Book Image

Practical OneOps

By : Nilesh Nimkar
Book Image

Practical OneOps

By: Nilesh Nimkar

Overview of this book

Walmart’s OneOps is an open source DevOps platform that is used for cloud and application lifecycle management. It can manage critical and complex application workload on any multi cloud-based infrastructure and revolutionizes the way administrators, developers, and engineers develop and launch new products. This practical book focuses on real-life cases and hands-on scenarios to develop, launch, and test your applications faster, so you can implement the DevOps process using OneOps. You will be exposed to the fundamental aspects of OneOps starting with installing, deploying, and configuring OneOps in a test environment, which will also come in handy later for development and debugging. You will also learn about design and architecture, and work through steps to perform enterprise level deployment. You will understand the initial setup of OneOps such as creating organization, teams, and access management. Finally, you will be taught how to configure, repair, scale, and extend applications across various cloud platforms.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Practical OneOps
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Maintaining your assembly


Once your assembly is deployed, you can also maintain it by issuing commands and querying various parameters related to it using the REST API. Although it is highly recommended that you use OneOps to maintain all the aspects of your deployment since it comes with robust monitoring, querying, and data gathering tools, you can also query any aspect of the assembly using the REST API, should you want to use your own scripts. The reason that you use OneOps to keep track of your deployment is because the avenues available through REST API are not as diverse as the rest of the deployment API. You can replace a component of your deployment by calling put on a component instance on the resource "/<Your Organization>/assemblies/<Your assembly>/operation/environments/<Your Environment>/platforms/<Your Platform>/components/<Your Component>/instances/<Instance ID>state". You can again find all the details pertaining to the component and instance...