Who has the nicest docs?
Thinking primarily about charts and containers, who are the people with the best documentation?
Whose Github repo has the best Issue and Pull Request templates?
Looking for inspiration about how to do things the right way. Ease of maintenance and clean formatting. Good ci integration.
https://redd.it/1boh2z3
@r_devops
Thinking primarily about charts and containers, who are the people with the best documentation?
Whose Github repo has the best Issue and Pull Request templates?
Looking for inspiration about how to do things the right way. Ease of maintenance and clean formatting. Good ci integration.
https://redd.it/1boh2z3
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Datadog Question
Hello,
My company started using Datadog recently and we've run into a problem. For context I am a SWE putting on a devops hat for this one. I appreciate any help that anyone can provide.
So, the problem is that we log our requests and the one application has requests around 700 key:value pairs. But, seems to be too large for datadog because they truncate it. Size wise they are about 20kb which is well under the 256KB limit with datadog agent. I can't seem to find any information of how to actually handle this. Datadog just asks why we have such a large JSON object and to respond it is what another team structured their api. Do I need to fight for a change in how large these request objects are or has anyone faced this and have a nice clean solution for logging such "large" objects?
https://docs.datadoghq.com/logs/log\_collection/?tab=hostThis portion below:
The HTTPS API supports logs of sizes up to 1MB. However, for optimal performance, it is recommended that an individual log be no greater than 25K bytes. If you use the Datadog Agent for logging, it is configured to split a log at 256kB (256000 bytes).A log event should not have more than 100 tags, and each tag should not exceed 256 characters for a maximum of 10 million unique tags per day.A log event converted to JSON format should contain less than 256 attributes. Each of those attribute’s keys should be less than 50 characters, nested in less than 10 successive levels, and their respective value should be less than 1024 characters if promoted as a facet.Log events can be submitted with a timestamp that is up to 18h in the past.
Edit: If this sub doesn't seem like the right place for you and have a good idea for another sub to post this in that would also be appreciated.
https://redd.it/1bojkrs
@r_devops
Hello,
My company started using Datadog recently and we've run into a problem. For context I am a SWE putting on a devops hat for this one. I appreciate any help that anyone can provide.
So, the problem is that we log our requests and the one application has requests around 700 key:value pairs. But, seems to be too large for datadog because they truncate it. Size wise they are about 20kb which is well under the 256KB limit with datadog agent. I can't seem to find any information of how to actually handle this. Datadog just asks why we have such a large JSON object and to respond it is what another team structured their api. Do I need to fight for a change in how large these request objects are or has anyone faced this and have a nice clean solution for logging such "large" objects?
https://docs.datadoghq.com/logs/log\_collection/?tab=hostThis portion below:
The HTTPS API supports logs of sizes up to 1MB. However, for optimal performance, it is recommended that an individual log be no greater than 25K bytes. If you use the Datadog Agent for logging, it is configured to split a log at 256kB (256000 bytes).A log event should not have more than 100 tags, and each tag should not exceed 256 characters for a maximum of 10 million unique tags per day.A log event converted to JSON format should contain less than 256 attributes. Each of those attribute’s keys should be less than 50 characters, nested in less than 10 successive levels, and their respective value should be less than 1024 characters if promoted as a facet.Log events can be submitted with a timestamp that is up to 18h in the past.
Edit: If this sub doesn't seem like the right place for you and have a good idea for another sub to post this in that would also be appreciated.
https://redd.it/1bojkrs
@r_devops
Datadog Infrastructure and Application Monitoring
Log Collection and Integrations
Configure your environment to gather logs from your host, containers, and services.
Best place to find Devops Engineer interested in hourly work?
I'm working on an application that uses Django and interacts with a Next.js application using the django-nextjs package (https://github.com/QueraTeam/django-nextjs). There is also a Rust service.
I've been looking for someone to help me create a simple containerized deployment and set up CI pipelines, but I've been having trouble finding someone.
