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DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift

You're reading from  DevOps Culture and Practice with OpenShift

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800202368
Pages 812 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (5):
Tim Beattie Tim Beattie
Profile icon Tim Beattie
Mike Hepburn Mike Hepburn
Profile icon Mike Hepburn
Noel O'Connor Noel O'Connor
Profile icon Noel O'Connor
Donal Spring Donal Spring
Profile icon Donal Spring
Ilaria Doria Ilaria Doria
Profile icon Ilaria Doria
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (30) Chapters close

Preface Acknowledgements Section 1: Practices Make Perfect
1. Introduction — Start with Why 2. Introducing DevOps and Some Tools 3. The Journey Ahead Section 2: Establishing the Foundation
4. Open Culture 5. Open Environment and Open Leadership 6. Open Technical Practices – Beginnings, Starting Right 7. Open Technical Practices — The Midpoint Section 3: Discover It
8. Discovering the Why and Who 9. Discovering the How 10. Setting Outcomes Section 4: Prioritize It
11. The Options Pivot Section 5: Deliver It
12. Doing Delivery 13. Measure and Learn Section 6: Build It, Run It, Own It
14. Build It 15. Run It 16. Own It Section 7: Improve It, Sustain It
17. Improve It 18. Sustain It Index
Appendix A – OpenShift Sizing Requirements for Exercises 1. Appendix B – Additional Learning Resources

Containers and Being Container-Native

Before we can define exactly what containers are (hint: they are Linux processes!) and what container-native means, we need to look back in time to see what led to containers.

Container History

If you are over a certain age (over 30!), it is very likely your first computer program involved compiling source code and statically linking it with libraries from the operating system. Computer scientists then invented dynamic linking – which is great: you could patch one library and all of the programs you had written would pick up that change once restarted. This of course created a different problem – managing all of the dependencies. Packaging technologies such as RPM and YUM were created to help solve the dependency problem when distributing and managing Linux operating systems. Operating system distributions are one mechanism for collaboratively sharing and managing lots of different software packages at scale, and ultimately...

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