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Go for DevOps

You're reading from   Go for DevOps Learn how to use the Go language to automate servers, the cloud, Kubernetes, GitHub, Packer, and Terraform

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801818896
Length 634 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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John Doak John Doak
Author Profile Icon John Doak
John Doak
David Justice David Justice
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David Justice
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Up and Running with Go
2. Chapter 1: Go Language Basics FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Go Language Essentials 4. Chapter 3: Setting Up Your Environment 5. Chapter 4: Filesystem Interactions 6. Chapter 5: Using Common Data Formats 7. Chapter 6: Interacting with Remote Data Sources 8. Chapter 7: Writing Command-Line Tooling 9. Chapter 8: Automating Command-Line Tasks 10. Section 2: Instrumenting, Observing, and Responding
11. Chapter 9: Observability with OpenTelemetry 12. Chapter 10: Automating Workflows with GitHub Actions 13. Chapter 11: Using ChatOps to Increase Efficiency 14. Section 3: Cloud ready Go
15. Chapter 12: Creating Immutable Infrastructure Using Packer 16. Chapter 13: Infrastructure as Code with Terraform 17. Chapter 14: Deploying and Building Applications in Kubernetes 18. Chapter 15: Programming the Cloud 19. Chapter 16: Designing for Chaos 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

Azure Storage is only one service out of hundreds that you can use to build applications in the cloud. Each cloud service provider has analogous storage services that operate in a similar way. The examples shown in this chapter are specific to Microsoft Azure, but they can be easily emulated for other clouds.

The Azure Storage example is useful for illustrating the separation between the management plane and the data plane of the cloud. If you look closely, you can observe a significant similarity in Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) resource operations using ARM in contrast to interacting with the Azure Storage service, container, and blob clients. Resource management is uniform within a cloud. The data plane for databases, storage services, and content delivery networks is rarely uniform and often exposed through purpose-built APIs.

In this chapter, we learned that the cloud is not just someone else's computer. The cloud is a planet-scale web of high-security...

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