Book Image

Enterprise DevOps for Architects

By : Jeroen Mulder
4 (1)
Book Image

Enterprise DevOps for Architects

4 (1)
By: Jeroen Mulder

Overview of this book

Digital transformation is the new paradigm in enterprises, but the big question remains: is the enterprise ready for transformation using native technology embedded in Agile/DevOps? With this book, you'll see how to design, implement, and integrate DevOps in the enterprise architecture while keeping the Ops team on board and remaining resilient. The focus of the book is not to introduce the hundreds of different tools that are available for implementing DevOps, but instead to show you how to create a successful DevOps architecture. This book provides an architectural overview of DevOps, AIOps, and DevSecOps – the three domains that drive and accelerate digital transformation. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts, practical examples, and self-assessment questions, this DevOps book will help you to successfully integrate DevOps into enterprise architecture. You'll learn what AIOps is and what value it can bring to an enterprise. Lastly, you will learn how to integrate security principles such as zero-trust and industry security frameworks into DevOps with DevSecOps. By the end of this DevOps book, you'll be able to develop robust DevOps architectures, know which toolsets you can use for your DevOps implementation, and have a deeper understanding of next-level DevOps by implementing Site Reliability Engineering (SRE).
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: Architecting DevOps for Enterprises
7
Section 2: Creating the Shift Left with AIOps
13
Section 3: Bridging Security with DevSecOps

Integrating zero trust in pipelines

In the previous sections, we discussed the principles of zero trust architectures and how microservices can help us with zero trust. Next, we learned how we can have microservices interact by means of a secure service mesh. In this section, we will learn how we can achieve this with containerized applications and using cloud services that we target from CI/CD pipelines. Platforms such as AWS and Azure offer solutions for this, and we will discuss these solutions.

First, we need to understand how we add security to a service mesh. One way to do this is with sidecars. Explained in a very simple way, a sidecar is a point in a container cluster where security postures are inserted. You could envisage it as a main road where cars are driving. A car carrying specific security policies comes from a side road and inserts itself in the line of cars on the main road. However, the point where this happens is fixed.

There are various tools that offer a...