Looks like I need to switch my field from devops - where should I go ?
I’m currently working as a DevOps Engineer, but I feel like I’m not a "complete" DevOps engineer because I struggle with programming. I’m fairly comfortable with cloud computing (AWS), Kubernetes, Terraform, Docker, monitoring tools, CI/CD pipelines, automation, infrastructure management, troubleshooting, etc.
In my day-to-day role, I:
Manage infrastructure and Kubernetes clusters
Set up and maintain CI/CD pipelines
Dockerize and release applications
Handle automation tasks and general troubleshooting
However, around 20% of my tasks require scripting or programming, and this is where I fall short. I don't know Python, and my Bash scripting skills are not strong. I usually rely on AI tools to help me write scripts when needed. Without them, I struggle to do it independently.
I’ve tried learning Python and improving my Bash, but it’s been tough and progress has been slow. So I’m wondering:
Given that I’m strong with DevOps tools but weak in programming and scripting, what direction should I consider moving into?
Of course, I plan to keep upskilling, but I’d appreciate guidance on a career path that aligns better with my strengths.
https://redd.it/1kj4rxz
@r_devops
I’m currently working as a DevOps Engineer, but I feel like I’m not a "complete" DevOps engineer because I struggle with programming. I’m fairly comfortable with cloud computing (AWS), Kubernetes, Terraform, Docker, monitoring tools, CI/CD pipelines, automation, infrastructure management, troubleshooting, etc.
In my day-to-day role, I:
Manage infrastructure and Kubernetes clusters
Set up and maintain CI/CD pipelines
Dockerize and release applications
Handle automation tasks and general troubleshooting
However, around 20% of my tasks require scripting or programming, and this is where I fall short. I don't know Python, and my Bash scripting skills are not strong. I usually rely on AI tools to help me write scripts when needed. Without them, I struggle to do it independently.
I’ve tried learning Python and improving my Bash, but it’s been tough and progress has been slow. So I’m wondering:
Given that I’m strong with DevOps tools but weak in programming and scripting, what direction should I consider moving into?
Of course, I plan to keep upskilling, but I’d appreciate guidance on a career path that aligns better with my strengths.
https://redd.it/1kj4rxz
@r_devops
Reddit
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Argo CD Setup with Terraform on EKS Clusters
I have an EKS cluster that I use for labs, which is deployed and destroyed using Terraform. I want to configure Argo CD on this cluster, but I would like the setup to be automated using Terraform. This way, I won't have to manually configure Argo CD every time I recreate the cluster. Can anyone point me in the right direction? Thanks!
https://redd.it/1kj52hu
@r_devops
I have an EKS cluster that I use for labs, which is deployed and destroyed using Terraform. I want to configure Argo CD on this cluster, but I would like the setup to be automated using Terraform. This way, I won't have to manually configure Argo CD every time I recreate the cluster. Can anyone point me in the right direction? Thanks!
https://redd.it/1kj52hu
@r_devops
Reddit
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Devops without CS degree
Is it possible ? At base i wanna follow mechanical engineering but i have a smiliarly big passion for linux and programming aswell(although its pretty challanging) . Will i be able to switch or choose careers without a CS degree? (With a decent github repo of good ideas in python , automation and networking)
https://redd.it/1kj6p3u
@r_devops
Is it possible ? At base i wanna follow mechanical engineering but i have a smiliarly big passion for linux and programming aswell(although its pretty challanging) . Will i be able to switch or choose careers without a CS degree? (With a decent github repo of good ideas in python , automation and networking)
https://redd.it/1kj6p3u
@r_devops
Reddit
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Did platform engineering also kill all small devops teams in your corpo BUs?
So I was in such small devops team in one of BUs. Platform department abstracted more and more stuff behind their IDP clickops.
After some time all the work we did (even of I still think was done better than many platform solutions) was abstracted. Infrastructure ? use UI to generate it. Need cicd? Use template. Template does not fit you exactly? Well too bad. GL.
Almost every part of regular devops engineer work was automated with a layer of ClickOps on top.
I strongly believe platform engineering is a direct competitor to devops (aka „devops at scale”).
Was this the same for your corpo ? (Ps. We are talking here about big corpos ~ few thousend ppl min)
https://redd.it/1kja11q
@r_devops
So I was in such small devops team in one of BUs. Platform department abstracted more and more stuff behind their IDP clickops.
After some time all the work we did (even of I still think was done better than many platform solutions) was abstracted. Infrastructure ? use UI to generate it. Need cicd? Use template. Template does not fit you exactly? Well too bad. GL.
Almost every part of regular devops engineer work was automated with a layer of ClickOps on top.
I strongly believe platform engineering is a direct competitor to devops (aka „devops at scale”).
Was this the same for your corpo ? (Ps. We are talking here about big corpos ~ few thousend ppl min)
https://redd.it/1kja11q
@r_devops
Reddit
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I have been a SDET for the last 6 years, how do I move to devops ?
Got laid off recently and looking for new areas I can transition to, I am pretty good in python and have decent understanding of ci/cd principles. At one of my jobs I created test and deployment pipeline in Jenkins as well. How devops jobs that I see demand a lot. So I had following questions.
What skill sets do I have to learn to get my foot in the door ?
I can probably get the free OCI associate certificate within a week, would that help ?
How devops is different than SRE jobs ?
https://redd.it/1kj9yma
@r_devops
Got laid off recently and looking for new areas I can transition to, I am pretty good in python and have decent understanding of ci/cd principles. At one of my jobs I created test and deployment pipeline in Jenkins as well. How devops jobs that I see demand a lot. So I had following questions.
What skill sets do I have to learn to get my foot in the door ?
I can probably get the free OCI associate certificate within a week, would that help ?
How devops is different than SRE jobs ?
https://redd.it/1kj9yma
@r_devops
Reddit
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ChallENGES with MOBILE
[https://www.reddit.com/r/interviewhammer/comments/1kjazgr/challenge\_can\_any\_interview\_platform\_detect\_our/](https://www.reddit.com/r/interviewhammer/comments/1kjazgr/challenge_can_any_interview_platform_detect_our/)
We built [interviewHammer](https://interviewhammer.com/) AI tool that helps with coding and regular interviews, and we’re challenging anyone (recruiters, platforms like HackerRank, LeetCode, Coderpad, etc..) to detect it.
* Here’s the deal: No subscription needed, try it with the free trial.
* Works on both Windows and Mac.
* If you manage to prove any site/tool can detect it, we’ll give you a **free 2-month subscription to interviewHammer the latest ChatGPT model**.
.................
***We’re confident that our tool is completely undetectable.***
*For example, in a coding interview, most other tools rely on the laptop to take screenshots, which can be flagged.*
*But our tool uses your mobile phone to capture screenshots of the questions, and the answers are displayed directly on your phone.*
*This means there’s* ***no way*** *for any website or application to detect it.*
.................
To win:
1. Record a full video showing how detection happens.
2. Include the **exact steps to reproduce the scenario**.
3. If we’re able to reproduce it ourselves, we’ll confirm it publicly, shout you out by name, and reward you.
We’re confident. This is your chance to prove us wrong. 👀
https://redd.it/1kjbv6j
@r_devops
[https://www.reddit.com/r/interviewhammer/comments/1kjazgr/challenge\_can\_any\_interview\_platform\_detect\_our/](https://www.reddit.com/r/interviewhammer/comments/1kjazgr/challenge_can_any_interview_platform_detect_our/)
We built [interviewHammer](https://interviewhammer.com/) AI tool that helps with coding and regular interviews, and we’re challenging anyone (recruiters, platforms like HackerRank, LeetCode, Coderpad, etc..) to detect it.
* Here’s the deal: No subscription needed, try it with the free trial.
* Works on both Windows and Mac.
* If you manage to prove any site/tool can detect it, we’ll give you a **free 2-month subscription to interviewHammer the latest ChatGPT model**.
.................
***We’re confident that our tool is completely undetectable.***
*For example, in a coding interview, most other tools rely on the laptop to take screenshots, which can be flagged.*
*But our tool uses your mobile phone to capture screenshots of the questions, and the answers are displayed directly on your phone.*
*This means there’s* ***no way*** *for any website or application to detect it.*
.................
To win:
1. Record a full video showing how detection happens.
2. Include the **exact steps to reproduce the scenario**.
3. If we’re able to reproduce it ourselves, we’ll confirm it publicly, shout you out by name, and reward you.
We’re confident. This is your chance to prove us wrong. 👀
https://redd.it/1kjbv6j
@r_devops
Reddit
From the interviewhammer community on Reddit: 📢 Challenge: Can ANY interview platform detect our interviewHammer assistant tool?
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The biggest DevOps lesson I’ve learned? It’s not about the tools—it’s about ownership
When I first got into DevOps, I obsessed over tools: Docker, Jenkins, Terraform, you name it. I thought knowing the tech would make me a great engineer.
But over time, I’ve realized the real shift is in how you think. DevOps isn’t just automation—it’s taking ownership from code to production. If something breaks in prod? You don’t say “that’s the dev team’s fault.” You own it, debug it, and fix the pipeline or infra that caused it.
Tools come and go. What sticks is this mindset of responsibility and constant improvement.
Anyone else feel like their biggest DevOps growth came from a shift in how they think—not what they use?
https://redd.it/1kjgtcp
@r_devops
When I first got into DevOps, I obsessed over tools: Docker, Jenkins, Terraform, you name it. I thought knowing the tech would make me a great engineer.
But over time, I’ve realized the real shift is in how you think. DevOps isn’t just automation—it’s taking ownership from code to production. If something breaks in prod? You don’t say “that’s the dev team’s fault.” You own it, debug it, and fix the pipeline or infra that caused it.
Tools come and go. What sticks is this mindset of responsibility and constant improvement.
Anyone else feel like their biggest DevOps growth came from a shift in how they think—not what they use?
https://redd.it/1kjgtcp
@r_devops
Reddit
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What are some good resources for learning about devops for mobile apps?
Looking to learn about Mobile DevOps. Share your experiences also.
https://redd.it/1kjlhib
@r_devops
Looking to learn about Mobile DevOps. Share your experiences also.
https://redd.it/1kjlhib
@r_devops
Reddit
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Best secure VCS to use in big companies
Hello everyone, my company is aiming to use a version control system (VCS) in our development team, up till now our IT team task were simple but overtime the team grew and our codes became more complex.
Thus we want a VCS application that is efficient but also secure, we need to make sure our codes don’t get leaked out.
I have suggested Git and GitHub since it’s the only one I know, but to be honest idk if they are secure enough or if we can manage it locally in our servers instead of GitHub servers
So what are your suggestions? Maybe something that big companies use? do you have other suggestions that are more secure and managed locally in our servers if possible, if not then something secure enough so I can suggest it to the team.
Thanks 🫂
https://redd.it/1kjwbgr
@r_devops
Hello everyone, my company is aiming to use a version control system (VCS) in our development team, up till now our IT team task were simple but overtime the team grew and our codes became more complex.
Thus we want a VCS application that is efficient but also secure, we need to make sure our codes don’t get leaked out.
I have suggested Git and GitHub since it’s the only one I know, but to be honest idk if they are secure enough or if we can manage it locally in our servers instead of GitHub servers
So what are your suggestions? Maybe something that big companies use? do you have other suggestions that are more secure and managed locally in our servers if possible, if not then something secure enough so I can suggest it to the team.
Thanks 🫂
https://redd.it/1kjwbgr
@r_devops
Reddit
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Looking for feedback on GitHub Actions runner alternatives
Hey all,
We currently use **x64 Ubuntu machines** via **GitHub-hosted runners** for our workflows and are evaluating alternatives for cost and performance improvements.
Has anyone here used any of the following runner platforms?
* **Blacksmith**
* **Ubicloud**
* **BuildJet**
* **WarpBuild**
* **runs-on**
* **Namespace**
I’m particularly interested in:
* **Startup time / cold start latency**
* **Job execution performance**
* **Pricing**
* **Integration complexity with GitHub Actions**
* **Any gotchas or unexpected limitations**
Would love to hear from anyone who's adopted one of these, or has done benchmarking against GitHub-hosted runners. Any insights or experiences would help us decide if it's worth migrating or sticking with what we have.
Thanks in advance!
https://redd.it/1kjypf8
@r_devops
Hey all,
We currently use **x64 Ubuntu machines** via **GitHub-hosted runners** for our workflows and are evaluating alternatives for cost and performance improvements.
Has anyone here used any of the following runner platforms?
* **Blacksmith**
* **Ubicloud**
* **BuildJet**
* **WarpBuild**
* **runs-on**
* **Namespace**
I’m particularly interested in:
* **Startup time / cold start latency**
* **Job execution performance**
* **Pricing**
* **Integration complexity with GitHub Actions**
* **Any gotchas or unexpected limitations**
Would love to hear from anyone who's adopted one of these, or has done benchmarking against GitHub-hosted runners. Any insights or experiences would help us decide if it's worth migrating or sticking with what we have.
