Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Coming along the road to battle between Dev and Ops, earlier we used to face tussles in between Dev and QA, Many thanks to DDD which helped to mitigate that gap, These days the heat is more on the conversations in between Dev and Ops related to automation during CI/CD or provisioning the infrastruct
This post is slightly different from my usual. Instead of providing some solution I will lay out here the problem and some thoughts about it.
We all love to work with command line right? At least I love the ease of just opening a console and write a command to accomplish a task. I agree it may seem overwhelming at first but once we get used to it, a command line is our friend.
There’s a lot written about how the way developers structure their daily work can cause unproductivity. An example is when unnecessary meetings are scheduled across the day so nobody can get into deep focus mode.
To be a maintainer of an email server is hard. One can’t simply apt install default-mta to get a healthy and robust email system. Even now it still requires extra work.
You may (or may not) be surprised to hear that software developers are among the most sought-after professionals today. As we propel into the future and greater aspects of life move online, we will rely on these engineers of the new world.
Since I work at a DevOps company, I should know what Kubernetes is. “Kubernetes, or k8s (k, 8 characters, s… get it?), or ‘kube’ if you’re into brevity, is an open source platform that automates Linux container operations.
In this tutorial, we will configure a Jenkins pipeline on Kubernetes that leverages Jenkins and Webhook Relay operators. Jenkins Kubernetes operator will be creating Jenkins instances with a predefined seed job.
As part of the Microsoft Azure Training Day, we’ve hosted a few sessions on Azure AI. We’ll be sharing these in a series of blogs. In the fifth episode of this series you’ll learn more about the process of putting machine learning models into a pipeline.
Pulumi, an open source cloud development platform that supports multiple languages and platforms, allows programming and managing cloud environments using a consistent model and the power of full programing languages.
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