Book Image

Practical DevOps - Second Edition

By : joakim verona
Book Image

Practical DevOps - Second Edition

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 code workflows from testing environments to production environments. It stresses cooperation between different roles, and how they can work together more closely, as the roots of the word imply—Development and Operations. Practical DevOps begins with a quick refresher on DevOps and continuous delivery and quickly moves on to show you how DevOps affects software architectures. You'll create a sample enterprise Java application that you’'ll continue to work with through the remaining chapters. Following this, you will explore various code storage and build server options. You will then learn how to test your code with a few tools and deploy your test successfully. In addition to this, you will also see how to monitor code for any anomalies and make sure that it runs as expected. Finally, you will discover how to handle logs and keep track of the issues that affect different processes. By the end of the book, you will be familiar with all the tools needed to deploy, integrate, and deliver efficiently with DevOps.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Large binary files

GitHub and GitLab are pretty similar but do have some differences. One of them springs from the fact that source code systems such as Git traditionally didn't cater much for the storage of large binary files. There have always been other ways, such as storing file paths to a file server in plain text files.

But what if you actually have files that are, in a sense, equivalent to source files, except that they are binary, and you still want to version them? Such file types might include image files, video files, and audio files. Modern websites make increasing use of media files, and this area has typically been the domain of content management systems (CMSes). CMSes, however nice they might be, have disadvantages compared to DevOps flows, so the allure of storing media files in your ordinary source handling system is strong. Disadvantages of CMSes include...