Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Introduction Traditionally SRE (Site Reliability Engineering) oriented teams have used Kanban for working and getting their tasks done. But that causes fewer releases of tools, products during the Release cycle which they might have developed for internal consumption by other teams.
Recently I started updating one of our deployment tools to utilize helm3. The current tool is a golang app which, given the path to a helm chart and kubeconfig, will deploy to all our production namespaces (in that cluster) at once using helm (will write a separate blog on this later).
Matt Stratton: I can make stuff up. Trust me. I’m good at that. Matt: It’s time for “Arrested DevOps,” the podcast that helps you achieve understanding, develop good practices, and operate your team and organization for maximum DevOps’ awesomeness. I’m your host, Matt Stratton.
There was a time in the not too distant past when IT Leaders said, “Oh Yes, we have the toolset for that” in response to questions around automated testing or even performance and security testing.
The addition of the PowerShell Dev Mode to Visual Studio 2019 was a great thing for developers that do their own DevOps. Now we have a proper environment in PowerShell for automating MSBUILD and here’s a technique to make it available to be launched in your current session.
Nadav's journey to VP of R&D for a hot security start-up began in an elite Israeli military intel unit. See his secrets for getting promoted & building elite dev teams.
Introduction to KEDA—event-driven autoscaler for Kubernetes, Apache Camel, and ActiveMQ Artimis—and how to use it to scale a Java microservice on Kubernetes. Recently, I've been having a look around at autoscaling options for applications deployed onto Kubernetes.
This post was contributed by James Bland, Sr. Partner Solutions Architect, AWS, Jay Yeras, Head of Cloud and Cloud Native Solution Architecture, Snyk, and Venkat Subramanian, Group Product Manager, Bitbucket
Federico invites Michael onto the Quality Sense podcast to discuss his unique approach to testing and how he arrived there.
Nowadays, using Docker as an infrastructure container for local testing purposes is becoming more and more common. Many times developers exploit docker-compose functionality to create an infrastructure stack that contains their application, web server, and databases in different docker containers.
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