Book Image

Go for DevOps

By : John Doak, David Justice
5 (1)
Book Image

Go for DevOps

5 (1)
By: John Doak, David Justice

Overview of this book

Go is the go-to language for DevOps libraries and services, and without it, achieving fast and safe automation is a challenge. With the help of Go for DevOps, you'll learn how to deliver services with ease and safety, becoming a better DevOps engineer in the process. Some of the key things this book will teach you are how to write Go software to automate configuration management, update remote machines, author custom automation in GitHub Actions, and interact with Kubernetes. As you advance through the chapters, you'll explore how to automate the cloud using software development kits (SDKs), extend HashiCorp's Terraform and Packer using Go, develop your own DevOps services with gRPC and REST, design system agents, and build robust workflow systems. By the end of this Go for DevOps book, you'll understand how to apply development principles to automate operations and provide operational insights using Go, which will allow you to react quickly to resolve system failures before your customers realize something has gone wrong.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Up and Running with Go
10
Section 2: Instrumenting, Observing, and Responding
14
Section 3: Cloud ready Go

Understanding the basics of GitHub Actions

GitHub Actions are event-driven automation tasks that live within a GitHub repository. An event like a pull request can trigger a set of tasks to be executed. An example is a pull request triggering a set of tasks to clone the Git repository and execute go test to run Go tests.

GitHub Actions is extremely flexible, enabling developers to author a wide variety of automations, even some that you might not normally associate with a traditional continuous integration/release pipeline. Actions are also composable, enabling groups of tasks to be packaged together as a published action and used in workflows together with other actions.

In this section, you will learn about the components of a GitHub Action: workflows, events, context and expressions, jobs, steps, and actions. After you have been introduced to these components, we'll build and trigger our first GitHub Action.

Exploring the components of a GitHub Action

Understanding...