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Google Cloud for DevOps Engineers

You're reading from   Google Cloud for DevOps Engineers A practical guide to SRE and achieving Google's Professional Cloud DevOps Engineer certification

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839218019
Length 482 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Sandeep Madamanchi Sandeep Madamanchi
Author Profile Icon Sandeep Madamanchi
Sandeep Madamanchi
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Site Reliability Engineering – A Prescriptive Way to Implement DevOps
2. Chapter 1: DevOps, SRE, and Google Cloud Services for CI/CD FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: SRE Technical Practices – Deep Dive 4. Chapter 3: Understanding Monitoring and Alerting to Target Reliability 5. Chapter 4: Building SRE Teams and Applying Cultural Practices 6. Section 2: Google Cloud Services to Implement DevOps via CI/CD
7. Chapter 5: Managing Source Code Using Cloud Source Repositories 8. Chapter 6: Building Code Using Cloud Build, and Pushing to Container Registry 9. Chapter 7: Understanding Kubernetes Essentials to Deploy Containerized Applications 10. Chapter 8: Understanding GKE Essentials to Deploy Containerized Applications 11. Chapter 9: Securing the Cluster Using GKE Security Constructs 12. Chapter 10: Exploring GCP Cloud Operations 13. Mock Exam 1 14. Mock Exam 2 15. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Getting Ready for Professional Cloud DevOps Engineer Certification

Alerting

SLIs are quantitative measurements at a given point in time and SLOs use SLIs to reflect the reliability of the system. SLIs are captured or represented in the form of metrics. Monitoring systems monitor these metrics against a specific set of policies. These policies represent the target SLOs over a period and are referred to as alerting rules.

Alerting is the process of processing the alerting rules, which track the SLOs and notify or perform certain actions when the rules are violated. In other words, alerting allows the conversion of SLOs into actionable alerts on significant events. Alerts can then be sent to an external application or a ticketing system or a person.

Common scenarios for triggering alerts include (and are not limited to) the following:

  • The service or system is down.
  • SLOs or SLAs are not met.
  • Immediate human intervention is required to change something.

As discussed previously, SLOs represent an achievable target, and error...

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