Any ideas of websites or devops communities where I may be able to find someone?
https://redd.it/1bokssb
@r_devops
I'm working on an application that uses Django and interacts with a Next.js application using the django-nextjs package (https://github.com/QueraTeam/django-nextjs). There is also a Rust service.
I've been looking for someone to help me create a simple containerized deployment and set up CI pipelines, but I've been having trouble finding someone.
Any ideas of websites or devops communities where I may be able to find someone?
https://redd.it/1bokssb
@r_devops
GitHub
GitHub - QueraTeam/django-nextjs: Integrate Next.js into your Django project
Integrate Next.js into your Django project. Contribute to QueraTeam/django-nextjs development by creating an account on GitHub.
Self Service Models
Looking through an article about the DevOps Maturity Model, I noticed that the top level gets to self service. What does that look like in your organization? How many people are there?
https://redd.it/1bol1p7
@r_devops
Looking through an article about the DevOps Maturity Model, I noticed that the top level gets to self service. What does that look like in your organization? How many people are there?
https://redd.it/1bol1p7
@r_devops
Veritis Group Inc
DevOps Maturity Model - Assessment, Transformation and Benefits
Explore the DevOps Maturity Model to assess your organization's capabilities, optimize processes, and leverage the full benefits of DevOps maturity.
A new guy might be faking his experience. What should I do?
I’m a DevOps contractor from a consulting company working a staff augmentation project and we just got a new FTE on our DevOps team. It seems one of my consulting teammates thinks that the new FTE is faking some of his past experience.
The FTE says he worked at the same company, at the same time more than 5 years ago, doing the same job, and that they know some of the same people, but our fellow consultant doesn’t remember this FTE. The company we’re talking about is a very large company, but our consultant has reasons to believe the FTE is lying.
On the other hand, this company has an intense interviewing process, and they do employment checks, so if the FTE is here then he passed all of that. The FTE also seems to have some decent skills, seems to do good work, and is very eager to learn.
Personally, I don’t even like my colleagues, they’re assholes. And I think they’re just jealous and hating on this guy & acting like petty hall monitors.
What should we do? Should we report our consultant’s concerns to management, or just let the FTE be?
https://redd.it/1bonrvv
@r_devops
I’m a DevOps contractor from a consulting company working a staff augmentation project and we just got a new FTE on our DevOps team. It seems one of my consulting teammates thinks that the new FTE is faking some of his past experience.
The FTE says he worked at the same company, at the same time more than 5 years ago, doing the same job, and that they know some of the same people, but our fellow consultant doesn’t remember this FTE. The company we’re talking about is a very large company, but our consultant has reasons to believe the FTE is lying.
On the other hand, this company has an intense interviewing process, and they do employment checks, so if the FTE is here then he passed all of that. The FTE also seems to have some decent skills, seems to do good work, and is very eager to learn.
Personally, I don’t even like my colleagues, they’re assholes. And I think they’re just jealous and hating on this guy & acting like petty hall monitors.
What should we do? Should we report our consultant’s concerns to management, or just let the FTE be?
https://redd.it/1bonrvv
@r_devops
Reddit
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So Many Hats
Is anyone else in a role/shop where half working code gets thrown over the fence and you have to make it work, all while hearing that the infrastructure is to blame? How does everyone deal with that mental beating? Also, feel free to feel me that I am just doing things wrong and your shop is much better than this 🤣.
https://redd.it/1bopg2o
@r_devops
Is anyone else in a role/shop where half working code gets thrown over the fence and you have to make it work, all while hearing that the infrastructure is to blame? How does everyone deal with that mental beating? Also, feel free to feel me that I am just doing things wrong and your shop is much better than this 🤣.
https://redd.it/1bopg2o
@r_devops
Reddit
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What is the best platform for ops automation
For general ops tasks (think database migrations, running hotfixes, etc) what is the best platform?
