Development PracticesTools-in-Action30min
Paketo Buildpacks: the best way to build Java container images?
This session explores the evolution of buildpacks, from early PaaS to modern Cloud Native Buildpacks for creating OCI images. It examines whether buildpacks are a viable alternative to Dockerfiles, introduces Paketo buildpacks, their supporting community, and includes live demos to showcase practical usage and benefits.
Anthony DahanneHeroDevs
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Tuesday, October 7, 18:20-18:50
Room 5
Buildpacks have been around for more than 15 years!
First they were used to detect and build an app before deploying it to a couple of PaaS.
Then we could create Docker (OCI) images with their latest generation, Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNCF incubating).
Are they a good alternative to the Dockerfile?
What are Paketo buildpacks? Which community is supporting them and how?
Come and find out during this session that will feature demos along the way!
First they were used to detect and build an app before deploying it to a couple of PaaS.
Then we could create Docker (OCI) images with their latest generation, Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNCF incubating).
Are they a good alternative to the Dockerfile?
What are Paketo buildpacks? Which community is supporting them and how?
Come and find out during this session that will feature demos along the way!
Anthony Dahanne
Software Developer for 15+ years, my favorite topics are containerization (Docker and Kubernetes), building tools, Continuous Integration and, of course, core Java development.
Having recently joined HeroDevs, I work on patching and releasing EOL OSS Java and Spring projects.
I'm also a maintainer of the Paketo Java buildpacks.
In my spare time, I work on various open source projects : from Mastodon bots written in NodeJS or Go, to Android apps!
Having recently joined HeroDevs, I work on patching and releasing EOL OSS Java and Spring projects.
I'm also a maintainer of the Paketo Java buildpacks.
In my spare time, I work on various open source projects : from Mastodon bots written in NodeJS or Go, to Android apps!

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