The DevOps Handbook – Anticipating Problems episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 17, 2020 · 1H 22M

The DevOps Handbook – Anticipating Problems

from Coding Blocks · host Allen Underwood, Michael Outlaw, Joe Zack

We're using telemetry to fill in the gaps and anticipate problems while discussing The DevOps Handbook, while Michael is still weird about LinkedIn, Joe knows who's your favorite JZ, and Allen might have gone on vacation. You can find these show notes at https://www.codingblocks.net/episode139, in case you're reading these within your podcast player. Sponsors Datadog – Sign up today for a free 14 day trial and get a free Datadog t-shirt after your first dashboard. Secure Code Warrior – Start gamifying your organization's security posture today, score 5,000 points, and get a free Secure Code Warrior t-shirt. Survey Says What's your favorite mobile device? Joe's Super Secret Survey Go or Rust? Take both surveys at: https://www.codingblocks.net/episode139. News Thank you to everyone that left us a new review: iTunes: AbhiZambre, Traz3r Stitcher: AndyIsTaken Most important things to do for new developer job seekers? I Got 99 Problems and DevOps ain't One Find and Fill Any Gaps Once we have telemetry in place, we can identify any gaps in our metrics, especially in the following levels of our application: Business level – These are metrics on business items, such as sales transactions, signups, etc. Application level – This includes metrics such as timing metrics, errors, etc. Infrastructure level – Metrics at this level cover things like databases, OS's, networking, storage, CPU, etc. Client software level – These metrics include data like errors, crashes, timings, etc. Deployment pipeline level – This level includes metrics for data points like test suite status, deployment lead times, frequencies, etc. Application and Business Metrics Gather telemetry not just for technical bits, but also organizational goals, i.e. things like new users, login events, session lengths, active users, abandoned carts, etc. Have every business metric be actionable. And if they're not actionable, they're "vanity metrics". By radiating these metrics, you enable fast feedback with feature teams to identify what's working and what isn't within their business unit. Infrastructure Metrics Need enough telemetry to identify what part of the infrastructure is having problems. Graphing telemetry across infrastructure and application allows you to detect when things are going wrong. Using business metrics along with infrastructure metrics allows development and operations teams to work quickly to resolve problems. Need the same telemetry in pre-production environments so you can catch problems before they make it to production. Overlaying other Relevant Information onto Our Metrics In addition to our business and infrastructure telemetry graphing, you also want to graph your deployments so you can quickly correlate if a release caused a deviation from normal. There may even be a "settling period" after a deployment where things spike (good or bad) and then return to normal. This is good information to have to see if deployments are acting as expected. Same thing goes for maintenance. Graphing when maintenance occurs helps you correlate infrastructure and application issues at the time they're deployed. Resources We Like The DevOps Handbook: How to Create World-Class Agility, Reliability, and Security in Technology Organizations (Amazon) The Phoenix Project: A Novel about IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win (Amazon) The Unicorn Project: A Novel about Developers, Digital Disruption, and Thriving in the Age of Data (Amazon) The ONE Metric More Important Than Sales & Subscribers (YouTube) 2020 Developer Survey – Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted Languages (Stack Overflow) Instrument your Python applications with Datadog and OpenTelemetry (Datadog) Why does speed matter? (web.dev) Dash goes virtual! Join us on Tuesday, August 11 (Datadog) Tip of the Week Google Career Certificates (grow.google) Google Offers 100,000 Scholarships – Here's How To Get One (Forbes) Grow with Google (grow.google) Hearth Bound (HearthBoundPodcast.com, Twitter) Tsunami (GitHub) is a general purpose network security scanner with an extensible plugin system for detecting high severity vulnerabilities with high confidence. Plugins for Tsunami Security Scanner (GitHub)

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Aug 17, 2020

NOW PLAYING

The DevOps Handbook – Anticipating Problems

0:00 1:22:25

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

API Intersection Stoplight Building a successful API requires more than just coding. It starts with collaborative design, focuses on creating a great developer experience, and ends with getting your company on board, maintaining consistency, and maximizing your API’s profitability.In the API Intersection, you’ll learn from experienced API practitioners who transformed their organizations, and get tangible advice to build quality APIs with collaborative API-first design.Jason Harmon brings over a decade of industry-recognized REST API experience to discuss topics around API design, governance, identity/auth versioning, and more.They’ll answer listener questions, and discuss best practices on API design (definition, modeling, grammar), Governance (multi-team design, reviewing new API’s), Platform Transformation (culture, internal education, versioning) and more.They’ll also chat with experienced API practitioners from a wide array of industries to draw out practical takeaways and insights you can use.H Unshamed & Unchained: Carving Space For Self-Healing & Habit Transformation Danny Poelman Welcome to "Unshamed & Unchained: Carving Space For Self-Healing & Habit Transformation", the podcast where we break the chains of shame and societal expectations to create a safe space for self-healing, habit transformation, and personal growth. Hosted by a seasoned life coach, Danny Poelman DDS, with years of hands-on experience, this podcast is your guide to reclaiming your voice, embracing your story, and living life on your terms.In each episode, we dive deep into the topics that matter most to you—whether it's:-breaking free from unwanted habits like pornography-excessive people-pleasing-healing from past trauma-recovering from narcissistic abuse or religious/relational trauma-anxiety/depression-money mindset blocks-overcoming limiting beliefsWe’re not afraid to talk about the things that are often considered taboo, because we believe that through honest, unfiltered conversations, real transformation happens.You’ll hear real Khanyisa Keke TV Khanyisa Keke On Khanyisa Keke TV, developers can learn and improve their Android for Kotlin Development skills. On this podcast, programmers can learn Android for Kotlin coding from scratch, improve their existing programming skills, get tips, be kept up to date with all the latest happenings and get access to free resources. Powered by Firstory Hosting The Triathlon Mental Performance Podcast Neil Edge This podcast is for you if you are a Triathlete that is interested in learning about tools and strategies to overcome challenges and to utilize the power of your mind to race faster.I'm an experienced Triathlon Mental Performance Coach working with both Age Groupers and Pros.Episodes will cover the following and more.How to improve your mental toughnessRemoving the possibility of panic attacks in open water Removing the fear of fast descents on your bike -Removing mental blocks to improve your race times Completely remove performance anxiety (you don't have to just cope with it)4 weeks to race day - Strategies to  arrive at your a-race feeling calm and confident, with race day mental strategiesI will also talk about specific tools that you can use to ensure that you race faster.<b

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Coding Blocks?

This episode is 1 hour and 22 minutes long.

When was this Coding Blocks episode published?

This episode was published on August 17, 2020.

What is this episode about?

We're using telemetry to fill in the gaps and anticipate problems while discussing The DevOps Handbook, while Michael is still weird about LinkedIn, Joe knows who's your favorite JZ, and Allen might have gone on vacation. You can find these show...

Can I download this Coding Blocks episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!