Help to analyze and monitor nodejs api routes
Whats up guys!! so, i am new in devops so i would like to ask help to perform a task.
Basically i have a backend api running node.js, i would like to monitor some attributes from this API, to analyze metrics from this attributes per moth, year, etc..., so thanks for the help :D
​
PS: the attributes would be something like:
​
route alias (something like this -> ""route/:id/update") , totalRequests, latency and failRate
https://redd.it/ssc29n
@r_devops
Whats up guys!! so, i am new in devops so i would like to ask help to perform a task.
Basically i have a backend api running node.js, i would like to monitor some attributes from this API, to analyze metrics from this attributes per moth, year, etc..., so thanks for the help :D
​
PS: the attributes would be something like:
​
route alias (something like this -> ""route/:id/update") , totalRequests, latency and failRate
https://redd.it/ssc29n
@r_devops
reddit
Help to analyze and monitor nodejs api routes
Whats up guys!! so, i am new in devops so i would like to ask help to perform a task. Basically i have a backend api running node.js, i would...
DevOps Bulletin Newsletter - Issue 38
Hey folks,
DevOps Bulletin - Digest #38 is out, the following topics are covered:
๐ 5 hours tutorial series but totally worth it to learn how to deploy a production-ready Django application into a Kubernetes cluster running on DigitalOcean with Docker and GitHub Actions.
๐ Great post to master RBAC and its terminologies (Role, ClusterRole, RoleBinding, and ClusterRoleBinding)
๐ฐ How a bug ended up generating 500k time/minute of logs that costs $1000 on Google Cloud Platform.
๐ PostgreSQL stores a lot of files on disk such as transaction commit data, sub-transaction status data, write ahead logs (WAL) ... In this post, you'll get into the implementation level details on how PostgreSQL row storage really works.
๐ป 2021 was a seriously good year for web security research. This post scratches the surface and list the most significant web hacking techniques of last year.
โค๏ธ 100% free Kubernetes tutorials and courses for getting hands-on knowledge and know-how to be a pro Kubernetes developer. Unlock the next level of growth in your cloud native career.
Complete issue: https://www.devopsbulletin.com/issues/1000-wasted-because-of-an-infinite-loop
Feedback is welcome :)
https://redd.it/ss8ge7
@r_devops
Hey folks,
DevOps Bulletin - Digest #38 is out, the following topics are covered:
๐ 5 hours tutorial series but totally worth it to learn how to deploy a production-ready Django application into a Kubernetes cluster running on DigitalOcean with Docker and GitHub Actions.
๐ Great post to master RBAC and its terminologies (Role, ClusterRole, RoleBinding, and ClusterRoleBinding)
๐ฐ How a bug ended up generating 500k time/minute of logs that costs $1000 on Google Cloud Platform.
๐ PostgreSQL stores a lot of files on disk such as transaction commit data, sub-transaction status data, write ahead logs (WAL) ... In this post, you'll get into the implementation level details on how PostgreSQL row storage really works.
๐ป 2021 was a seriously good year for web security research. This post scratches the surface and list the most significant web hacking techniques of last year.
โค๏ธ 100% free Kubernetes tutorials and courses for getting hands-on knowledge and know-how to be a pro Kubernetes developer. Unlock the next level of growth in your cloud native career.
Complete issue: https://www.devopsbulletin.com/issues/1000-wasted-because-of-an-infinite-loop
Feedback is welcome :)
https://redd.it/ss8ge7
@r_devops
Devopsbulletin
$1000 Wasted Because of an Infinite Loop ๐ธ - DevOps Bulletin
Read DevOps Bulletin latest issue "$1000 Wasted Because of an Infinite Loop ๐ธ"
Automation ideas
Hi guys cool automation ideas you would like to suggest? My manager is asking me to do some automation but i am out of ideas now.
https://redd.it/ssruvl
@r_devops
Hi guys cool automation ideas you would like to suggest? My manager is asking me to do some automation but i am out of ideas now.
https://redd.it/ssruvl
@r_devops
reddit
Automation ideas
Hi guys cool automation ideas you would like to suggest? My manager is asking me to do some automation but i am out of ideas now.
