Book Image

Practical DevOps

By : joakim verona
Book Image

Practical DevOps

By: joakim verona

Overview of this book

DevOps is a practical field that focuses on delivering business value as efficiently as possible. DevOps encompasses all the flows from code through testing environments to production environments. It stresses the cooperation between different roles, and how they can work together more closely, as the roots of the word imply—Development and Operations. After a quick refresher to DevOps and continuous delivery, we quickly move on to looking at how DevOps affects architecture. You'll create a sample enterprise Java application that you’ll continue to work with through the remaining chapters. Following this, we explore various code storage and build server options. You will then learn how to perform code testing with a few tools and deploy your test successfully. Next, you will learn how to monitor code for any anomalies and make sure it’s running properly. Finally, you will discover how to handle logs and keep track of the issues that affect processes
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Practical DevOps
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

A look at the Jenkins filesystem layout


It is often useful to know where builds wind up in the filesystem.

In the case of the Fedora package, the Jenkins jobs are stored here:

/var/lib/jenkins/jobs

Each job gets its own directory, and the job description XML is stored in this directory as well as a directory for the build called workspace. The job's XML files can be backed up to another server in order to be able to rebuild the Jenkins server in the event of a catastrophic failure. There are dedicated backup plugins for this purpose as well.

Builds can consume a lot of space, so it may sometimes happen that you need to clean out this space manually.

This shouldn't be the normal case, of course. You should configure Jenkins to only leave the number of builds you have space for. You can also configure your configuration management tool to clear out space if needed.

Another reason you might need to delve into the filesystem is when a build mysteriously fails, and you need to debug the cause of...