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DevOps for Networking

You're reading from   DevOps for Networking Bringing Network Automation into DevOps culture

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786464859
Length 364 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Steven Armstrong Steven Armstrong
Author Profile Icon Steven Armstrong
Steven Armstrong
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Impact of Cloud on Networking 2. The Emergence of Software-defined Networking FREE CHAPTER 3. Bringing DevOps to Network Operations 4. Configuring Network Devices Using Ansible 5. Orchestrating Load Balancers Using Ansible 6. Orchestrating SDN Controllers Using Ansible 7. Using Continuous Integration Builds for Network Configuration 8. Testing Network Changes 9. Using Continuous Delivery Pipelines to Deploy Network Changes 10. The Impact of Containers on Networking 11. Securing the Network Index

Continuous Delivery and deployment overview


Continuous Delivery and deployment are a natural extension of the continuous integration process. Continuous Delivery and deployment create a consistent mechanism to deploy changes to production and create a conveyer belt delivering new features to customers or end users. So conceptually a conveyer belt is what continuous Delivery is all about, but in terms of actual process how is this achieved?

A continuous integration process will carry out the following high level steps:

  • Commit

  • Build (Compile/Version/Tag)

  • Validate

  • Package

  • Push

Continuous Delivery and deployment take over once the artifact has been pushed to the artifact repository. Each and every build artifact created by a continuous integration process should be considered a release candidate, meaning that it can potentially be deployed to production if it passes all validations in the Continuous Delivery pipeline.

Like continuous integration, Continuous Delivery and deployment create a series...

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