Reasonable SLA for API's which serve millions of request per day?
Building API which handles potentially 10 mil calls a day. Whats a reasonable SLA to guarantee? Do to networking issues we may see the backend occasionally get disconnected resulting in some 5xx issues. Is it possible to get to 5 9's or more or is 4 9's or 3 9's more realistic?
https://redd.it/sq4ctw
@r_devops
Building API which handles potentially 10 mil calls a day. Whats a reasonable SLA to guarantee? Do to networking issues we may see the backend occasionally get disconnected resulting in some 5xx issues. Is it possible to get to 5 9's or more or is 4 9's or 3 9's more realistic?
https://redd.it/sq4ctw
@r_devops
reddit
r/devops - Reasonable SLA for API's which serve millions of request per day?
2 votes and 7 comments so far on Reddit
DevOps Advisory Services | DevOps Consulting Services
Ksolves **DevOps Consulting Services** and Solutions is an end-to-end solution designed to overcome the hurdles presented by the constant market upgrades. The service will allow you to remain on your toes and continuously integrate, deploy, and deliver business processes. We are a DevOps as a service company consolidating application modernization and revitalizing enterprise agility. Get hold of a varied list of services and solutions to automate deployment, analytics, and boost continuous delivery!
https://redd.it/ssuagn
@r_devops
Ksolves **DevOps Consulting Services** and Solutions is an end-to-end solution designed to overcome the hurdles presented by the constant market upgrades. The service will allow you to remain on your toes and continuously integrate, deploy, and deliver business processes. We are a DevOps as a service company consolidating application modernization and revitalizing enterprise agility. Get hold of a varied list of services and solutions to automate deployment, analytics, and boost continuous delivery!
https://redd.it/ssuagn
@r_devops
Ksolves
DevOps Consulting Services | DevOps Solutions | Ksolves
Ksolves DevOps consulting company offering DevOps managed services, DevOps software development, custom DevOps solutions in the USA. Get your DevOps solutions Now!
Should you store all configuration in Vault?
Iโm trying to fix our configuration management at work - part of the solution I proposed was to put all of our secret values in Vault, and use environment variables for the remaining non-sensitive values.
A coworker said it would be simpler to put all configuration in Vault, but I think itโs bad to unnecessarily store things in Vault - what should I do?
https://redd.it/sssssb
@r_devops
Iโm trying to fix our configuration management at work - part of the solution I proposed was to put all of our secret values in Vault, and use environment variables for the remaining non-sensitive values.
A coworker said it would be simpler to put all configuration in Vault, but I think itโs bad to unnecessarily store things in Vault - what should I do?
https://redd.it/sssssb
@r_devops
reddit
Should you store all configuration in Vault?
Iโm trying to fix our configuration management at work - part of the solution I proposed was to put all of our secret values in Vault, and use...
Landed my first real DevOps job after teaching myself! | Motivational
I just wanted to give a big thank you to the DevOps learning community for all the inspiration over the years. I have been a long-time lurker here and I can't believe I finally landed a real gig after all these hours of tutorials and research. It's very surreal to have an actual office where I get paid to code all day.
And I really have to thank Thetips4you (https://www.youtube.com/c/Thetips4you/videos) for his YouTube channel and courses. Total game-changers. I know some people don't like the free YouTube videos, but they worked for me.
I have been grinding away in earnest for about a year and a half and it finally paid off. Keep plugging away y'all, you'll make it.
https://redd.it/ssy5rx
@r_devops
I just wanted to give a big thank you to the DevOps learning community for all the inspiration over the years. I have been a long-time lurker here and I can't believe I finally landed a real gig after all these hours of tutorials and research. It's very surreal to have an actual office where I get paid to code all day.
And I really have to thank Thetips4you (https://www.youtube.com/c/Thetips4you/videos) for his YouTube channel and courses. Total game-changers. I know some people don't like the free YouTube videos, but they worked for me.
I have been grinding away in earnest for about a year and a half and it finally paid off. Keep plugging away y'all, you'll make it.
https://redd.it/ssy5rx
@r_devops
reddit
Landed my first real DevOps job after teaching myself! | Motivational
I just wanted to give a big thank you to the DevOps learning community for all the inspiration over the years. I have been a long-time lurker here...
