Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Kubernetes is a fantastic platform to run resilient applications and services at scale. But let's face it, getting started with Kubernetes can be challenging. The path that code must take from the repository to a Kubernetes cluster can be dark and full of terrors.
Most commercial software applications are created with a set of complex business requirements to solve specific business problems or needs.
One of the biggest challenges in developing cloud-native applications today is speeding up the number of your deployments.
A connected factory, a robotic arm, and a power drill walk into a bar. The bartender asks them for data. All three start yelling at the same time. The bartender walks out. The next day, his body is found in a trough of disillusionment outside the old Gartner place. The data wars had begun…
One of the key communication tools in software development is source control. This is how teams communicate that a change has been made and it is ready for use. Certainly this is true within a culture that facilitates DevOps where small changes are released frequently i.e.
In our team, multiple people handle the production environment, which is in Kubernets. For every service, we maintain a separate Kubernets secret file. The problem is whenever a secret value changes, it’s hard to distribute among maintainer and it’s also hard to keep track of change.
I was alarmed to read this week that the Alabama Senate has passed a bill to outlaw abortion under almost all circumstances, including cases of rape and/or incest. Under the bill, doctors face 10 years in prison for attempting to terminate a pregnancy and 99 years for carrying out the procedure.
We are excited to announce werf — Open Source, Go-native and simply powerful DevOps tool bringing the CI/CD implementation based on Kubernetes to the next level. DevOps itself is all about tight collaboration of different teams and their skills.
Have you ever found yourself trying to reconstruct an event from the past only to come up blank because you cannot go so far back in time? If only you could bring back that missing piece of the puzzle! In the world of IT, logs are the way machines and software record events.
I’ve finally read the seminal DevOps book The Phoenix Project, after numerous people recommended it. It is a quick and fun read, and if you have even a tiny bit of IT ops experience, it will definitely resonate and maybe even be helpful.
Have valuable insights to share with the DevOps community? Submit your article for publication.
Get the latest DevOps news, tools, and insights delivered to your inbox.
Made with pure grit © 2026 Jetpack Labs Inc. All rights reserved. www.jetpacklabs.com