The only platform i can think of that is dedicated to this kind of stuff is rundeck.
https://redd.it/1bovk40
@r_devops
For general ops tasks (think database migrations, running hotfixes, etc) what is the best platform?
The only platform i can think of that is dedicated to this kind of stuff is rundeck.
https://redd.it/1bovk40
@r_devops
Reddit
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Running Tekton Pipelines on Kubernetes at Scale
Running Tekton CI/CD pipelines on Kubernetes/OpenShift at scale: https://piotrminkowski.com/2024/03/27/running-tekton-pipelines-on-kubernetes-at-scale/
https://redd.it/1bowqxj
@r_devops
Running Tekton CI/CD pipelines on Kubernetes/OpenShift at scale: https://piotrminkowski.com/2024/03/27/running-tekton-pipelines-on-kubernetes-at-scale/
https://redd.it/1bowqxj
@r_devops
Piotr's TechBlog
Running Tekton Pipelines on Kubernetes at Scale - Piotr's TechBlog
In this article, you will learn how to configure and run CI pipelines on Kubernetes at scale with Tekton or OpenShift Pipelines.
Senior Devops doesn’t know anything. It’s really frustrating
So, I recently started working as a DevOps engineer at an online shopping platform, and boy, let me tell you, it's been a rollercoaster ride already. The interview process was insanely hectic, and there were very few openings available.
Here's the kicker: my senior doesn't seem to know much about what we're actually working with. We're using GCP and Terraform for infrastructure as code (IaC), but they're clueless about even the basics. I'm talking about not knowing how a simple Cloud Build file is created or how it functions.
In our meetings, it feels like we're discussing nonsense most of the time. They're adamant about creating our own Google Cloud logs because apparently, using Logs Explorer is too expensive. but then they stumble when it comes to knowing which machine types are suitable or understanding the differences between them.
It's frustrating because there are countless talented, unemployed freshers out there who could bring so much more to the table. And don't even get me started on CI/CD pipelines – they're a foreign concept to my senior.
Has anyone else experienced something similar? How did you cope with it? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for letting me vent.
https://redd.it/1boxx67
@r_devops
So, I recently started working as a DevOps engineer at an online shopping platform, and boy, let me tell you, it's been a rollercoaster ride already. The interview process was insanely hectic, and there were very few openings available.
Here's the kicker: my senior doesn't seem to know much about what we're actually working with. We're using GCP and Terraform for infrastructure as code (IaC), but they're clueless about even the basics. I'm talking about not knowing how a simple Cloud Build file is created or how it functions.
In our meetings, it feels like we're discussing nonsense most of the time. They're adamant about creating our own Google Cloud logs because apparently, using Logs Explorer is too expensive. but then they stumble when it comes to knowing which machine types are suitable or understanding the differences between them.
It's frustrating because there are countless talented, unemployed freshers out there who could bring so much more to the table. And don't even get me started on CI/CD pipelines – they're a foreign concept to my senior.
Has anyone else experienced something similar? How did you cope with it? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for letting me vent.
https://redd.it/1boxx67
@r_devops
Reddit
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how are all of you testing your ansible?
I'm currently undertaking a project to switch our chef to ansible piece by piece, for chef we are leveraging the spec tests which do a decent enough job.
in looking at testing ansible most people seem to mention Molecule but in trying it I can't really seem to find many examples as to how the default verifier "ansible" is actually meant to be written. I've noticed though that many have opted to use testinfra instead.
For local testing in chef we use test kitchen and Molecule seems to emulate that part completely fine.
Curious as to how all of you are managing.
https://redd.it/1boyqdj
@r_devops
I'm currently undertaking a project to switch our chef to ansible piece by piece, for chef we are leveraging the spec tests which do a decent enough job.
in looking at testing ansible most people seem to mention Molecule but in trying it I can't really seem to find many examples as to how the default verifier "ansible" is actually meant to be written. I've noticed though that many have opted to use testinfra instead.
