Containers, Kubernetes, and Serverless Functions

Oracle Cloud provides both breadth and depth when it comes to support for modern application deployment. This includes managed Kubernetes, serverless functions using docker containers, and container instances—all thoughtfully integrated with a secure performance image repository service (OCIR). What’s more, you can leverage the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) DevOps service to build and deliver all your containerized applications with ease.

Containers, Kubernetes, and Serverless Functions

Calling all container aficionados

Kubernetes at scale just got a lot easier. Check out the amazing new features in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Kubernetes Engine (OKE).

Cloud Native Services on OCI


  • OCI Kubernetes Engine (OKE)

    Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Kubernetes Engine is a fully managed, scalable, and highly available service that you can use to deploy your containerized applications to the cloud. Use OKE when your development team wants to reliably build, deploy, and manage cloud native applications. You specify the compute resources that your applications require, then OKE provisions them in an existing tenancy on OCI.

    Read the documentation Read the documentation
  • OCI Container Registry Classic

    Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry Classic (also known as Container Registry) is an Oracle-managed registry that enables you to simplify your development-to-production workflow. Container Registry makes it easy to store, share, and manage container images (such as Docker images). With highly available and scalable OCI architecture, you can reliably deploy your applications. You don't have to worry about operational issues or scaling the underlying infrastructure.

    Read the documentationRead the documentation
  • OCI Functions

    Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Functions is a fully managed, multitenant, highly scalable, on-demand function-as-a-service platform. It is built on enterprise-grade OCI and powered by the Fn Project open source engine. Use OCI Functions (formerly known as Oracle Functions) when you want to focus on writing code to meet business needs.

    Read the documentation Read the documentation
  • OCI Container Instances

    Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Instances enables you to easily run applications on serverless compute optimized for containers. Using Container Instances, you can easily launch one or more containers with the flexibility to specify compute shape, resource allocation, networking, and other optional configurations. Container Instances run on a dedicated environment with strong isolation for improved security. You only pay for the CPU and memory resources at the same price as regular OCI Compute, making Container Instances one of the best value options for running containers in the cloud.

    Read the documentation Read the documentation
  • OCI DevOps

    Oracle Cloud Infrastructure DevOps service is a complete continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) platform for developers to simplify and automate their software development lifecycle. The OCI DevOps service enables developers and operators to collaboratively develop, build, test, and deploy software. Developers and operators get visibility across the full development lifecycle with a history of source commit through build, test, and deploy phases.

    Read the documentation Read the documentation

OCI Kubernetes Engine (formerly Container Engine for Kubernetes)

Deploying Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Kubernetes Engine (59:11)
Kubernetes on OCI Made Easy (52:50)
Kubernetes Cluster Management Made Easy (29:43)

OCI Container Instances


First principles: Inside OCI Container Instances (19:52)

OCI Container Instances deep dive (9:11)
Container Instances

Using Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Instances (36:49)

OCI Functions


Developing serverless applications on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (55:49)

Serverless functions the easy way (28:01)

Workshop: Configuring OCI Functions (1:00)

OCI Container Registry

OCI Registry

How to push a Docker image to OCI Registry using an identity cloud service user (5:03)
OCI Registry

Container image scanning, signing, and verification (3:58)