Book Image

AWS DevOps Simplified

By : Akshay Kapoor
Book Image

AWS DevOps Simplified

By: Akshay Kapoor

Overview of this book

DevOps and AWS are the two key enablers for the success of any modern software-run business. DevOps accelerates software delivery, while AWS offers a plethora of services, allowing developers to prioritize business outcomes without worrying about undifferentiated heavy lifting. This book focuses on the synergy between them, equipping you with strong foundations, hands-on examples, and a strategy to accelerate your DevOps journey on AWS. AWS DevOps Simplified is a practical guide that starts with an introduction to AWS DevOps offerings and aids you in choosing a cloud service that fits your company's operating model. Following this, it provides hands-on tutorials on the GitOps approach to software delivery, covering immutable infrastructure and pipelines, using tools such as Packer, CDK, and CodeBuild/CodeDeploy. Additionally, it provides you with a deep understanding of AWS container services and how to implement observability and DevSecOps best practices to build and operate your multi-account, multi-Region AWS environments. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped with solutions and ready-to-deploy code samples that address common DevOps challenges faced by enterprises hosting workloads in the cloud.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1 Driving Transformation through AWS and DevOps
5
Part 2 Faster Software Delivery with Consistent and Reproducible Environments
9
Part 3 Security and Observability of Containerized Workloads
13
Part 4 Taking the Next Steps

A quick introduction to the container ecosystem

If you’ve not been exposed to containers in your software landscape yet, then this is the introduction for you. I will try to keep it short since there are great resources on the internet if you wish to dive deep into the technology.

What are containers and why do we need them?

Containers are not a new idea. They have been around for many years in the Solaris, FreeBSD, and Unix operating systems as Solaris Zones, Jails, and Chroot, respectively. In the compute space, we have already experienced a lot of innovations that raise the technical maturity bar while abstracting the underlying complexity. We started with bare-metal servers, moved onto virtual machines for hardware-level virtualization, started using containers for software virtualization, and now have serverless technologies that abstract all of it away from the end user. However, in comparison to serverless technologies, containers are still heavily used due to the...