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Repeatability, Reliability, and Scalability through GitOps

You're reading from   Repeatability, Reliability, and Scalability through GitOps Continuous delivery and deployment codified

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077798
Length 292 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Bryan Feuling Bryan Feuling
Author Profile Icon Bryan Feuling
Bryan Feuling
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals of GitOps
2. Chapter 1: The Fundamentals of Delivery and Deployment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring Common Industry Delivery and Deployment Practices 4. Chapter 3: The "What" and "Why" of GitOps 5. Section 2: GitOps Types, Benefits, and Drawbacks
6. Chapter 4: The Original GitOps – Continuous Deployment in Kubernetes 7. Chapter 5: The Purist GitOps – Continuous Deployment Everywhere 8. Chapter 6: Verified GitOps – Continuous Delivery Declaratively Defined 9. Chapter 7: Best Practices for Delivery, Deployment, and GitOps 10. Section 3: Hands-On Practical GitOps
11. Chapter 8: Practicing the Basics – Declarative Language File Building 12. Chapter 9: Originalist Gitops in Practice – Continuous Deployment 13. Chapter 10: Verified GitOps Setup – Continuous Delivery GitOps with Harness 14. Chapter 11: Pitfall Examples – Experiencing Issues with GitOps 15. Chapter 12: What's Next? 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Conventions used

There are a number of text conventions used throughout this book.

DevOps Analogy (Italics): Indicates the analogy of a DevOps team going through the process of adopting Continuous Deployment and Continuous Delivery. This analogy can be found at the beginning of every heading in each chapter, followed by an explanation of the analogy.

Code in text: Indicates code words in text, database table names, folder names, filenames, file extensions, pathnames, dummy URLs, user input, and Twitter handles. Here is an example: "The automation of the tool runs helm install or kubectl apply."

A block of code is set as follows:

# BASIC STRUCTURE
name-1: "hello-world-1"
description-1: "say hello to the world 1"
count-1: 1

Bold: Indicates a new term, an important word, or words that you see onscreen. For example, words in menus or dialog boxes appear in the text like this. Here is an example: "Select the Disable button."

Tips or important notes

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