Thanks in advance!
https://redd.it/1kjypf8
@r_devops
Reddit
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Startup Founders
When does SAAS startup or any startup think about IT infrastructure as per your experience?
https://redd.it/1kk4rv4
@r_devops
When does SAAS startup or any startup think about IT infrastructure as per your experience?
https://redd.it/1kk4rv4
@r_devops
Reddit
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I’m done applying. I’ll fix your cloud/SRE problem in 48 hours and for free.
I’m a Site Reliability Engineer with 3 years of experience stabilizing cloud chaos , scaling infrastructure, optimizing observability, and putting out production fires nobody else could trace.
But after months of getting ghosted by hiring pipelines, I’m flipping the script.
Here’s the deal:
Give me one real, gnarly infra or SRE issue I’ll solve it in 48 hours. Free. No strings.
Dealing with stuff like:
ML workloads starving your GPU nodes and breaking autoscaling?
CI runners hogging ephemeral disks and silently failing deploys?
OpenTelemetry or Datadog showing 0% CPU... right before your pod dies?
Terraform state files locking up during high-frequency changes?
Real-time APIs randomly timing out under load but only during inference spikes?
S3 buckets quietly serving stale model files after a blue/green deployment?
IAM policies growing into unmanageable beasts breaking least privilege by accident?
Docker build cache exploding and pushing deploy times past 15 minutes?
EKS upgrades failing because of legacy node taints?
GitHub Actions burning free minutes due to missing cache keys?
Broken rollback logic that works in staging but fails in production?
Load balancers routing traffic unevenly across AZs during scale events?
Secrets leaking from ENV vars in ephemeral test environments?
Lambda cold starts doubling after a version bump and nobody knows why?
These are the problems I love solving and the kind of fires I’ve put out before.
Reply here or DM me your toughest infra/SRE pain. I’ll pick a few, solve them fast, and share anonymized fixes publicly.
You get a real solution. I get to prove what I can do no fluff, just execution.
Let’s build.
https://redd.it/1kk685o
@r_devops
I’m a Site Reliability Engineer with 3 years of experience stabilizing cloud chaos , scaling infrastructure, optimizing observability, and putting out production fires nobody else could trace.
But after months of getting ghosted by hiring pipelines, I’m flipping the script.
Here’s the deal:
Give me one real, gnarly infra or SRE issue I’ll solve it in 48 hours. Free. No strings.
Dealing with stuff like:
ML workloads starving your GPU nodes and breaking autoscaling?
CI runners hogging ephemeral disks and silently failing deploys?
OpenTelemetry or Datadog showing 0% CPU... right before your pod dies?
Terraform state files locking up during high-frequency changes?
Real-time APIs randomly timing out under load but only during inference spikes?
S3 buckets quietly serving stale model files after a blue/green deployment?
IAM policies growing into unmanageable beasts breaking least privilege by accident?
Docker build cache exploding and pushing deploy times past 15 minutes?
EKS upgrades failing because of legacy node taints?
GitHub Actions burning free minutes due to missing cache keys?
Broken rollback logic that works in staging but fails in production?
Load balancers routing traffic unevenly across AZs during scale events?
Secrets leaking from ENV vars in ephemeral test environments?
Lambda cold starts doubling after a version bump and nobody knows why?
These are the problems I love solving and the kind of fires I’ve put out before.
Reply here or DM me your toughest infra/SRE pain. I’ll pick a few, solve them fast, and share anonymized fixes publicly.
You get a real solution. I get to prove what I can do no fluff, just execution.
Let’s build.
https://redd.it/1kk685o
@r_devops
Reddit
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Containers with azure functions
hello lately I have started a new project that have few apps hosted on azure functions, but not as a container. I want to start deploying the apps as containers in azure functions.
the base image is pretty big, the base azure function for node is around 2GB. I used dive to get inside, and I have found there are some unused runtimes installed and some azure function bundles with older version that I can delete.
with cleaning and using slim version, I can get the base image to 1 GB.
I was wondering if you have any tips and tricks for containerized azure function to keep the image small.
cheers
https://redd.it/1kk4zb8
@r_devops
hello lately I have started a new project that have few apps hosted on azure functions, but not as a container. I want to start deploying the apps as containers in azure functions.
the base image is pretty big, the base azure function for node is around 2GB. I used dive to get inside, and I have found there are some unused runtimes installed and some azure function bundles with older version that I can delete.
with cleaning and using slim version, I can get the base image to 1 GB.
