Book Image

Implementing Azure DevOps Solutions

By : Henry Been, Maik van der Gaag
Book Image

Implementing Azure DevOps Solutions

By: Henry Been, Maik van der Gaag

Overview of this book

Implementing Azure DevOps Solutions helps DevOps engineers and administrators to leverage Azure DevOps Services to master practices such as continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD), containerization, and zero downtime deployments. This book starts with the basics of continuous integration, continuous delivery, and automated deployments. You will then learn how to apply configuration management and Infrastructure as Code (IaC) along with managing databases in DevOps scenarios. Next, you will delve into fitting security and compliance with DevOps. As you advance, you will explore how to instrument applications, and gather metrics to understand application usage and user behavior. The latter part of this book will help you implement a container build strategy and manage Azure Kubernetes Services. Lastly, you will understand how to create your own Azure DevOps organization, along with covering quick tips and tricks to confidently apply effective DevOps practices. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained the knowledge you need to ensure seamless application deployments and business continuity.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting to Continuous Delivery
6
Section 2: Expanding your DevOps Pipeline
12
Section 3: Closing the Loop
15
Section 4: Advanced Topics

Implementing Dependency Management

  1. You are using Azure Artifacts for hosting NuGet packages that your team creates. You have a new requirement for making one (and only one) of the packages that you create available to all other teams in your organization. Which of the following are valid solutions? [Choose more than one.]
    1. You create a new feed and allow any user in your Azure Active Directory to use packages from this feed. You move the package to be shared to this feed.
    2. You allow all users within your organization to use your existing feed.
    3. You create a new feed and allow any user in your organization to use packages from this feed. You move the package to be shared to this view.
    4. You create a new view in your existing feed and publish the package to be shared to this view. Next, you configure that all members of your organization can read packages from this view.
    5. You add your...