Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Interviews with four women where they discuss their careers, challenges, successes, and advice related to being a woman in the software development industry.
Roadmap for manages and executives on how to spin the API flywheel and leverage its business possibilities, also describing top tools to help with API adoption.
A detailed guide which talks about the importance of cross browser testing on older browser versions and the ways in which you can test on older browsers.
How we use TiPocket, an automated testing framework to build a full Chaos Engineering testing loop for TiDB, our distributed database. Chaos Mesh ® is an open-source chaos engineering platform for Kubernetes.
Red Hat sponsored this post. Software developers can go fast when properly motivated, and what better motivation than helping millions of people deal with the COVID-19 crisis? It didn’t take long for programmers around the world to try and help out.
Configuration-as-code, or “GitOps” as many are now calling it, is a simple but astounding idea: Standardize configuration, check it into version control; no need for each Operations/DevOps person to develop their own set of scripts to get the job done.
When software development and IT operations merge and work in a state of harmony, they create a flow that we call continuous product delivery. Ideal for project managers, this flow is the elixir to innovation and enables the agility needed to respond to changing market requirements.
In another post, we talked about blue-green deployments. In this one, we’ll learn about another deployment strategy, which shares the same advantages but is less risky and often leads to better insights. Continuous integration has changed the way we develop software.
You might be thinking, “why would anyone want to play chess in the terminal ?!”. I say, it’s a lot of fun. It is also challenging if you play against Stockfish. Yes, there’s GNU Chess available, but it is not visually appealing and the chess engine “keeps thinking” for a long time.
If you’re running Kubernetes on GKE, chances are there’s already some form of upgrades for the Kubernetes clusters in place. Given that their release cycle is quarterly, you would have a minor version bump every quarter in the upstream. This is certainly a high velocity for version releases.
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