DevOps pragmatism?
What are your thoughts?
Should I be more pragmatic?
I tend to stand firm when I see something is missing transparency and ask people to do the least amount of work to make something easy to understand whenever we get back to code. Especially from a security point of view.
A coworker upgraded an ye olde application which is not documented in any fashion, other than it exists in a git repository. It wasn't added to a CI/CD pipeline in any form, nor is there added any documentation or pushed a package. The upgrade ended up on a production server, since it was time essential to get the application going again.
From my point of view, there should be at least be a CI build and an application package which ends up in a package repository, even if the application is small and cannot be deploy with a CD tool. Me and my coworker discussed it with our team, but the team decided it wasn't worth the effort since the application/code actually belongs to another team.
I feel like I'm nagging about something that should be the minimum effort. But am I just being an inconvenience?
https://redd.it/ssz4ul
@r_devops
What are your thoughts?
Should I be more pragmatic?
I tend to stand firm when I see something is missing transparency and ask people to do the least amount of work to make something easy to understand whenever we get back to code. Especially from a security point of view.
A coworker upgraded an ye olde application which is not documented in any fashion, other than it exists in a git repository. It wasn't added to a CI/CD pipeline in any form, nor is there added any documentation or pushed a package. The upgrade ended up on a production server, since it was time essential to get the application going again.
From my point of view, there should be at least be a CI build and an application package which ends up in a package repository, even if the application is small and cannot be deploy with a CD tool. Me and my coworker discussed it with our team, but the team decided it wasn't worth the effort since the application/code actually belongs to another team.
I feel like I'm nagging about something that should be the minimum effort. But am I just being an inconvenience?
https://redd.it/ssz4ul
@r_devops
reddit
r/devops - DevOps pragmatism?
10 votes and 10 comments so far on Reddit
The DevOps handbook - summary
# The DevOps handbook - summary
DevOps handbook is one of the most important DevOps books on the market. It combines the most important DevOps ideas, examples from known companies, and best practices. It does not have any code so it is an ideal book for non-technical readers that would like to know what their teams are talking about. Bellow, you find a summary with the ideas that stick with me the most.
## Flow and Feedback
The first thing we want to accomplish in DevOps is to have fast feedback on our work. The first frontier, before the ultimate testing on production, is a set of well-written fast tests. Those tests should be able to run in parallel and they should be run on each commit automatically. Tests that are not run are useless, and the only way to enforce running those tests is using automation. This allows us to have basic confidence in our code and the fast feedback provided by fast pipeline should not break the flow. The testing should be not limited to unit tests but it can (and should) test also security, integration, and other aspects of our application. Important is to run different tests on different occasions (run slow tests less often) to not break the developer`s flow.
> ...a small number of reliable, automated tests are almost always preferable over a large number of manual or unreliable automated tests.
## Get it out!
You will never test everything. In production, someone will always do something you do not expect, try to hack you, or will not use your shiny feature at all. And the only way to test this is to go to production as fast as possible. This is the only way to test (almost) every possible scenario and see the outcomes. Of course, going fast to production have its dangers but we can mitigate them using tools such as shadow releases, canary testing, or blue-green release pattern. With frequent releases, we generally get smaller release sizes which is associated with a higher deployment success rate.
> ...when we increase our deployment batch size, our change success rates go down and our incident counts and MTTR go upโthe opposite of the outcomes we want.
## Observer and learn
If we put our code into production we need to have a way to observe the code running. Other than standard metrics such as CPU and Memory usage, percentage of a cache hit, and other technical measures we should also have business metrics available. Does our new feature that is promoted everywhere have poor usage? It might be caused by a technical issue such as poor performance or distorted render on some browsers. The second case can be that we simply build the wrong thing. Both outcomes are valuable for us developers so we should have access to those metrics to be able to learn from them.
> ...business metrics create context for our infrastructure metrics, enabling Development and Operations to better work together toward common goals.
