The Story of Reformatting 100k Files at Google in 2012 is a short story of rolling a massive change at Google.
Basically, they have enforced formatting rules for all the BUILD files for Bazel.
What I like in this story is how this change ended up being uneventful. Which confirms a point: if formatter is integrated into your workflow, you don't care about formatting, you don't even think about it much.
And this is one of the reasons I like Go so much: it has a formatter integrated into the language itself. Same thing with Terraform.
#culture
Basically, they have enforced formatting rules for all the BUILD files for Bazel.
What I like in this story is how this change ended up being uneventful. Which confirms a point: if formatter is integrated into your workflow, you don't care about formatting, you don't even think about it much.
And this is one of the reasons I like Go so much: it has a formatter integrated into the language itself. Same thing with Terraform.
#culture
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A small Saturday post from GetYourGuide on how they migrated from Spinnaker to ArgoCD.
There are not too many details in the article, so the main takeaway is that such migrations can be easier than they seem to be. Still, you need a political will to do that.
P.S. This article came from our chat. If you have other interesting stories to share, you can do it here.
#cicd
There are not too many details in the article, so the main takeaway is that such migrations can be easier than they seem to be. Still, you need a political will to do that.
P.S. This article came from our chat. If you have other interesting stories to share, you can do it here.
#cicd
www.getyourguide.careers
Lessons Learned from Migrating to ArgoCD | Inside GetYourGuide
In order to improve the deployment experience of the developers at GetYourGuide and to enable them to configure more sophisticated deployment strategies, the Developer Enablement team migrated their deployment tooling from Spinnaker to ArgoCD. Engineering…
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A new issue of the CatOps Digest is here!
https://newsletter.catops.dev/p/catops-digest-2024-08-11
#digest #newsletter
https://newsletter.catops.dev/p/catops-digest-2024-08-11
#digest #newsletter
newsletter.catops.dev
CatOps Digest 2024-08-11
What was on CatOps in the last couple of weeks...
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UA DevOps channel continues raising funds for a Mavik drone for the folks on the Kharkiv direction.
Link to the Monobank Jar: https://send.monobank.ua/jar/2WC8C4npTN
Original post in the channel: https://t.iss.one/devops4ua/566
#donations #Ukraine
Link to the Monobank Jar: https://send.monobank.ua/jar/2WC8C4npTN
Original post in the channel: https://t.iss.one/devops4ua/566
#donations #Ukraine
send.monobank.ua
Безпечний переказ коштів
Надсилайте безкоштовно та безпечно кошти
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Karpenter (Kubernetes nodes autoscaler by AWS) goes version 1.0 today.
Notable changes are listed in the announcement.
#kubernetes
Notable changes are listed in the announcement.
#kubernetes
Amazon
Announcing Karpenter 1.0 | Amazon Web Services
Introduction In November 2021, AWS announced the launch of v0.5 of Karpenter, “a new open source Kubernetes cluster auto scaling project.” Originally conceived as a flexible, dynamic, and high-performance alternative to the Kubernetes Cluster Autoscaler,…
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A fundraiser for equipment for FPV drones by the UkrOps community is still ongoing!
About 40% still left.
You can top up a Monobank jar:
https://send.monobank.ua/jar/6k2H9iu8tN
Or a card directly:
5375411219683781
Original post
#donations #Ukraine
About 40% still left.
You can top up a Monobank jar:
https://send.monobank.ua/jar/6k2H9iu8tN
Or a card directly:
5375411219683781
Original post
#donations #Ukraine
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Amazing Julia Evans posts about the things she missed in Go.
This is kinda a promotion of the book "100 Go Mistakes and How to Avoid Them" and you know what, now I want to read it!
P.S. Unfortunately, I don't have a chance to write much in Go lately, which makes me sad. Maybe, it will push me towards creating some side-projects, probably, someday, maybe 😭
#programming #golang
This is kinda a promotion of the book "100 Go Mistakes and How to Avoid Them" and you know what, now I want to read it!
P.S. Unfortunately, I don't have a chance to write much in Go lately, which makes me sad. Maybe, it will push me towards creating some side-projects, probably, someday, maybe 😭
#programming #golang
Julia Evans
Go structs are copied on assignment (and other things about Go I'd missed)
I’ve been writing Go pretty casually for years – the backends for all of my playgrounds (nginx, dns, memory, more DNS) are written in Go, but many of those projects are just a few hundred lines and I don’t come back to those codebases much.
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Happy Independence Day, cats!
As you know, freedom never comes for free. So, the best way to celebrate this day is to make a donation to your charity of choice.
Here the list of charities I link to almost every post
Also, I would like to remind you about fundraisers from our friends at:
- UkrOps Club
- UA DevOps
As you know, freedom never comes for free. So, the best way to celebrate this day is to make a donation to your charity of choice.
Here the list of charities I link to almost every post
Also, I would like to remind you about fundraisers from our friends at:
- UkrOps Club
- UA DevOps
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I skipped the newsletter today, because there were not that many posts on the channel, TBH.