For local testing in chef we use test kitchen and Molecule seems to emulate that part completely fine.
Curious as to how all of you are managing.
https://redd.it/1boyqdj
@r_devops
Ansible
Ansible Molecule
Fullstack dev tasked to do some devops : looking for pointers to learn what i should know.
Hello r/devops and sorry if my title is too vague, i'll enter in the details.
So, I'm part of a small dev teams, 5 people, and until today we were self hosting all of our tools : Jira for out ticketing system, Jenkins for our Continuous Integration and unit testing, perforce -soon to be git- repo. We're tech-savvy and can rtfm so we set up the vms to host these services ourselves, but it's in no way our job or our domain.
2024 is the year of the migration to the cloud for us as asked by the management. We already migrated Jira and our repo should be done by the end of the year.
I've been asked to look for solutions to do the same with our CI. The complexity seems a level higher as CI is not "static" in the sense that it needs to pull files, to have sdk installed to compile them (we do .Net6), to run unit tests on the result and copy it to a place where we can access it, all while keeping the interactions between Jira and our CI for version release for example.
And of top of that, there's the security which I also worry about.
I'm not tasked to do the actual migration, just to look for potential solutions, but I don't know where to look at.
Is it common to have cloud-hosted CI ? If so, are there resources you advise me to read ? Do you have an opinion on how I should do?
Thanks a lot.
https://redd.it/1boysrj
@r_devops
Hello r/devops and sorry if my title is too vague, i'll enter in the details.
So, I'm part of a small dev teams, 5 people, and until today we were self hosting all of our tools : Jira for out ticketing system, Jenkins for our Continuous Integration and unit testing, perforce -soon to be git- repo. We're tech-savvy and can rtfm so we set up the vms to host these services ourselves, but it's in no way our job or our domain.
2024 is the year of the migration to the cloud for us as asked by the management. We already migrated Jira and our repo should be done by the end of the year.
I've been asked to look for solutions to do the same with our CI. The complexity seems a level higher as CI is not "static" in the sense that it needs to pull files, to have sdk installed to compile them (we do .Net6), to run unit tests on the result and copy it to a place where we can access it, all while keeping the interactions between Jira and our CI for version release for example.
And of top of that, there's the security which I also worry about.
I'm not tasked to do the actual migration, just to look for potential solutions, but I don't know where to look at.
Is it common to have cloud-hosted CI ? If so, are there resources you advise me to read ? Do you have an opinion on how I should do?
Thanks a lot.
https://redd.it/1boysrj
@r_devops
Reddit
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developer deleted heroku server and the frontend is not loading
so the developer I was working with was probably mad, and he deleted the heroku server without finishing the transition, now some parts of the frontend are not loading... i'm not technical and in the process of finding another developer. Is this easy to fix?
https://redd.it/1bp1t74
@r_devops
so the developer I was working with was probably mad, and he deleted the heroku server without finishing the transition, now some parts of the frontend are not loading... i'm not technical and in the process of finding another developer. Is this easy to fix?
https://redd.it/1bp1t74
@r_devops
Reddit
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Terraform 1.7 Adds Config-Driven Remove and Test Mocking Ahead of OpenTofu
https://www.infoq.com/news/2024/03/terraform-test-mocking-remove/
Hashicorp announced the release of Terraform 1.7, a new version of the popular Infrastructure as Code (IaC) tool. Terraform now supports config-driven remove capability, a safer way to remove resources from the managed stack’s state data. The new version also comes with mock providers and overrides, as well as several other enhancements in the test framework.
https://redd.it/1boxtzt
@r_devops
https://www.infoq.com/news/2024/03/terraform-test-mocking-remove/
Hashicorp announced the release of Terraform 1.7, a new version of the popular Infrastructure as Code (IaC) tool. Terraform now supports config-driven remove capability, a safer way to remove resources from the managed stack’s state data. The new version also comes with mock providers and overrides, as well as several other enhancements in the test framework.
