Book Image

Practical DevOps

By : joakim verona
Book Image

Practical DevOps

By: joakim verona

Overview of this book

DevOps is a practical field that focuses on delivering business value as efficiently as possible. DevOps encompasses all the flows from code through testing environments to production environments. It stresses the cooperation between different roles, and how they can work together more closely, as the roots of the word imply—Development and Operations. After a quick refresher to DevOps and continuous delivery, we quickly move on to looking at how DevOps affects architecture. You'll create a sample enterprise Java application that you’ll continue to work with through the remaining chapters. Following this, we explore various code storage and build server options. You will then learn how to perform code testing with a few tools and deploy your test successfully. Next, you will learn how to monitor code for any anomalies and make sure it’s running properly. Finally, you will discover how to handle logs and keep track of the issues that affect processes
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Practical DevOps
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

All the trackers


Next, we will explore a selection of different issue tracker systems. They are all easy to try out before you commit to an actual deployment. Most are free, but some proprietary alternatives are also mentioned.

All the trackers mentioned here are present on the comparison page on Wikipedia at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_issue-tracking_systems.

Since we can only explore a selection of issue trackers, the following were chosen because they exhibit differences due to different design choices. Bugzilla was designed for large-scale public-facing trackers. Trac was designed for simplicity and tool integration. Redmine as a fully featured project management tool with an issue tracker. The GitLab tracker was chosen for simplicity, and Git integration and Jira for usability.

We begin our issue tracker exploration with Bugzilla, since it is one of the earliest issue trackers and is still popular. This means that its flows are pretty mature since they have proven themselves...