## Involve everyone
One of the most important lessons for me was how important is to make everyone more exposed to other team's problems. In the end, we all work toward a common goal. By being more exposed to problems of developers, testers, or ops we can often find better solutions to problems, fix the problems earlier, cheaper and build empathy for other teams.
> ...how to make Dev work more visible to Operations. To accomplish this, we explored three broad strategies, including creating self-service capabilities to enable developers in service teams to be productive, embedding Ops engineers into the service teams, and assigning Ops liaisons to the service teams when embedding Ops engineers is not possible.
## Conclusion
The DevOps handbook is one of the technical books that will fill your head with ideas. It will not teach you how to create an ideal pipeline, nor it will give you the answers to all problems but it will tickle those parts of your brain that know that our job can be done better.
> Our call to action is this: no matter what role you play in your organization, start finding people around you who want to change
# The DevOps handbook - summary
DevOps handbook is one of the most important DevOps books on the market. It combines the most important DevOps ideas, examples from known companies, and best practices. It does not have any code so it is an ideal book for non-technical readers that would like to know what their teams are talking about. Bellow, you find a summary with the ideas that stick with me the most.
## Flow and Feedback
The first thing we want to accomplish in DevOps is to have fast feedback on our work. The first frontier, before the ultimate testing on production, is a set of well-written fast tests. Those tests should be able to run in parallel and they should be run on each commit automatically. Tests that are not run are useless, and the only way to enforce running those tests is using automation. This allows us to have basic confidence in our code and the fast feedback provided by fast pipeline should not break the flow. The testing should be not limited to unit tests but it can (and should) test also security, integration, and other aspects of our application. Important is to run different tests on different occasions (run slow tests less often) to not break the developer`s flow.
> ...a small number of reliable, automated tests are almost always preferable over a large number of manual or unreliable automated tests.
## Get it out!
You will never test everything. In production, someone will always do something you do not expect, try to hack you, or will not use your shiny feature at all. And the only way to test this is to go to production as fast as possible. This is the only way to test (almost) every possible scenario and see the outcomes. Of course, going fast to production have its dangers but we can mitigate them using tools such as shadow releases, canary testing, or blue-green release pattern. With frequent releases, we generally get smaller release sizes which is associated with a higher deployment success rate.
> ...when we increase our deployment batch size, our change success rates go down and our incident counts and MTTR go upโthe opposite of the outcomes we want.
## Observer and learn
If we put our code into production we need to have a way to observe the code running. Other than standard metrics such as CPU and Memory usage, percentage of a cache hit, and other technical measures we should also have business metrics available. Does our new feature that is promoted everywhere have poor usage? It might be caused by a technical issue such as poor performance or distorted render on some browsers. The second case can be that we simply build the wrong thing. Both outcomes are valuable for us developers so we should have access to those metrics to be able to learn from them.
> ...business metrics create context for our infrastructure metrics, enabling Development and Operations to better work together toward common goals.
## Involve everyone
One of the most important lessons for me was how important is to make everyone more exposed to other team's problems. In the end, we all work toward a common goal. By being more exposed to problems of developers, testers, or ops we can often find better solutions to problems, fix the problems earlier, cheaper and build empathy for other teams.
> ...how to make Dev work more visible to Operations. To accomplish this, we explored three broad strategies, including creating self-service capabilities to enable developers in service teams to be productive, embedding Ops engineers into the service teams, and assigning Ops liaisons to the service teams when embedding Ops engineers is not possible.
## Conclusion
The DevOps handbook is one of the technical books that will fill your head with ideas. It will not teach you how to create an ideal pipeline, nor it will give you the answers to all problems but it will tickle those parts of your brain that know that our job can be done better.
> Our call to action is this: no matter what role you play in your organization, start finding people around you who want to change
how work is performed. Show this book to others and create a coalition of like-minded thinkers to break out of the downward spiral.
Orignaly published on my substack, if you like the post consider subscribing
https://rejmank.substack.com/p/the-devops-handbook-summary?r=438li
https://redd.it/ssz1y9
@r_devops
Orignaly published on my substack, if you like the post consider subscribing
https://rejmank.substack.com/p/the-devops-handbook-summary?r=438li
https://redd.it/ssz1y9
@r_devops
Substack
The DevOps handbook - summary
Summary of the best DevOps book i red so far.
