Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
We’re living in a cloud-native age. That means that many of the paradigms that worked in the days of on-premises hosting no longer suffice. Chief among them is security.
BookStack is a free and open source tool that helps you create documentation for your project. It is a simple and self-hosted platform for organizing and storing information. It is written in PHP and uses Laravel.
One of the many challenges when building an application is ensuring that it's secure. Whether you're storing hashed passwords, sanitizing user inputs, or even just constantly updating package dependencies to the latest and greatest, the effort to attain a secure application is never-ending.
The Internet of Things (IoT) brings plenty of opportunities for System Integrators (SI). The topic is hot, and customers are keen to harvest value from smart connected devices, digital twins, and IoT-enabled business processes.
This post is the beginning of a short series I'm creating to document my current coding style. Everyone's coding style is going to be a bit different, but whatever their style is should be dictated by their values as a software developer.
The AWS Summit brings together the cloud computing community to connect, collaborate and learn about AWS. This year’s summit proved to be the largest one-day summit on the planet for AWS with over 12.000 attendees.
This sentence is the last mention of the word DevOps in this article. The word has lost all meaning, or at least it now has a very different meaning to its original intent. Originally it had as much meaning to devs as it did to ops folks. Now it seems to have shifted towards the latter community.
This is the first in a three part series on looking at creating "local" microservices. What I mean by local microservices is pass by reference microservices running in the same process. Right now, I see microservices similar to the original EJB 1.0 specification.
We have walked a long path already in this journey. In the first article, we briefly described how the IT industry has evolved to the point we are now. Next, in the second article, we defined how the architecture of our solution what will look like.
This post will show you how to implement a kind of "expiration" for your data objects. The strategy is sufficiently abstract, so it's applicable to any resource you need to expire, including files, logs, and so on.
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