I was wondering if you have any tips and tricks for containerized azure function to keep the image small.
cheers
https://redd.it/1kk4zb8
@r_devops
Reddit
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15 Years of DevOps, yet manual schema migrations still a thing
Hey All,
My name is Rotem, co-founder of atlasgo.io
One of the most surprising things I learned since starting the company 4 years ago is that manual database schema changes are still a thing. Way more common that I had thought.
We commonly see this is in customer calls - the team has CI/CD pipelines for app delivery, maybe even IaC for cloud stuff - but the database - still devs/DBAs connect directly to prod to apply changes.
This came as a surprise to me since tools for automating schema changes have existed since at least 2006.
Our DevRel Engineer u/noarogo published a piece about it today:
https://atlasgo.io/blog/2025/05/11/auto-vs-manual
What's your experience? Do you still see this practice?
If you see it, what's your explanation for this gap?
https://redd.it/1kk8x91
@r_devops
Hey All,
My name is Rotem, co-founder of atlasgo.io
One of the most surprising things I learned since starting the company 4 years ago is that manual database schema changes are still a thing. Way more common that I had thought.
We commonly see this is in customer calls - the team has CI/CD pipelines for app delivery, maybe even IaC for cloud stuff - but the database - still devs/DBAs connect directly to prod to apply changes.
This came as a surprise to me since tools for automating schema changes have existed since at least 2006.
Our DevRel Engineer u/noarogo published a piece about it today:
https://atlasgo.io/blog/2025/05/11/auto-vs-manual
What's your experience? Do you still see this practice?
If you see it, what's your explanation for this gap?
https://redd.it/1kk8x91
@r_devops
atlasgo.io
Atlas is a language-agnostic tool for managing and migrating database schemas using modern DevOps principles. It enables developers to automate schema changes through both declarative (schema-as-code) and versioned migration workflows, supporting inputs like…
Getting env file to digitalocean droplet
Hello I currently have a next.js app and I'm currently deploying to digitalocean droplets using github actions, but I'm kind of confused on how to get my .env file to the droplet. Would I manually just add it to the cloned repo on the droplet? Or scp my env to the droplet. Or some other way? I'm a bit new to this.
https://redd.it/1kk7sw8
@r_devops
Hello I currently have a next.js app and I'm currently deploying to digitalocean droplets using github actions, but I'm kind of confused on how to get my .env file to the droplet. Would I manually just add it to the cloned repo on the droplet? Or scp my env to the droplet. Or some other way? I'm a bit new to this.
https://redd.it/1kk7sw8
@r_devops
Reddit
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What tool are you using for easy provisioning?
Hi, I am experimenting with self managed kubernetes cluster. Kubernetes is cool and all but the underlying servers where the pods run on still need to be provisioned and managed. I understand that terraform can create/manage the infra resources such as network, storage, vm etc. But for provisioning other tools such as Ansible is used. I am looking for an easy to use with web ui preferably to provision my servers.
https://redd.it/1kkaqdq
@r_devops
Hi, I am experimenting with self managed kubernetes cluster. Kubernetes is cool and all but the underlying servers where the pods run on still need to be provisioned and managed. I understand that terraform can create/manage the infra resources such as network, storage, vm etc. But for provisioning other tools such as Ansible is used. I am looking for an easy to use with web ui preferably to provision my servers.
https://redd.it/1kkaqdq
@r_devops
Reddit
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Starting DevOps role, but no prior experience
I’m starting a DevOps Azure Team Lead. I have long history leading agile teams, but no real hands-on experience in DevOps. I’m pretty sure I’m gonna be just fine, but I would like to thrive.
Hence my question - what’s the fast-track to learn the DevOps craft? With so many tutorials out there, I’d like to know which one to choose or start from. Any recommends?
https://redd.it/1kkcy4y
@r_devops
I’m starting a DevOps Azure Team Lead. I have long history leading agile teams, but no real hands-on experience in DevOps. I’m pretty sure I’m gonna be just fine, but I would like to thrive.
Hence my question - what’s the fast-track to learn the DevOps craft? With so many tutorials out there, I’d like to know which one to choose or start from. Any recommends?
https://redd.it/1kkcy4y
@r_devops
Reddit
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I made a DevOps tool in Golang
I made a DevOps tool with Golang. Its like Ansible, but I feel better as far as speed and customization. I can't say much more than isn't already in the README file. I just thought it might be of use to someone. Or maybe there's some feedback on something I can't see. If anyone gets time, let me know what you think.
https://github.com/mephistolist/godev
https://redd.it/1kkdkhj
@r_devops
I made a DevOps tool with Golang. Its like Ansible, but I feel better as far as speed and customization. I can't say much more than isn't already in the README file. I just thought it might be of use to someone. Or maybe there's some feedback on something I can't see. If anyone gets time, let me know what you think.
https://github.com/mephistolist/godev
https://redd.it/1kkdkhj
@r_devops
GitHub
GitHub - mephistolist/godev: A simple cross-platform devops project in Golang that's built for speed and customization.