You started a new job, what are the first tools you install on your machine?
I'm curious to know what DevOps engineers do to setup their workspace when they are handed with a new laptop. What tools do you use daily to boost your productivity?
For example, oh my zsh, WSL for Windows, VS Code with X extensions, etc etc.
I'm part of a DevOps IT team for R&D (I'm personally IT) and the engineers at my team always have wacky setups that help them to almost never use their mouse, or never completely type anything without some auto-completion. Basically wizards.
Thanks :)
https://redd.it/st22ia
@r_devops
I'm curious to know what DevOps engineers do to setup their workspace when they are handed with a new laptop. What tools do you use daily to boost your productivity?
For example, oh my zsh, WSL for Windows, VS Code with X extensions, etc etc.
I'm part of a DevOps IT team for R&D (I'm personally IT) and the engineers at my team always have wacky setups that help them to almost never use their mouse, or never completely type anything without some auto-completion. Basically wizards.
Thanks :)
https://redd.it/st22ia
@r_devops
reddit
You started a new job, what are the first tools you install on...
I'm curious to know what DevOps engineers do to setup their workspace when they are handed with a new laptop. What tools do you use daily to boost...
How long did you wait between your final interview and job offer?
I've been interviewing for this tech company in London for the past 3 weeks, the stages went like this:
​
1. Screening call with Founder of company (invitation to 2nd round 1 week later)
2. Technical interview with DevOps engineer (invitation to culture fit interview day after)
3. Culture fit interview with 2 other Devs at the company last Friday - hopefully will hear back this week (it's Tuesday).
The position is a junior DevOps engineer with a focus on AWS, Kubernetes and Python. I'm a certified SAA and after 5 years working as a sys admin this would be my first devops job.
I think I'm just being anxious and their are clearly a lot of other unseen factors involved, but it would be good to know what the rough estimate is between a final interview and job offer in the devops world. Thanks.
https://redd.it/ssz74u
@r_devops
I've been interviewing for this tech company in London for the past 3 weeks, the stages went like this:
​
1. Screening call with Founder of company (invitation to 2nd round 1 week later)
2. Technical interview with DevOps engineer (invitation to culture fit interview day after)
3. Culture fit interview with 2 other Devs at the company last Friday - hopefully will hear back this week (it's Tuesday).
The position is a junior DevOps engineer with a focus on AWS, Kubernetes and Python. I'm a certified SAA and after 5 years working as a sys admin this would be my first devops job.
I think I'm just being anxious and their are clearly a lot of other unseen factors involved, but it would be good to know what the rough estimate is between a final interview and job offer in the devops world. Thanks.
https://redd.it/ssz74u
@r_devops
reddit
How long did you wait between your final interview and job offer?
I've been interviewing for this tech company in London for the past 3 weeks, the stages went like this: โ 1. Screening call with Founder...
Shameful cloud sourcing request regarding Azure Pipelines and Docker login task
The default behavior of the docker login task is absolutely absurd when you're not using ACR.
It dumps the service connection credentials into the pipeline logs. Does anyone know of a way to suppress this? If not ; someone made an issue regarding this already and it'd be nice to get more attention to this?
https://github.com/microsoft/azure-pipelines-tasks/issues/14322
https://redd.it/st6x6h
@r_devops
The default behavior of the docker login task is absolutely absurd when you're not using ACR.
It dumps the service connection credentials into the pipeline logs. Does anyone know of a way to suppress this? If not ; someone made an issue regarding this already and it'd be nice to get more attention to this?
https://github.com/microsoft/azure-pipelines-tasks/issues/14322
https://redd.it/st6x6h
@r_devops
GitHub
Docker json_key gets logged ยท Issue #14322 ยท microsoft/azure-pipelines-tasks
Environment: Azure DevOps Cloud displayName: 'Docker Login' inputs: containerRegistry: 'gcr' command: 'login' addPipelineData: false condition: eq(va...
