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Software Architecture with C++

You're reading from   Software Architecture with C++ Design modern systems using effective architecture concepts, design patterns, and techniques with C++20

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838554590
Length 540 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Adrian Ostrowski Adrian Ostrowski
Author Profile Icon Adrian Ostrowski
Adrian Ostrowski
Piotr Gaczkowski Piotr Gaczkowski
Author Profile Icon Piotr Gaczkowski
Piotr Gaczkowski
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Concepts and Components of Software Architecture
2. Importance of Software Architecture and Principles of Great Design FREE CHAPTER 3. Architectural Styles 4. Functional and Nonfunctional Requirements 5. Section 2: The Design and Development of C++ Software
6. Architectural and System Design 7. Leveraging C++ Language Features 8. Design Patterns and C++ 9. Building and Packaging 10. Section 3: Architectural Quality Attributes
11. Writing Testable Code 12. Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment 13. Security in Code and Deployment 14. Performance 15. Section 4: Cloud-Native Design Principles
16. Service-Oriented Architecture 17. Designing Microservices 18. Containers 19. Cloud-Native Design 20. Assessments 21. About Packt 22. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A

How Ansible fits with the CI/CD pipeline

Ansible's idempotence makes it a great target to use in CI/CD pipelines. After all, there's no risk in running the same Ansible playbook multiple times even if nothing changes between the two runs. If you use Ansible for your deployment code, creating a CD is just a matter of preparing appropriate acceptance tests (such as smoke tests or end-to-end tests).

The declarative approach may require changing the way you think about deployments, but the gains are well worth it. Besides running playbooks, you can also use Ansible to perform one-off commands on remote machines, but we won't cover this use case as it doesn't really help with deployments.

Everything you can do with a shell you can do with Ansible's shell module. That's because, in the playbooks, you write tasks specifying which modules they use and their respective parameters. One such module is the aforementioned shell module, which...

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