So, as an apology, here is a brief reminder from Google on why heroism is bad.
#culture
So, as an apology, here is a brief reminder from Google on why heroism is bad.
#culture
sre.google
Why heroism is bad, and what we can do to stop it
Discover Site Reliability Engineering, learn about team development, SRE toil reduction
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A very nice collection of books on software architecture by O’Reilly.
As usual, you can pay different amount to unlock various number of books.
#books
As usual, you can pay different amount to unlock various number of books.
#books
Humble Bundle
Humble Tech Book Bundle: Software Architecture 2024 by O'Reilly
Learn about software architecture with this library of technology courses. Pay what you want and support charity!
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The Senior Engineer Illusion: What I Thought vs. What I Learned is an article about one could have regarding the day-to-day routine of their more senior colleagues.
Ofc, many things may sound familiar to you personally, but never forget that there are less experienced peers in the industry for whom this information may be useful.
P.S. I didn't like some word choices of this article, but overall it's Ok.
#culture
Ofc, many things may sound familiar to you personally, but never forget that there are less experienced peers in the industry for whom this information may be useful.
P.S. I didn't like some word choices of this article, but overall it's Ok.
#culture
Mensur Duraković
The Senior Engineer Illusion: What I Thought vs. What I Learned
As a junior engineer, I had some wild ideas about senior engineers.
I thought they were like coding superheroes - able to debug any issue, always knowing the next step, and walking tech encyclopedias. I used to think that leveling up your career to senior…
I thought they were like coding superheroes - able to debug any issue, always knowing the next step, and walking tech encyclopedias. I used to think that leveling up your career to senior…
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Some people know that I'm not a fan of Python. Yet, I have to tolerate it because it is objectively one of the most popular and widespread programming languages.
So, here is an article about asynchronous code in Python.
Enjoy!
#programming #python
So, here is an article about asynchronous code in Python.
Enjoy!
#programming #python
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Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren,
Ich möchte gerne Ihren eine neue Cloud Alternative vorstellen.
European alternative to AWS, Azure and Google was born inside Lidl
P.S. АТБ Cloud: when?
Ich möchte gerne Ihren eine neue Cloud Alternative vorstellen.
European alternative to AWS, Azure and Google was born inside Lidl
P.S. АТБ Cloud: when?
Techzine Global
European alternative to AWS, Azure and Google was born inside Lidl
Lidl founder Dieter Schwarz has "accidentally" become a real alternative to the big U.S. hyperscalers. As a German cloud player, Schwarz Digits is an
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For today’s Donations Monday, I would like to share with you an initiative from Come Back Alive - “Dronefall”.
Instead of a monetary goal, this project aims to strike down 1000 russian reconnaissance drones.
#donations #Ukraine
Instead of a monetary goal, this project aims to strike down 1000 russian reconnaissance drones.
#donations #Ukraine
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Since I’m a bit busy this week, I cannot really bring too many articles to you this week.
Every time this happens, Humble Bundle comes to my rescue :D
So, today I want to share a bundle of courses about cloud by Packt.
You can get it for a bit more than $20 for the next 11 days.
#courses
Every time this happens, Humble Bundle comes to my rescue :D
So, today I want to share a bundle of courses about cloud by Packt.
You can get it for a bit more than $20 for the next 11 days.
#courses
Humble Bundle
Cloud Solutions Architect Pro Pack
Learn cloud computing with this bundle of courses from Packt. Pay what you want & support charity!
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I rarely share videos here, but it's Friday, so it's fine. Also, this video provides some food for thoughts.
This is a reaction video, if you wish, to an interview with Pieter Levels on the Lex Fridman podcast. I don't link the whole podcast episode here, because it's long, and it's also linked to the video I'm sharing.
You can think whatever you want about Lex and his podcast specifically, but here is what's interesting about this particular quest: he's running several websites that allegedly bring him $3M a year, and all of these websites are hosted on a single DigitalOcean server that costs $400. All these websites are created with PHP and JQuery.
We need to address an elephant in the room here: he does use 3rd party vendors to do some heavy-lifting for his projects, but many "startups" that have much more complex technical stacks do that as well.
I'm not arguing that this is the way to go for everyone, but still an interesting thing to think about.
#architecture #video
This is a reaction video, if you wish, to an interview with Pieter Levels on the Lex Fridman podcast. I don't link the whole podcast episode here, because it's long, and it's also linked to the video I'm sharing.
You can think whatever you want about Lex and his podcast specifically, but here is what's interesting about this particular quest: he's running several websites that allegedly bring him $3M a year, and all of these websites are hosted on a single DigitalOcean server that costs $400. All these websites are created with PHP and JQuery.
We need to address an elephant in the room here: he does use 3rd party vendors to do some heavy-lifting for his projects, but many "startups" that have much more complex technical stacks do that as well.
I'm not arguing that this is the way to go for everyone, but still an interesting thing to think about.