Packer unable to read the subnet in a different resource group
Hi All,
I am getting an error like
"Invalid resource reference" .. /subscriptions/12fasd4324-213asd4e21dad342-dsa/resourseGroups/network-rg/Providers/...../subnets/existing-subnet1 referenced by resource /subscriptions/../Microsft.Network/networkInterfaces/pkrni88im9aen8 was not found .Please make sure the referenced resource exist and both are in same region
The referenced resource existing-subnet1 is present and also all these things are in Eastus2
I am not sure whats the issue
Can you guys please help
Important points:
I cant use public ip thats the reson i included virtual network details
the virtual network is in a different resource group but everything is in a same subscription
​
is the error because packer is not able to read that vnet ?
Attached code below
{
"builders": [{
"type": "azure-arm",
​
"client_id": "f5b6a5cf-fbdf-4a9f-b3b8-3c2cd00225a4",
"client_secret": "0e760437-bf34-4aad-9f8d-870be799c55d",
"tenant_id": "72f988bf-86f1-41af-91ab-2d7cd011db47",
"subscription_id": "xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxx",
"virtual_network_name" : "existing-vnet1"
"virtual_network_subnet_name" : "existing-subnet1"
"virtual_network_resource_group_name" : "network-rg"
​
"managed_image_resource_group_name": "myResourceGroup",
"managed_image_name": "myPackerImage",
​
"os_type": "Linux",
"image_publisher": "Canonical",
"image_offer": "UbuntuServer",
"image_sku": "16.04-LTS",
​
"azure_tags": {
"dept": "Engineering",
"task": "Image deployment"
},
​
"location": "East US",
"vm_size": "Standard_DS2_v2"
}\],
"provisioners": [{
"execute_command": "chmod +x {{ .Path }}; {{ .Vars }} sudo -E sh '{{ .Path }}'",
"inline": [
"apt-get update",
"apt-get upgrade -y",
"apt-get -y install nginx",
​
"/usr/sbin/waagent -force -deprovision+user && export HISTSIZE=0 && sync"
\],
"inline_shebang": "/bin/sh -x",
"type": "shell"
}\]
}
https://redd.it/sszwe6
@r_devops
Hi All,
I am getting an error like
"Invalid resource reference" .. /subscriptions/12fasd4324-213asd4e21dad342-dsa/resourseGroups/network-rg/Providers/...../subnets/existing-subnet1 referenced by resource /subscriptions/../Microsft.Network/networkInterfaces/pkrni88im9aen8 was not found .Please make sure the referenced resource exist and both are in same region
The referenced resource existing-subnet1 is present and also all these things are in Eastus2
I am not sure whats the issue
Can you guys please help
Important points:
I cant use public ip thats the reson i included virtual network details
the virtual network is in a different resource group but everything is in a same subscription
​
is the error because packer is not able to read that vnet ?
Attached code below
{
"builders": [{
"type": "azure-arm",
​
"client_id": "f5b6a5cf-fbdf-4a9f-b3b8-3c2cd00225a4",
"client_secret": "0e760437-bf34-4aad-9f8d-870be799c55d",
"tenant_id": "72f988bf-86f1-41af-91ab-2d7cd011db47",
"subscription_id": "xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxx",
"virtual_network_name" : "existing-vnet1"
"virtual_network_subnet_name" : "existing-subnet1"
"virtual_network_resource_group_name" : "network-rg"
​
"managed_image_resource_group_name": "myResourceGroup",
"managed_image_name": "myPackerImage",
​
"os_type": "Linux",
"image_publisher": "Canonical",
"image_offer": "UbuntuServer",
"image_sku": "16.04-LTS",
​
"azure_tags": {
"dept": "Engineering",
"task": "Image deployment"
},
​
"location": "East US",
"vm_size": "Standard_DS2_v2"
}\],
"provisioners": [{
"execute_command": "chmod +x {{ .Path }}; {{ .Vars }} sudo -E sh '{{ .Path }}'",
"inline": [
"apt-get update",
"apt-get upgrade -y",
"apt-get -y install nginx",
​
"/usr/sbin/waagent -force -deprovision+user && export HISTSIZE=0 && sync"
\],
"inline_shebang": "/bin/sh -x",
"type": "shell"
}\]
}
https://redd.it/sszwe6
@r_devops
reddit
Packer unable to read the subnet in a different resource group
Hi All, I am getting an error like "Invalid resource reference" .....
