Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
I’ve worked with close to 200 startups over the years. So I’ve seen a lot of stuff. Some of the get-rich-quick managed to get broke even quicker. And others saw great engineers leave behind a clunky maze of an architecture with little or no documtation.
By most accounts, 2020 was set to be a pretty good year for U.S. gross domestic product and enterprise IT budgets. That was before the novel coronavirus, and the subsequent economic shutdown that is designed to blunt its spread and avoid overwhelming the nation’s health system.
Last time we talked about the pros and cons of DevOps as a Service. There we mentioned AWS and Google Cloud Platform as the main platforms that are frequently used by DevOps. Why can’t we make a small comparison for them? Sure, there’s also Microsoft Azure among the giants.
Everyday, we use numerous scripts, tools and applications, sometimes on multiple operating systems and lately, on multiple mobile platforms.
Due to increased outsourcing, digitization, and globalization, vendor risk management has become a top concern for CISOs and senior management around the world.
I’ve often seen, and have been responsible for, throwing code into packages without much thought. I’ve quickly drawn a line in the sand and started putting code into different folders (which in Go are different packages by definition) just for the sake of findability.
We develop several — mostly Kubernetes-related — Open Source tools, and loghouse is one of the most popular. It is our solution for centralized logging in K8s that has been initially announced over two years ago.
Volumes in Kubernetes can be thought of as a directory that is accessible to the containers in a pod. Volumes help you persist data even if your container restarts. There are different types of volumes in Kubernetes and the type defines how the volume is created and it’s content.
Since last week’s update, the global health pandemic continues to impact every organization—large or small—their employees, and the customers they serve.
With the popularity of containers growing every day,have you ever wondered what docker and a container actually is?…Well if you are searching for answers,you are indeed in a right place. Lets get on point,Docker is a open-source containerization platform for building and maintaining containers.
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