Book Image

Modern DevOps Practices

By : Gaurav Agarwal
Book Image

Modern DevOps Practices

By: Gaurav Agarwal

Overview of this book

Containers have entirely changed how developers and end-users see applications as a whole. With this book, you'll learn all about containers, their architecture and benefits, and how to implement them within your development lifecycle. You'll discover how you can transition from the traditional world of virtual machines and adopt modern ways of using DevOps to ship a package of software continuously. Starting with a quick refresher on the core concepts of containers, you'll move on to study the architectural concepts to implement modern ways of application development. You'll cover topics around Docker, Kubernetes, Ansible, Terraform, Packer, and other similar tools that will help you to build a base. As you advance, the book covers the core elements of cloud integration (AWS ECS, GKE, and other CaaS services), continuous integration, and continuous delivery (GitHub actions, Jenkins, and Spinnaker) to help you understand the essence of container management and delivery. The later sections of the book will take you through container pipeline security and GitOps (Flux CD and Terraform). By the end of this DevOps book, you'll have learned best practices for automating your development lifecycle and making the most of containers, infrastructure automation, and CaaS, and be ready to develop applications using modern tools and techniques.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Container Fundamentals and Best Practices
7
Section 2: Delivering Containers
15
Section 3: Modern DevOps with GitOps

Modern DevOps versus traditional DevOps

DevOps is a set of principles and practices, as well as a philosophy, that encourage the participation of both the development and operations teams in the entire software development life cycle, software maintenance, and operations. To implement this, organizations manage several processes and tools that help automate the software delivery process to improve speed and agility, reduce the cycle time of code release through continuous integration and delivery (CI/CD) pipelines, and monitor the applications running in production.

DevOps' traditional approach would be to establish a DevOps team consisting of Dev, QA, and Ops members and work toward the common goal to create better software quicker. While there would be a focus on automating software delivery, the automating tools such as Jenkins, Git, and so on were installed and maintained manually. This led to another problem as we now had to manage another set of IT infrastructure. It finally boiled down to infrastructure and configuration, and the focus was to automate the automation process.

With the advent of containers and the recent boom in the public cloud landscape, DevOps' modern approach came into the picture, which involved automating everything. Right from provisioning infrastructure to configuring tools and processes, there is code for everything. Now, we have infrastructure as code, configuration as code, immutable infrastructure, and containers. I call this approach to DevOps modern DevOps, and it will be the entire focus of this book.

Containers help implement modern DevOps and form the core of the practice. We'll have a look at how in the next section.