Path based routing in local
How can we test path based routing from our local systems, Is it possible?
https://redd.it/st1cl5
@r_devops
How can we test path based routing from our local systems, Is it possible?
https://redd.it/st1cl5
@r_devops
reddit
Path based routing in local
How can we test path based routing from our local systems, Is it possible?
Is a Customer Success Engineer job as a new grad better than no job?
I apologize in advance if this post doesn't belong in the DevOps community but I thought it might be related.
The CSE job description says, I have to :
* maintain websites on cloud PaaS
* access cloud servers using terminal system (Nginx, Apache, etc.)
* work on chats and support tools (such as Zendesk)
There's a 5 month probation period and then a 2 yrs contract (and if I leave before that I have to pay back 5 months' salary). I have been job hunting for around 1.5 months and even though I have gotten calls from a few good places, I couldn't pass the interview because my DSA problem solving skills are not that good yet.
Now, I plan to study DSA for 3/4 months and then apply to jobs I am interested in but I am not confident about the future. I am planning to accept the job and then practice DSA at the same time, then apply elsewhere. Does that sound like a good plan? Although, I am interested in a SWE job but I do not mind going into the DevOps route either. But does the above job description even sound good for my career?
I just graduated 4 months ago and money is not a problem atm. I am just scared that I might be unemployed for a year or more if I let go of this job. Any insight is appreciated. Thanks for your time.
https://redd.it/stbpuc
@r_devops
I apologize in advance if this post doesn't belong in the DevOps community but I thought it might be related.
The CSE job description says, I have to :
* maintain websites on cloud PaaS
* access cloud servers using terminal system (Nginx, Apache, etc.)
* work on chats and support tools (such as Zendesk)
There's a 5 month probation period and then a 2 yrs contract (and if I leave before that I have to pay back 5 months' salary). I have been job hunting for around 1.5 months and even though I have gotten calls from a few good places, I couldn't pass the interview because my DSA problem solving skills are not that good yet.
Now, I plan to study DSA for 3/4 months and then apply to jobs I am interested in but I am not confident about the future. I am planning to accept the job and then practice DSA at the same time, then apply elsewhere. Does that sound like a good plan? Although, I am interested in a SWE job but I do not mind going into the DevOps route either. But does the above job description even sound good for my career?
I just graduated 4 months ago and money is not a problem atm. I am just scared that I might be unemployed for a year or more if I let go of this job. Any insight is appreciated. Thanks for your time.
https://redd.it/stbpuc
@r_devops
reddit
Is a Customer Success Engineer job as a new grad better than no job?
I apologize in advance if this post doesn't belong in the DevOps community but I thought it might be related. The CSE job description says, I...
Aws image builder pipeline for CIS images.:
errors with TOE because of the working directory being set to /tmp - where else can it be set for the CIS ?
https://redd.it/std77u
@r_devops
errors with TOE because of the working directory being set to /tmp - where else can it be set for the CIS ?
https://redd.it/std77u
@r_devops
reddit
Aws image builder pipeline for CIS images.:
errors with TOE because of the working directory being set to /tmp - where else can it be set for the CIS ?
Defining responsibilities in a DevOps team...
So, I know it's far too common for "DevOps engineers" to get thrown under the bus and become a multitool on steroids thay can fix anything involving technogy.
I'm in a position where in my new team I might be clable to restore some sanity. The issue is in a team of about 10, the work is going through about 3 people who have to fix everything and dev pretty much everything.
How do you introduce a fairer distribution of work and responsibilities in a DevOps team without creating silos? Everyone will still be working on one project and having CICD is critical, but I don't think it's fair for our Ops Engineer, who has a full work load already, to spend half their week in meetings rewriting a junior devs Java because said Jr Dev complained to the boss about getting help and the (departing boss) understood DevOps to be "everyone knows how to do everything and should therefore work on everything".
https://redd.it/stcjh2
@r_devops
So, I know it's far too common for "DevOps engineers" to get thrown under the bus and become a multitool on steroids thay can fix anything involving technogy.
