Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Kubernetes, also known as K8s (where 8 represents the number of letters between K and S!) is the most widely used and trending open source tool nowadays. It is a system used for automating the deployment, scaling, and management of containerised applications.
In the traditional IT dev process. Security gets involved at the end of the stack (of an application or software). Every now and then, the Dev team will request security scans of their applications from the security teams. This applies even in a team that works in DevOps fashion.
Data modeling tools are critical because they enable organizations to make data-driven decisions and meet varied business goals.
This post was originally published on Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at cloudwithchris.com. Okay, part 3! At this point, I’m assuming that you have already familiarised yourself with part 1 and part 2 of the series. As a quick recap, part 1 focused on why we would consider using GPG Keys in general.
LaunchDarkly is sponsoring our coverage of KubeCon+CloudNativeCon 2021. Conventionally, we run Kubernetes on top of a standard Linux distribution.
This post was originally published on Wed, Mar 3, 2021 at cloudwithchris.com. Hopefully by now you’ve had a chance to read part 1 of this series, which explains why you may be interested in using GPG keys to sign your commits.
Not all SQL applications are fully compatible with cloud-native database services such as Azure SQL (PaaS) or CosmosDB, and Azure SQL Managed Instance (Managed IaaS) which provides higher compatibility may be too expensive an option or require application changes to fully exploit (e.g.
This post was originally published on Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at cloudwithchris.com. Part 4 — The final part (at least for now, until I find somewhere else that we can expand on with this)! This part will focus on porting the keys that we have recently generated onto our YubiKey device.
By the end of this AWS Lambda optimization article, you will have a workflow of continuously monitoring and improving your Lambda functions and getting alerts on failures.
My occasional reminder that “Change is good, but predictability is better,” is in the form of a message to DevOps upper management. I thought it would be fun to write, and would offer a different perspective and drive than normal. Hope you enjoy! Too much of anything is bad.
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