https://redd.it/1boxtzt
@r_devops
InfoQ
Terraform 1.7 Adds Config-Driven Remove and Test Mocking Ahead of OpenTofu
Hashicorp announced the release of Terraform 1.7, a new version of the popular Infrastructure as Code (IaC) tool. Terraform now supports config-driven remove capability, a safer way to remove resources from the managed stack’s state data. The new version…
I am not a senior and had a first interview with HR for a senior position
I am feeling nervous. I was approached by a recruiter as a Senior DevOps position. I am not a senior and told this the recruiter upfront. The recruiter just talked with the company and they decided to do a HR interview with me.
The interview went well and we will proceed. But I am feeling uncomfortable with the jump since I would be the first and only DevOps for the team. They have a Data Platform with high responsibilities and critical data and would be my responsibility to take care of the environment.
Now I am feeling a very strong imposter syndrome. For example. It is a long time now that I do not touch terraform and they use terraform. Same for Helm. Being the solo DevOps and to take care of the whole environment and also a role to be of very high responsibility sounds too much to me. I am feeling overwhelmed by the responsibilities.
Has anyone had this experience in the past?
https://redd.it/1bp54f8
@r_devops
I am feeling nervous. I was approached by a recruiter as a Senior DevOps position. I am not a senior and told this the recruiter upfront. The recruiter just talked with the company and they decided to do a HR interview with me.
The interview went well and we will proceed. But I am feeling uncomfortable with the jump since I would be the first and only DevOps for the team. They have a Data Platform with high responsibilities and critical data and would be my responsibility to take care of the environment.
Now I am feeling a very strong imposter syndrome. For example. It is a long time now that I do not touch terraform and they use terraform. Same for Helm. Being the solo DevOps and to take care of the whole environment and also a role to be of very high responsibility sounds too much to me. I am feeling overwhelmed by the responsibilities.
Has anyone had this experience in the past?
https://redd.it/1bp54f8
@r_devops
Reddit
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Containerized POS - Lipstick on a pig?
To preface this post, I'm new to all things DevOps but I definitely see it as the future of all IT in some facets.
We use Oracle Simphony as a POS system in our restaurants. Everything runs on windows. Currently we have onsite hyperv servers that host a ton of windows 10 VMs with Simphony installed on them. Then people RDP into those VMs from tablets.
I want to find a better way. I was inspired by Chick-fil-A's restaurant compute system
https://medium.com/chick-fil-atech/enterprise-restaurant-compute-f5e2fd63d20f
And id love to build something much more scalable, resilient, and overall better. Simphony can be installed on Linux and would theoretically move to cloud virtual machines or even containers. My only fear with that is ensuring the restaurant can operate without Internet.
I found this repo for a kubernetes vdi
https://github.com/webmeshproj/webmesh-vdi
But it definitely don't want to be using that in a production env
Then that brings up the question of, is this even worth it, possible, or am I putting lipstick on a pig? We don't have an internal dev team (even though we should) so it just seems a bit overkill since we use an out of box solution.
Thoughts?
https://redd.it/1bp5gib
@r_devops
To preface this post, I'm new to all things DevOps but I definitely see it as the future of all IT in some facets.
We use Oracle Simphony as a POS system in our restaurants. Everything runs on windows. Currently we have onsite hyperv servers that host a ton of windows 10 VMs with Simphony installed on them. Then people RDP into those VMs from tablets.
I want to find a better way. I was inspired by Chick-fil-A's restaurant compute system
https://medium.com/chick-fil-atech/enterprise-restaurant-compute-f5e2fd63d20f
And id love to build something much more scalable, resilient, and overall better. Simphony can be installed on Linux and would theoretically move to cloud virtual machines or even containers. My only fear with that is ensuring the restaurant can operate without Internet.
