Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
I attended the CloudNative conference last month, and although it was weighted towards open source and Docker, Kubernetes and containerisation (say all 3 fast and you sound clever), the core principles were more relevant than ever.
Our goals are simple — one frontend for different backends. Build once, reuse everywhere. We did it with Angular 8 and docker-compose, and we are deploying our Angular application without rebuilding it for different backends.
re:Invent 2019 is fast approaching (NEXT WEEK!) and we here at the AWS DevOps blog wanted to take a moment to highlight DevOps focused presentations, share some tips from experienced re:Invent pro’s, and highlight a few sessions that still have availability for pre-registration.
At Natural Intelligence we use Airflow extensively in order to create simple ETL flows as well as complex ML tasks that run on terabytes of data. However, with its great power, Airflow also presents great complexity and many pitfalls.
Hey everyone! I’m sure your minds are currently full of travel chores, meeting your families, Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping rush, and holiday prep. We’ve been also prepping for the holidays and have a present for you — Docksal v1.13.0.
The Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) team at Glasswall is responsible for making sure our SaaS FileTrust platform is as reliable as possible for our end-users, whilst ensuring this focus on reliability doesn’t hamper innovation in terms of new product features.
This is a small tutorial about how to install and setup Ingress support with Kubernetes. In particular, we’ll use the popular nginx-ingress ingress controller along with external-dns to rgister DNS records with Amazon Route53 service.
It would be hard to overstate the importance of avoiding downtime. Every minute your website is inaccessible represents both a financial and customer relations hit. The cumulative effect can lead to catastrophic consequences for e-commerce sites, in particular.
If you’re in any industry long enough, you know that the BIG Guys will eventually eat your lunch. In the tech industry, this can be done directly or more commonly indirectly. Raising prices. Disabling features. Requiring “bundling” on stuff you don’t want.
I head product and engineering for Grofers, the largest online grocer in India. Grofers has grown by over 11x — from $60MM in GMV to nearly $700MM — in the last 24 months.
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