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 Terraform

Terraform (https://www.terraform.io/) is an open source IaC tool written in Go and created by HashiCorp that provides a consistent command-line experience for managing a wide variety of resources. With Terraform, infrastructure engineers define the desired state of a set of hierarchical resources using declarative Terraform configuration files or with imperative code (https://www.terraform.io/cdktf), which results in Terraform configurations files. These configuration files are the code in IaC. They can be used to manage the full life cycle of creating, mutating, and destroying resources, plan and predict changes to resources, provide a graph of dependencies in complex resource topologies, and store the last observed state of a system.

Terraform is simple to get started and has a fairly linear learning curve. There are many features of Terraform we will not cover in this chapter that will be useful as you deepen your adoption of the tool. The...