#architecture #video
YouTube
He makes $3M a year with a $400 VPS
🚀 Apply to join KubeCraft & land your DevOps job: https://kubecraft.click/d0bad4
🎁 Get my Free DevOps Career Blueprint course: https://go.kubecraft.dev/blueprint-yt-1
💡 Member Wins:
“I landed a Senior SRE role. The edge came from my KubeCraft home lab.”…
🎁 Get my Free DevOps Career Blueprint course: https://go.kubecraft.dev/blueprint-yt-1
💡 Member Wins:
“I landed a Senior SRE role. The edge came from my KubeCraft home lab.”…
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Why Cutting Costs is Expensive: How $9/Hour Software Engineers Cost Boeing Billions.
This is a quite famous story about Boeings 737-Max falling down because of a software bug.
A friend of mine was closely following this story from even before the tragedies. Since it all started with Airbus blowing Boeing out of the water.
Anyway, let this article be a reminder to you that software engineering is not just for cat videos these days.
This is a quite famous story about Boeings 737-Max falling down because of a software bug.
A friend of mine was closely following this story from even before the tragedies. Since it all started with Airbus blowing Boeing out of the water.
Anyway, let this article be a reminder to you that software engineering is not just for cat videos these days.
Medium
Why Cutting Costs is Expensive: How $9/Hour Software Engineers Cost Boeing Billions
On October 29, 2018 Lion Air Flight 610, a 737 MAX 8 flight from Jakarta, Indonesia to Pangkal Pinang, Indonesia, crashed into the sea 13…
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Our friends from UA DevOps started a new fundraiser for Special Operations units.
You can donate to this Monobank Jar:
https://send.monobank.ua/jar/6ZzfTRqPT5
P.S. Also, here’s a picture of a drone you’ve helped to fund!
You can donate to this Monobank Jar:
https://send.monobank.ua/jar/6ZzfTRqPT5
P.S. Also, here’s a picture of a drone you’ve helped to fund!
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Your company needs Junior devs.
This article reminds me of when a long time ago a senior manager was doing a presentation which had a tweet: "A team of senior engineers without juniors is just a team of engineers". This manager tried to make a point of how egalitarian we are because the team is so senior, but was quickly corrected by one of the engineers that they missed the point of the original tweet completely.
I really like how this article shifts the perspective of a senior developer:
...
The main point is that people who ask many questions (juniors) foster the culture of curiosity and psychological safety, while even for some more senior folks it might be too shameful to ask questions that "should" be "obvious" for those with many years in the industry. Therefore, without a culture of curiosity, many problems will be swiped under the rug.
And yet, this is way too hard these days for junior folks to find a job. Trading short-term gains for the cost of long-term consequences. This has never ever happened to humanity before!
#culture
This article reminds me of when a long time ago a senior manager was doing a presentation which had a tweet: "A team of senior engineers without juniors is just a team of engineers". This manager tried to make a point of how egalitarian we are because the team is so senior, but was quickly corrected by one of the engineers that they missed the point of the original tweet completely.
I really like how this article shifts the perspective of a senior developer:
companies, they argue, see the “assembly line” of a knowledge firm. They see the outputs: KPIs, OKRs, Quarterly results. If you only think in terms of the assembly line, you will only seek units of input that increase those outputs (ie expert employees that ‘hit the ground running’ to churn out higher metrics).
...
employees come prepared with that Socratic dialog: to ask dumb questions and seek their answers. Often, it turns out, experts – through ego or blindness - don’t see obvious solutions. They don’t question tacit assumptions. Juniors on the other hand eagerly crash into, and sometimes through, problems seniors have convinced themselves are too hard. Juniors try “dumb” things that often fail, but sometimes show how blinded experts have become from their long held assumptions.
The main point is that people who ask many questions (juniors) foster the culture of curiosity and psychological safety, while even for some more senior folks it might be too shameful to ask questions that "should" be "obvious" for those with many years in the industry. Therefore, without a culture of curiosity, many problems will be swiped under the rug.
And yet, this is way too hard these days for junior folks to find a job. Trading short-term gains for the cost of long-term consequences. This has never ever happened to humanity before!
#culture
Doug Turnbull's Blog
Your company needs Junior devs
Junior engineers are foundational to whether a team can collaborate and innovate
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A blog post from DHH on why don't more people use Linux.
Technically, the answer is quite simple for the general public: no one uses an OS for the sake of an OS itself. People use computers to run specific software to help them with their routines. OS is secondary.
However, he raises another question: if you're not a part of the "general public", what if you're a person who writes code that then (most likely) is run on Linux, shouldn't you know your tools better in this case?
#culture #linux
Technically, the answer is quite simple for the general public: no one uses an OS for the sake of an OS itself. People use computers to run specific software to help them with their routines. OS is secondary.
However, he raises another question: if you're not a part of the "general public", what if you're a person who writes code that then (most likely) is run on Linux, shouldn't you know your tools better in this case?
#culture #linux
Hey
Why don't more people use Linux?
A couple of weeks ago, I saw a tweet asking: "If Linux is so good, why aren't more people using it?" And it's a fair question! It intuitively rings true until you give it a moment's consideration. Linux is even free, so what's stopping mass adoption, if it's…
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