I found this repo for a kubernetes vdi
https://github.com/webmeshproj/webmesh-vdi
But it definitely don't want to be using that in a production env
Then that brings up the question of, is this even worth it, possible, or am I putting lipstick on a pig? We don't have an internal dev team (even though we should) so it just seems a bit overkill since we use an out of box solution.
Thoughts?
https://redd.it/1bp5gib
@r_devops
Medium
Enterprise Restaurant Compute
by the CFA Enterprise Restaurant Compute Team
How are ya'll using ChatGPT or any GenAI tools lately?
Went from ChatGPT Personal to an Enterprise account a few months back and have been advocating for it within my company as a great general purpose tool for pretty much anything. I've seen folks really accelerate their learning on a lot of topics, and just be more productive as a result of it. We've got a few custom GPT's too that a handful of folks use.
We're now exploring Azure OpenAI Studio and Google Vertex AI and Gemini, but again, nothing is in cement yet. ChatGPT is by far the most "mature" (heavy air quotes) tool we're using and even that isn't that popular, I'd say 15% of the company signed up for it, and out of that group I'd say maybe 10% are using it daily.
Some areas I've found it's helping us:
1. Engineers writing way better emails. Really helping as a communications tool.
2. It's half decent at troubleshooting and quick and dirty scripting in bash.
3. It knows enough to be dangerous when it comes to AWS, GCP and Azure. With AWS specifically (90% of our shop is here) it's even helped me get caught up on a lot of new topics.
I can list more but I think these 3 are worth the investment. It's hard to hire these days and I think these tools really help push productivity from the folks who are using them. How about your experiences /r/devops?
https://redd.it/1bp8zv1
@r_devops
Went from ChatGPT Personal to an Enterprise account a few months back and have been advocating for it within my company as a great general purpose tool for pretty much anything. I've seen folks really accelerate their learning on a lot of topics, and just be more productive as a result of it. We've got a few custom GPT's too that a handful of folks use.
We're now exploring Azure OpenAI Studio and Google Vertex AI and Gemini, but again, nothing is in cement yet. ChatGPT is by far the most "mature" (heavy air quotes) tool we're using and even that isn't that popular, I'd say 15% of the company signed up for it, and out of that group I'd say maybe 10% are using it daily.
Some areas I've found it's helping us:
1. Engineers writing way better emails. Really helping as a communications tool.
2. It's half decent at troubleshooting and quick and dirty scripting in bash.
3. It knows enough to be dangerous when it comes to AWS, GCP and Azure. With AWS specifically (90% of our shop is here) it's even helped me get caught up on a lot of new topics.
I can list more but I think these 3 are worth the investment. It's hard to hire these days and I think these tools really help push productivity from the folks who are using them. How about your experiences /r/devops?
https://redd.it/1bp8zv1
@r_devops
Reddit
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Can we ban the low-effort “how do I go into DevOps” posts?
I see at least a couple of them a day and the answer’s always the same. If you can’t be bothered to do a basic search of the sub then you’re probably not gonna make it in DevOps anyways; this field requires a self-starter that knows how to find information.
https://redd.it/1bp9424
@r_devops
I see at least a couple of them a day and the answer’s always the same. If you can’t be bothered to do a basic search of the sub then you’re probably not gonna make it in DevOps anyways; this field requires a self-starter that knows how to find information.
https://redd.it/1bp9424
@r_devops
Reddit
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Need a FullStack Developer for a freelance project.
I want to have a site/app cloned and result timing reduced by 10-20%. If any capable developer wants to do the work , then DM me for further details.
https://redd.it/1bpb5yd
@r_devops
I want to have a site/app cloned and result timing reduced by 10-20%. If any capable developer wants to do the work , then DM me for further details.
https://redd.it/1bpb5yd
@r_devops
Reddit
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Is there anyone who needs a Coursera Plus?
