrics or basically understanding of the auditing.