A simple cross-platform devops project in Golang that's built for speed and customization. - mephistolist/godev
Starting my selfhosting journey - k8s or docker?
Hello all, i feel ready enough to start practicing and suffering with my homelab in order to improve my skills on common devops topics and to give a try to a bunch of r/selfhosted projects. Now i'm simply wondering, portainer or kubernetes ? I have a single mini-pc node setup with ubuntu server + docker/podman + minikube running on it. Initially, no network drives, everything will resides on the local disk machine so i need a pretty much easy setup and i don't care so much about FT and DR.
Trying to analyze the two architectures, i would say that the kubernetes one is more reliable and more interesting, but sometimes helm charts aren't updated or they are a bit messy to investigate or manage. But storage and networking would probably be much easier (a single ingress with multiple path, one for each service).
Instead running everything on pure docker with a management system like portainer would be probably easier to manage but dunno if this can really help me in enlarge my skills and if the pure docker approach can be a little bit "aged".
What's your point about this ? Any suggestions or insights ?
Many thanks !
https://redd.it/1kka335
@r_devops
Hello all, i feel ready enough to start practicing and suffering with my homelab in order to improve my skills on common devops topics and to give a try to a bunch of r/selfhosted projects. Now i'm simply wondering, portainer or kubernetes ? I have a single mini-pc node setup with ubuntu server + docker/podman + minikube running on it. Initially, no network drives, everything will resides on the local disk machine so i need a pretty much easy setup and i don't care so much about FT and DR.
Trying to analyze the two architectures, i would say that the kubernetes one is more reliable and more interesting, but sometimes helm charts aren't updated or they are a bit messy to investigate or manage. But storage and networking would probably be much easier (a single ingress with multiple path, one for each service).
Instead running everything on pure docker with a management system like portainer would be probably easier to manage but dunno if this can really help me in enlarge my skills and if the pure docker approach can be a little bit "aged".
What's your point about this ? Any suggestions or insights ?
Many thanks !
https://redd.it/1kka335
@r_devops
Reddit
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Simple way to Analyse .ddl file
Hey,
we Need a task in a Pipeline with a Script Which Extrakt the properties from the ddl file and if the file has a signature, do you have any Examples with powershell or something Else?
https://redd.it/1kkbzmd
@r_devops
Hey,
we Need a task in a Pipeline with a Script Which Extrakt the properties from the ddl file and if the file has a signature, do you have any Examples with powershell or something Else?
https://redd.it/1kkbzmd
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Simple, self-hosted GitHub Actions runners
I needed more RAM for my GitHub Actions runners and I couldn't really find an offering that I could link to a private repository (they all need organization accounts?).
Anyways, I have a pretty powerful desktop for dev work already so I figured why not put the runner on my local desktop. It turns out the GHA runner is not containerized by default and, more importantly, it is stateful so you have to rewrite the way your actions work to get them to play nicely with the default self-hosted configuration.
To make it easier, I made a Docker image that deploys a self-hosted runner very similar to the GitHub one, check it out! https://github.com/kevmo314/docker-gha-runner
https://redd.it/1kkj6p7
@r_devops
I needed more RAM for my GitHub Actions runners and I couldn't really find an offering that I could link to a private repository (they all need organization accounts?).
Anyways, I have a pretty powerful desktop for dev work already so I figured why not put the runner on my local desktop. It turns out the GHA runner is not containerized by default and, more importantly, it is stateful so you have to rewrite the way your actions work to get them to play nicely with the default self-hosted configuration.
To make it easier, I made a Docker image that deploys a self-hosted runner very similar to the GitHub one, check it out! https://github.com/kevmo314/docker-gha-runner
https://redd.it/1kkj6p7
@r_devops
GitHub
GitHub - kevmo314/docker-gha-runner: Simple self-hosted GitHub Actions Runners
Simple self-hosted GitHub Actions Runners. Contribute to kevmo314/docker-gha-runner development by creating an account on GitHub.