Release Notes
Making open source more inclusive
Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. We are beginning with these four terms: master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist. Because of the enormity of this endeavor, these changes will be implemented gradually over several upcoming releases. For more details, see our CTO Chris Wright’s message.
1. New features
This section describes the new features of the Migration Toolkit for Applications (MTA) 6.0.0.
New application portfolio driven UI that enables organizations to manage and classify their applications using an extensible tagging model.
A questionnaire based tool that assesses the suitability of applications for deployment in containers within an enterprise Kubernetes platform, highlighting potential risks that should be considered when deciding which migration strategy to follow.
Dedicated perspective to manage tool-wide configuration, it has a similar approach and design to the OpenShift Administrator Perspective.
Three new differentiated personas with different permissions — Administrator, Architect and Migrator.
Full integration with source code (Git, Subversion) and binaries (Maven) repositories to automate the retrieval of applications for analysis.
Secure store for multiple credential types (source control, Maven settings files, proxy). Credentials are managed by Administrators and assigned by Architects to applications.
HTTP and HTTPS proxy configuration can be managed in the MTA UI.
Aside from source and binary analysis modes, now MTA includes the Source + Dependencies mode that parses the POM file available in the source repository to gather dependencies from corporate or public artifact repositories, adding them to the scope of the analysis.
Simplified user experience to configure the analysis scope, with the possibility to force the analysis of known Open Source libraries.
MTA can now be optionally deployed without Keycloak, allowing full unauthenticated admin access to the tool. This is especially useful when deploying the tool in resource constrained environments like local instances of Minikube, where only a single user would have access to it.
New transformation targets have been added to MTA:
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OpenJDK 11 to OpenJDK 17
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EAP and Spring Boot applications to Azure App Service
MTA lifecycle is now managed by a new operator with Capability Level II, allowing seamless upgrades between GA versions.
A new transaction report is now available in the application analysis reports. This new option analyzes the application data layer and provides detailed information about how transactions propagate across different layers, expressing it as a sequence of service entries, call graphs and SQL statements.
Important
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Transaction report is provided as Technology Preview only. Technology Preview features are not supported with Red Hat production service level agreements (SLAs), might not be functionally complete, and Red Hat does not recommend to use them for production. These features provide early access to upcoming product features, enabling customers to test functionality and provide feedback during the development process. See Technology Preview features support scope on the Red Hat Customer Portal for information about the support scope for Technology Preview features. |
2. Known issues
At the time of release, there are no known issues in this release.
3. Resolved issues
At the time of the release, there are no resolved issues for this release.