Setting a launch date for your new web site is common practice. Even though nobody knows what exactly the site might look like and even less how much effort it will be to launch it, the release date is fixed. This can have positive and negative effects. The Good The positive side of having a … Continue reading Launch Dates – The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly
Category: DevOps
What have we done for you today?
I'm a firm believer of release early and often. If there's more than 10 new commits in our code repository awaiting release, I start to get uncomfortable. Whether it's extra "inventory sitting on our shelves" instead of in your browser, or the uncertainty of "going live" with a bunch of new stuff and then running … Continue reading What have we done for you today?
How to guide a team through a crisis
No matter whether your team is self-organizing or not, when the shit hits the fan, they'll need strict rules and close guiding to manage the crisis. Clear Responsibilities First, everyone has to know exactly what they're supposed to do. Whether it's restarting crashed servers, capturing log outputs, or just staying the hell out of the … Continue reading How to guide a team through a crisis
Using Kanban For DevOps Projects
This is a guest post by Robert Dempsey, CEO & Founder of Atlantic Dominion Solutions. He helps clients with agile training and builds products like scrum'd. I wish I had known about Kanban when I was a network administrator. It would have helped me immensely in terms of prioritization of work and making everything we … Continue reading Using Kanban For DevOps Projects
DevOps: Why Silos Suck And How To Break Them
Divide and conquer, Caesar's strategy to break huge problems down into smaller parts, is an outdated model for structuring teams and organizations. Breaking teams apart by area like development, QA, operations, product management, etc, creates silo like divisions of labor. Unfortunately, these divisions create so many "walls of confusion" between the silos that your speed … Continue reading DevOps: Why Silos Suck And How To Break Them
20 DevOps guys you should follow
DevOps is an approach to bridge the gap between agile software development and operations. The DevOps tribe is a growing group of people practicing a new way of combining development and system administration for more speed, quality, revenues, and fun. The DevOps Tribe Here is a list of some of the most active guys in … Continue reading 20 DevOps guys you should follow
Back to the roots: Bridging the Deployment Gap
Matthias and I started this blog over a year ago because we had first-hand experiences with the rift between developers and sysadmins. We knew this was a lose-lose situation not only for those directly involved, but the companies they were working for as well. We've described many real-life examples of how to overcome this rift, … Continue reading Back to the roots: Bridging the Deployment Gap
The 12 principles behind the agile manifesto adapted to web operations
Walking once again through the twelve principles behind the Agile Manifesto, I realized how tailored they are for software development projects. Yet experience has shown that agile practices are not strictly limited to development projects, but to all areas involved in bringing a software product to the users. Here is my version of the twelve … Continue reading The 12 principles behind the agile manifesto adapted to web operations
New Conference On Agile System Administration: Devopsdays 2009
Devopsdays 2009 After years of advocating, @patrickdebois's dream came true: He created the Devopsdays. Quoting his announcement from the Agile System Administration Google Group: Devopsdays '09, the conference that tries to get the best of both dev and ops world. Two days of fun and interesting talks. So if you are a developer with a … Continue reading New Conference On Agile System Administration: Devopsdays 2009
Dev and Ops Cooperation
John Allspaw and Paul Hammond did a great presentation at Velocity 2009 about the tools and culture at Flickr, which enable them to do 10+ deploys per day. My favorite quote is: Ops' job is NOT to keep the site stable and fast [but] Ops' job is it to enable the business (this is the … Continue reading Dev and Ops Cooperation