I will be inviting you to use Plus for a year (worth $399) on your email (corporate invites) at $39 and obviously you won't be paying me without any proof that you require from and before you are satisfied. If anyone is needy and actually needs it, can dm me. I'll help them!
https://redd.it/1bpb36x
@r_devops
I will be inviting you to use Plus for a year (worth $399) on your email (corporate invites) at $39 and obviously you won't be paying me without any proof that you require from and before you are satisfied. If anyone is needy and actually needs it, can dm me. I'll help them!
https://redd.it/1bpb36x
@r_devops
Reddit
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Angry about work tracking process
I've been in my career for 15 years. I'm at the most senior level I can be at for my role within my organization. We had a leadership change a few years back that brought some new processes that I don't like at all.
Entering time in a time sheet by project
Sending a weekly status update with everything you have done
Talking about what you did every day on stand-up
Recording everything you do in a ticket putting hours on it and marking it with a bunch fields for report generation, all data entry and tracking is done by the engineer
It's the last one that bugs me, because I've obviously already provided the info needed to management to track what they need to. However my boss is a self-proclaimed hand-off boss. He had someone create reports off the information we're entering so he can provide updates to management without really being involved with what is going on.
This makes me irrationally angry, and I wonder if I'm being dramatic or if it is actually an awful thing to hoist upon a team. There's more tracking than actual work. He doesn't assign work he just expects it all to get done, he doesn't even care what the work is really.
I thought about leaving but I've got a classic case of golden shackles, there's no way I'd be able to find the same pay with the way the market has changed. I'm thinking about just leaving tech. I also own a real estate business, but it's not big enough to rely soley on. 3 million dollar portfolio with 33 units, I pull in probably 8K extra a month from my business but I put it all back into continue to grow. Eventually, I'll leave tech but my situation currently wont allow for change right this moment.
Really just trying to find a way to accept how much of a cluster this place is or validate my anger. I have much more of an owner mindset, than a manager. I also prefer doing.
Feedback appreciated.
https://redd.it/1bpeccf
@r_devops
I've been in my career for 15 years. I'm at the most senior level I can be at for my role within my organization. We had a leadership change a few years back that brought some new processes that I don't like at all.
Entering time in a time sheet by project
Sending a weekly status update with everything you have done
Talking about what you did every day on stand-up
Recording everything you do in a ticket putting hours on it and marking it with a bunch fields for report generation, all data entry and tracking is done by the engineer
It's the last one that bugs me, because I've obviously already provided the info needed to management to track what they need to. However my boss is a self-proclaimed hand-off boss. He had someone create reports off the information we're entering so he can provide updates to management without really being involved with what is going on.
This makes me irrationally angry, and I wonder if I'm being dramatic or if it is actually an awful thing to hoist upon a team. There's more tracking than actual work. He doesn't assign work he just expects it all to get done, he doesn't even care what the work is really.
I thought about leaving but I've got a classic case of golden shackles, there's no way I'd be able to find the same pay with the way the market has changed. I'm thinking about just leaving tech. I also own a real estate business, but it's not big enough to rely soley on. 3 million dollar portfolio with 33 units, I pull in probably 8K extra a month from my business but I put it all back into continue to grow. Eventually, I'll leave tech but my situation currently wont allow for change right this moment.
Really just trying to find a way to accept how much of a cluster this place is or validate my anger. I have much more of an owner mindset, than a manager. I also prefer doing.
Feedback appreciated.
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How can AI integrate to DevOps solution?
AI is growing rapidly and I don’t wanna be exclude from it. As a DevOps engineer, is there any practical usage of AI in DevOps?
Can anyone share some examples that how your company integrates AI into pipelines, workflows, or anything?
https://redd.it/1bpg7mj
@r_devops
AI is growing rapidly and I don’t wanna be exclude from it. As a DevOps engineer, is there any practical usage of AI in DevOps?
Can anyone share some examples that how your company integrates AI into pipelines, workflows, or anything?
https://redd.it/1bpg7mj
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the devops community