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Repeatability, Reliability, and Scalability through GitOps

You're reading from   Repeatability, Reliability, and Scalability through GitOps Continuous delivery and deployment codified

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077798
Length 292 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Bryan Feuling Bryan Feuling
Author Profile Icon Bryan Feuling
Bryan Feuling
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals of GitOps
2. Chapter 1: The Fundamentals of Delivery and Deployment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring Common Industry Delivery and Deployment Practices 4. Chapter 3: The "What" and "Why" of GitOps 5. Section 2: GitOps Types, Benefits, and Drawbacks
6. Chapter 4: The Original GitOps – Continuous Deployment in Kubernetes 7. Chapter 5: The Purist GitOps – Continuous Deployment Everywhere 8. Chapter 6: Verified GitOps – Continuous Delivery Declaratively Defined 9. Chapter 7: Best Practices for Delivery, Deployment, and GitOps 10. Section 3: Hands-On Practical GitOps
11. Chapter 8: Practicing the Basics – Declarative Language File Building 12. Chapter 9: Originalist Gitops in Practice – Continuous Deployment 13. Chapter 10: Verified GitOps Setup – Continuous Delivery GitOps with Harness 14. Chapter 11: Pitfall Examples – Experiencing Issues with GitOps 15. Chapter 12: What's Next? 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

What is GitOps?

The DevOps team found themselves in the middle of a perfect storm of problems. They were still needing to support the quarterly release process, at least until the monolithic application was completely broken down into microservices. They also had to support the new pipeline process that they had builtwhich has resulted in major support issues. And the team also needed to figure out a new pipeline process that would eventually supercede the rest.

The hotfix for the pipeline queuing issue was now completely resolved and the teams could move back into the previous continuous process that they had before. However, since the development process had become a tightly coupled service oriented architecture, it was difficult to get the teams to adopt anything new. Ultimately, the DevOps team needed to not only bring in a better process, but they also had to make it easy to adopt, automate, and reduce the onboarding requirements.

Since the developers were already familiar...

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