I'm in a position where in my new team I might be clable to restore some sanity. The issue is in a team of about 10, the work is going through about 3 people who have to fix everything and dev pretty much everything.
How do you introduce a fairer distribution of work and responsibilities in a DevOps team without creating silos? Everyone will still be working on one project and having CICD is critical, but I don't think it's fair for our Ops Engineer, who has a full work load already, to spend half their week in meetings rewriting a junior devs Java because said Jr Dev complained to the boss about getting help and the (departing boss) understood DevOps to be "everyone knows how to do everything and should therefore work on everything".
https://redd.it/stcjh2
@r_devops
reddit
Defining responsibilities in a DevOps team...
So, I know it's far too common for "DevOps engineers" to get thrown under the bus and become a multitool on steroids thay can fix anything...
How good do you have to be at linux or powershell for a devops engineer?
I know the more you know the better. But I am trying to find out the time I should split between coding, learning devops and bash? Thanks
https://redd.it/stfr2g
@r_devops
I know the more you know the better. But I am trying to find out the time I should split between coding, learning devops and bash? Thanks
https://redd.it/stfr2g
@r_devops
reddit
How good do you have to be at linux or powershell for a devops...
I know the more you know the better. But I am trying to find out the time I should split between coding, learning devops and bash? Thanks
How do you make an infinitely scalable Wordpress box?
How do you make an infinitely scalable Wordpress box? I have a box, and I have a cronjob that runs a stored proc from a MSSQL server, I want the other instances to just be slave instances of the master and not run any cronjob. Is there a tutorial on how to do this?
https://redd.it/stgnuj
@r_devops
How do you make an infinitely scalable Wordpress box? I have a box, and I have a cronjob that runs a stored proc from a MSSQL server, I want the other instances to just be slave instances of the master and not run any cronjob. Is there a tutorial on how to do this?
https://redd.it/stgnuj
@r_devops
reddit
How do you make an infinitely scalable Wordpress box?
How do you make an infinitely scalable Wordpress box? I have a box, and I have a cronjob that runs a stored proc from a MSSQL server, I want the...
DevOps Certification for someone wanting to become a Digital Nomad?
I am thinking of switching over to DevOps Engineer from my current Data Engineer job. I think DevOps gives more opportunities for remote work (thus helping to become a Digital Nomad!) and is less boring compared to being an SQL monkey as a Data Professional. Besides, I found it's very interesting to work with Infra and Production problems rather than PoC and pure data modeling jobs.
So, which DevOps certification should I get? GitLab is the best DevOps platform (CI/CD) now and they have some certifications. AWS on the other hand has cloud dominance and they offer DevOps Professional-level certifications. Moreover, Kubernetes is ever more important nowadays and GitOps is the future (that includes Terraform).
Please suggest to me which DevOps certification should I get that will cover Linux, Git, CI/CD, Docker, Terraform, Ansible, Kubernetes, etc?
https://redd.it/stjtjj
@r_devops
I am thinking of switching over to DevOps Engineer from my current Data Engineer job. I think DevOps gives more opportunities for remote work (thus helping to become a Digital Nomad!) and is less boring compared to being an SQL monkey as a Data Professional. Besides, I found it's very interesting to work with Infra and Production problems rather than PoC and pure data modeling jobs.
So, which DevOps certification should I get? GitLab is the best DevOps platform (CI/CD) now and they have some certifications. AWS on the other hand has cloud dominance and they offer DevOps Professional-level certifications. Moreover, Kubernetes is ever more important nowadays and GitOps is the future (that includes Terraform).
Please suggest to me which DevOps certification should I get that will cover Linux, Git, CI/CD, Docker, Terraform, Ansible, Kubernetes, etc?
https://redd.it/stjtjj
@r_devops
reddit
DevOps Certification for someone wanting to become a Digital Nomad?
I am thinking of switching over to DevOps Engineer from my current Data Engineer job. I think DevOps gives more opportunities for remote work...