Book Image

Accelerate DevOps with GitHub

By : Michael Kaufmann
Book Image

Accelerate DevOps with GitHub

By: Michael Kaufmann

Overview of this book

This practical guide to DevOps uses GitHub as the DevOps platform and shows how you can leverage the power of GitHub for collaboration, lean management, and secure and fast software delivery. The chapters provide simple solutions to common problems, thereby helping teams that are already on their DevOps journey to further advance into DevOps and speed up their software delivery performance. From finding the right metrics to measure your success to learning from other teams’ success stories without merely copying what they’ve done, this book has it all in one place. As you advance, you’ll find out how you can leverage the power of GitHub to accelerate your value delivery – by making work visible with GitHub Projects, measuring the right metrics with GitHub Insights, using solid and proven engineering practices with GitHub Actions and Advanced Security, and moving to event-based and loosely coupled software architecture. By the end of this GitHub book, you'll have understood what factors influence software delivery performance and how you can measure your capabilities, thus realizing where you stand in your journey and how you can move forward.
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
1
Part 1: Lean Management and Collaboration
7
Part 2: Engineering DevOps Practices
14
Part 3: Release with Confidence
19
Part 4: Software Architecture
22
Part 5: Lean Product Management
25
Part 6: GitHub for your Enterprise

The benefits of Feature Flags

Managing the lifecycle of a feature without using Feature Flags is impossible, but there are many other use cases where Feature Flags can bring value to your DevOps teams:

  • Release flags: These are used to roll out code behind a flag. Release flags normally stay in the code until the feature is rolled out completely. This can be weeks or months. Release flags change with each deployment or with the system's configuration. This means they can be implemented very easily by just reading a configuration value. But if you want to use release flags for canary releases (gradually exposing the feature to more and more users) or blue-green deployments (swapping staging and production environments), they are much more dynamic.
  • Experimentation flags: If you roll out multiple versions of the same feature and expose it to different audiences, it is called A/B testing or experimentation. It is normally used to confirm or diminish a hypothesis by measuring...