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The Latest DevOps and CI/CD Topics

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How to Build Microservices With Node.js
Building Microservices with NodeJS is an event-driven development architecture that allows you to develop feature-loaded, scalable, and reliable applications.
Updated September 14, 2022
by Mahipal Nehra
· 30,633 Views · 7 Likes
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Five Minute Cloud Lambda Function
Building a serverless function is easy. AWS calls their serverless functions Lambdas. Let’s build on a serverless function with Python on AWS.
September 14, 2022
by Eric Goebelbecker DZone Core CORE
· 5,834 Views · 1 Like
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The Real Value of Microservices
Microservices architecture has established itself as a quasi-standard and is deployed in many projects. How do they influence the lifecycle of an application?
September 13, 2022
by Simon Martinelli
· 7,167 Views · 4 Likes
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Acceptance Tests in Java With JGiven
In these example scenarios, learn more about acceptance tests in Java, and why you should learn them right now.
Updated September 13, 2022
by Elmar Dott
· 15,197 Views · 5 Likes
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Modernizing Long-Running Transactions for the Microservices Era
This open-source platform solves the long-running process problem in a modern microservices environment by replacing Sagas with workflows.
September 13, 2022
by Dominik Tornow
· 8,249 Views · 3 Likes
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Migrating MongoDB Collections to CockroachDB With FerretDB
In part 2 of an experiment with FerretDB and CockroachDB, restore a MongoDB collection into CockroachDB via FerretDB, and expand on previous learnings.
September 13, 2022
by Artem Ervits DZone Core CORE
· 7,425 Views · 2 Likes
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How to Connect SuperTokens to a MySQL or PostgreSQL DB
Learn how to connect a self-hosted SuperTokens core to a MySQL or PostgreSQL database with or without Docker.
September 12, 2022
by Advait Ruia
· 4,466 Views · 1 Like
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How to Get Code Ready for Microservices
Are you thinking about adapting a microservices architecture? Here are three steps to prepare your code base.
September 12, 2022
by David Bucek
· 5,557 Views · 3 Likes
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A Quick Glance at the Kubernetes Gateway API
Many alternatives are available to access a pod from outside the cluster. The Gateway API is the new kid on the block and the subject of this post.
September 8, 2022
by Nicolas Fränkel
· 10,424 Views · 8 Likes
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How to Build a Serverless WebSockets Platform
Modern web applications increasingly need to handle realtime data with an event-driven architecture. Serverless WebSockets are the solution.
September 8, 2022
by Jo Stichbury DZone Core CORE
· 7,468 Views · 3 Likes
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Predictions for the Future of DevOps
In order to stay ahead in the DevOps game, it is imperative that you incorporate these trends into your business and embrace them.
September 7, 2022
by Jyoti Dadhich
· 8,241 Views · 4 Likes
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Solving The Pull Request Problem With Continuous Merge
Fact: the state of pull requests is broken and we finally have the data to prove it. In this interview, learn about a proposed solution: continuous merge.
September 7, 2022
by Dan Lines
· 9,138 Views · 6 Likes
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Journey of Deployment Creation in Kubernetes
We will take a Kubernetes feature and break its implementation to understand how it interacts with Kubernetes system components.
September 7, 2022
by Sharad Regoti
· 5,894 Views · 1 Like
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Know How to Build Microservices With Node.js
Want to know about microservices and how they can be implemented with node.js? Go through and know everything about microservices in detail.
September 7, 2022
by Kiran Beladiya
· 8,951 Views · 4 Likes
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How to Setup an Ansible Test Environment
When you want to experiment with Ansible, you will need to setup a test environment. In this blog, you will create a test environment containing one controller and two target machines. This will give you a good setup for experimenting with Ansible without breaking a real machine. 1. Introduction With Ansible, you can automate repetitive IT tasks and because it is automated, it will also prevent you from making mistakes. Especially when you have to configure several similar environments. The other main advantage is that the configuration is maintained in files and therefore extremely suitable for adding the configuration to version control (e.g. Git). However, in every learning path you need to be able to experiment in order to make mistakes and to learn. In this blog, you will setup an Ansible controller machine and two target machines running in VirtualBox. The Ansible Controller will be the machine where to run the Ansible playbooks from and the target machines will be where tasks can be executed. The test setup looks as follows. The sources for this post are available at GitHub. 2. Setup Ansible Controller The machines will be created as Virtual Machines (VMs) and as virtualization platform you will use VirtualBox. Install VirtualBox on your host machine when it is not yet installed. You can create a machine from scratch and install an operating system (OS) yourself, but for testing purposes, it is easier to retrieve an already installed image from osboxes.org. Navigate to VM IMAGES – VirtualBox Images and choose for Ubuntu, the OS you will use for setting up the environment. Download the Ubuntu 20.04.4 Focal Fossa version. After downloading the file, unzip it. Create in VirtualBox a new machine via Machine – New… Fill in the following and click the Next button: Name: Controller Type: Linux Version: Ubuntu (64-bit) Set the memory size to 4 GB and click the Next button. Choose for Use an existing virtual hard disk file and select the .vdi file you downloaded and unzipped. Click the Create button. Select the VM in VirtualBox and click the Settings button. Navigate to Network in the left menu and change in the Adapter_1 tab Attached to into Bridged Adapter. Click the OK button. Start the VM and login with username osboxes and password osboxes.org. After successful login, verify whether you have internet connection (just try to search something in the browser in the VM). Run the software updates in Ubuntu and also update libraries in a terminal window. