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Learning DevOps

Learning DevOps

By : Mikael Krief
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Learning DevOps

Learning DevOps

4 (4)
By: Mikael Krief

Overview of this book

The implementation of DevOps processes requires the efficient use of various tools, and the choice of these tools is crucial for the sustainability of projects and collaboration between development (Dev) and operations (Ops). This book presents the different patterns and tools that you can use to provision and configure an infrastructure in the cloud. You'll begin by understanding DevOps culture, the application of DevOps in cloud infrastructure, provisioning with Terraform, configuration with Ansible, and image building with Packer. You'll then be taken through source code versioning with Git and the construction of a DevOps CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins, GitLab CI, and Azure Pipelines. This DevOps handbook will also guide you in containerizing and deploying your applications with Docker and Kubernetes. You'll learn how to reduce deployment downtime with blue-green deployment and the feature flags technique, and study DevOps practices for open source projects. Finally, you'll grasp some best practices for reducing the overall application lead time to ensure faster time to market. By the end of this book, you'll have built a solid foundation in DevOps, and developed the skills necessary to enhance a traditional software delivery process using modern software delivery tools and techniques
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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Section 1: DevOps and Infrastructure as Code
6
Section 2: DevOps CI/CD Pipeline
9
Section 3: Containerized Applications with Docker and Kubernetes
12
Section 4: Testing Your Application
16
Section 5: Taking DevOps Further

Understanding blue-green deployment concepts and patterns

Blue-green deployment is a practice that allows us to deploy a new version of an application in production without impacting the current version of the application. In this approach, the production architecture must be composed of two identical environments; one environment is known as the blue environment while the other is known as the green environment.

The element that allows routing from one environment to another is a router—that is, a load balancer.

The following diagram shows a simplified schematic of a blue-green architecture:

Figure 15.2 – Blue-green architecture

Figure 15.2 – Blue-green architecture

As we can see, there are two identical environments—the environment called blue, which is the current version of the application, and the environment called green, which is the new version or the next version of the application. We can also see a router, which redirects users' requests either to...

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Learning DevOps
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