Book Image

Modern DevOps Practices - Second Edition

By : Gaurav Agarwal
Book Image

Modern DevOps Practices - Second Edition

By: Gaurav Agarwal

Overview of this book

DevOps and the cloud have changed how we look at software development and operations like never before, leading to the rapid growth of various DevOps tools, techniques, and practices. This updated edition helps you pick up the right tools by providing you with everything you need to get started with your DevOps journey. The book begins by introducing you to modern cloud-native architecture, and then teaches you about the architectural concepts needed to implement the modern way of application development. The next set of chapters helps you get familiarized with Git, Docker, Kubernetes, Ansible, Terraform, Packer, and other similar tools to enable you to build a base. As you advance, you’ll explore the core elements of cloud integration—AWS ECS, GKE, and other CaaS services. The chapters also discuss GitOps, continuous integration, and continuous delivery—GitHub actions, Jenkins, and Argo CD—to help you understand the essence of modern app delivery. Later, you’ll operate your container app in production using a service mesh and apply AI in DevOps. Throughout the book, you’ll discover best practices for automating and managing your development lifecycle, infrastructure, containers, and more. By the end of this DevOps book, you'll be well-equipped to develop and operate applications using modern tools and techniques.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1:Modern DevOps Fundamentals
6
Part 2:Container Orchestration and Serverless
10
Part 3:Managing Config and Infrastructure
14
Part 4:Delivering Applications with GitOps
18
Part 5:Operating Applications in Production

The need for serverless offerings

Numerous organizations, so far, have been focusing a lot on infrastructure provisioning and management. They optimize the number of resources, machines, and infrastructure surrounding the applications they build. However, they should focus on what they do best—software development. Unless your organization wants to invest heavily in an expensive infrastructure team to do a lot of heavy lifting behind the scenes, you’d be better off concentrating on writing and building quality applications rather than focusing on where and how to run and optimize them.

Serverless offerings come as a reprieve for this problem. Instead of concentrating on how to host your infrastructure to run your applications, you can declare what you want to run, and the serverless offering manages it for you. This has become a boon for small enterprises that do not have the budget to invest heavily in infrastructure and want to get started quickly without wasting...