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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

Common verified GitOps tools

The process of designing the requirements for verified GitOps gave the team a better understanding of where they should spend their time. The DevOps team has experienced building an in-house solution before, mainly avoid the costs of buying a tool. But they have also experienced the significant administration and maintenance effort associated to building a tool. Although Ansible had offered a wide range of customization capabilities, it was essentially a tool that they would have to build out and maintain. The other problem with Ansible was that although the files could be stored in a Git repository and pulled at runtime, the tool required the Git repository to be pulled down before every execution.

After performing market research for a verified GitOps tool, the team found Harness, which had a very promising solution. The tool allowed the team to support Kubernetes, serverless, and server-based platforms. It had a native code conversion process that...

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