Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Our mission statement: To make learning backend engineering skills as fun and simple as it can be. Our vision statement? We don’t have one because they’re a bit dumb. What values inform our culture? 🔗 Integrity? Honesty? Excellence? Teamwork? Barf.
In today’s cloud native world, managing permissions and access control has become a critical challenge for many organizations. As applications and microservices become more distributed, it’s essential to ensure that only the right people and systems have access to the right resources.
Kubefirst delivers instant GitOps platforms made from popular free and open source cloud native tools. We’ve supported the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud for years and love how well our platform runs on Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS).
As API usage continues to grow, so too does the need to secure APIs to prevent incidents, leakages, and outages. Authorization schemes have begun to gather attention from industry consortiums and vendors, with many seeking to address this longstanding and worsening set of API risks.
Software organizations need to store data and expose it over the internet to user-based applications. The standard way to manage this is to host APIs. In the following diagram, API endpoints are called by both web and mobile clients.
Cloud-focused attacks have soared in recent years, with attackers growing more sophisticated, brazen and determined in cloud exploitation, according to a new report.
Editor’s note: This is Part One of a two-part series on WebAssembly and the programming language Go. You can read the second part here. WebAssembly (Wasm) and Go are a powerful combination for building efficient and high-performance web applications.
WebAssembly (Wasm) and Golang (Go) are a dynamic duo for high-performance web applications due to their specific features and advantages. Wasm is a binary instruction format that allows running code at near-native speed in modern web browsers.
In the modern world, information — and money — is digital. Its flow around the world leaves a trail as it moves through onshore and offshore intermediaries, such as lawyers, accountants and banks, and is transformed into other assets, such as property, private jets and yachts.
Let me set the stage: You’re just starting your journey into Kubernetes and you’re thrilled at the idea of developing your first application or service. Your first step is to deploy a Kubernetes cluster so you can start building but almost immediately realize how challenging a task that is.
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