Book Image

DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift

By : Tim Beattie, Mike Hepburn, Noel O'Connor, Donal Spring, Ilaria Doria
Book Image

DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift

By: Tim Beattie, Mike Hepburn, Noel O'Connor, Donal Spring, Ilaria Doria

Overview of this book

DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift features many different real-world practices - some people-related, some process-related, some technology-related - to facilitate successful DevOps, and in turn OpenShift, adoption within your organization. It introduces many DevOps concepts and tools to connect culture and practice through a continuous loop of discovery, pivots, and delivery underpinned by a foundation of collaboration and software engineering. Containers and container-centric application lifecycle management are now an industry standard, and OpenShift has a leading position in a flourishing market of enterprise Kubernetes-based product offerings. DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift provides a roadmap for building empowered product teams within your organization. This guide brings together lean, agile, design thinking, DevOps, culture, facilitation, and hands-on technical enablement all in one book. Through a combination of real-world stories, a practical case study, facilitation guides, and technical implementation details, DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift provides tools and techniques to build a DevOps culture within your organization on Red Hat's OpenShift Container Platform.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
Free Chapter
2
Section 1: Practices Make Perfect
6
Section 2: Establishing the Foundation
11
Section 3: Discover It
15
Section 4: Prioritize It
17
Section 5: Deliver It
20
Section 6: Build It, Run It, Own It
24
Section 7: Improve It, Sustain It
27
Index
Appendix B – Additional Learning Resources

Pipelines and Quality Gates (Non-functionals)

Quality is often just focused on whether tests pass or not. However there's also the concept of code quality. The code may perform as expected but the manner in which it's been written could be so poor that it could be a future source of problems when changes are added. So now it's time to check the quality of our code.

SonarQube

As part of the Ubiquitous Journey, we have automated the Helm chart deployment of SonarQube, which we are using to test and measure code quality. In values-tooling.yaml, the SonarQube stanza references the Helm chart and any extra plugins that are required. Many of the common language profile plugins are already deployed with the base version of SonarQube, for example, Java, JavaScript, and Typescript. We add in extra plugin entries for Checkstyle, our Java formatting check tool, and a dependency checker for detecting publicly disclosed vulnerabilities contained within project dependencies...