Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
At a recent training session, Jeli spent a great deal of time covering incident retrospectives and what makes an incident worthy of studying. My colleague Ben Hartshorne asked a fascinating question, which I’ll paraphrase here: That caught me by surprise.
Metrics are an important component of monitoring and observability. They provide information about specific durations of measured occurrences. In OpenTelemetry (OTEL), metrics play a huge role in providing visibility into the performance and health of an application.
The hype has kicked in and you have finally created a Kubernetes cluster on your favorite cloud provider. A couple of developers have started using it, but everyone is deploying to default and it is starting to get cluttered. The first request comes in from a developer who wants their own cluster.
It’s Day 1 at your new job as the first DevOps or platform engineer. You fill out a bunch of HR forms, sign into Slack and get your GitHub account connected to your organization. You chat with new colleagues and explore the infrastructure you’re now responsible for operating and maintaining.
Kubernetes as a core technology has become foundational to modern application architectures and continues to expand its market presence.
Still streaming data like it’s 2011? Think back to 2011. Netflix was still making the transition from DVDs to streaming. Google+ was still a thing. And you could even occasionally catch someone chatting on a Windows Phone.
Last year, we made available an experimental alpha Ansible Content Collection of generated modules using the AWS Cloud Control API to interact with AWS services.
Ambassador Labs sponsored this post. Ambassador Labs is under common control with TNS. Within the growing cloud native development space, consensus has emerged around Kubernetes as the de facto standard for organizations.
Marc Linster is the chief technology officer of EnterpriseDB (EDB), which offers a high-performance supported version of the open source PostgreSQL (or Potsgres) relational database system.
With AWS Service Catalog, you can create, govern, and manage a catalog of infrastructure as code (IaC) templates that are approved for use on AWS.
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