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

Introduction to IaC

IaC is the concept of using code to define infrastructure. While most people can visualize infrastructure as tangible, virtual infrastructure is already commonplace and has existed for around two decades. Cloud providers provide a web-based console through which you can manage your infrastructure intuitively. But the process is not repeatable or recorded.

If you spin up a set of infrastructure components using the console in one environment and want to replicate it in another, it is a duplication of effort. To solve this problem, cloud platforms provide APIs to manipulate resources within the cloud and some command-line tools that can help trigger the APIs. You can then start writing scripts using commands to create the infrastructure and parameterize them to use the same scripts in another environment. Well, that kind of solves the problem, right?

Not really! Writing scripts is an imperative way of managing infrastructure. Though you can still call it IaC...