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Continuous Delivery and DevOps ??? A Quickstart Guide

You're reading from   Continuous Delivery and DevOps ??? A Quickstart Guide Start your journey to successful adoption of CD and DevOps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788995474
Length 270 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Paul Swartout Paul Swartout
Author Profile Icon Paul Swartout
Paul Swartout
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface The Evolution of Software Delivery FREE CHAPTER Understanding Your Current Pain Points Culture and Behaviors are the Cornerstones to Success Planning for Success Approaches, Tools, and Techniques Avoiding Hurdles Vital Measurements You Are Not Finished Just Yet Expanding Your Opportunity Horizon CD and DevOps Beyond Traditional Software Delivery Some Useful Information Other Books You May Enjoy

ACME systems evolution phase 3.0

Now that the CD and DevOps team has official backing from high up, its members start to address the broken culture and behaviors, and develop ways to overcome and/or remove the barriers. They are no longer simply a technical team; they are a catalyst for business change.

The remit is cleardo whatever is needed to streamline the process of software delivery and make it seamless and repeatable. In essence, implement what we now commonly refer to as CD and DevOps.

The first thing they do is to go out and talk with as many people across the business as possible to ensure they are also aware of the broken process and its root causes. Simply put, if someone is actively involved in the decision-making process of getting software from conception to consumer, or involved in supporting it when it's live, they are a chat target. This not only gathers useful information, but also gives the team the opportunity to evangelize and form a wider network of like-minded individuals.

The team has a vision, a purpose, that its members passionately believe in what needs to be done, and they have the energy and drive to do it.

Over the next few months, they embark on (among other things):

  • Running various in-depth sessions to understand and map out the end-to-end product-delivery process
  • Refining and simplifying the tooling based upon continuous feedback from those using it—where applicable, replacing in-house built solutions with off-the-shelf ones
  • Addressing the complexity of managing dependencies and the order of deployment
  • Engaging experts in the field of CD and DevOps to independently assess the progress being made (or not, as the case may be)
  • Arranging offsite CD and DevOps training and encouraging both R&D and Ops team members to attend the training together (it's amazing how much DevOps collaboration stems from a chat in the hotel bar)
  • Reducing the many handover and decision-making points throughout the software-release process
  • Removing the barriers to allow developers to safely deploy their own software to the production platform
  • Working with other business functions to gain trust and help them to refine and streamline their processes
  • Removing the us-and-them attitudes and behaviors, and reinforcing trust-based relationships
  • Working with R&D and operations teams to experiment with different agile methodologies, such as Kanban, scrum, and lean
  • Openly and transparently sharing information and data around deliveries and progress being made across all areas of the business
  • Replacing the need for complex performance-testing with the ability for developers to closely monitor their own software running in the production environment
  • Removing the need for downtime to release changes
  • Evangelizing across all areas of the business to share and sell the overall vision and value of CD and DevOps

This is by no means a walk in the park and it takes determination, steadfast focus, patience, and, above all, time to produce quantifiable, positive results, however after some months, the vision and benefits start to be realized. Now the process of building and delivering software has transformed to the extent that a code change can be built, fully tested, and deployed to the production platform in minutes many times per day—all at the press of a button and initiated and monitored by the developer who made the change, all with no downtime and little/no impact on the customers. The stakeholders have a trusted and reliable way of delivering value to their customers, the R&D team has the tooling and empowerment to deliver value as and when it is needed, and the Ops team has a stable and reliable platform that it can support and optimize.

Let's look again at the software-delivery process flow to see what results have been realized.

Software-delivery process flow version 3.0

As you can see from the diagram, the process looks much healthier. It's not as simple as Version 1.0, but it is efficient, reliable, and repeatable. Some much-needed checks and balances have been retained from Version 2.0 and optimized to enhance rather than impede the overall process:

Overview of ACME 3.0 software-delivery process
This more elegant and well-oiled process is something that a mature yet modern software business will recognize. The barriers between those delivering the software and those that support it are there to ensure there is a degree of control and quality assurance, but both sides benefit from and embrace them.

This highly efficient process has freed up valuable R&D and operations resources so that they can focus on what they are best atdeveloping and delivering new high-quality features, and ensuring that the production platform is healthy and customers are delighted.

The ACME systems team has got back its mojo and is moving forward with a newfound confidence and drive. It now has the best of both worlds, and there's nothing stopping it.

You have been reading a chapter from
Continuous Delivery and DevOps ??? A Quickstart Guide - Third Edition
Published in: Oct 2018
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781788995474
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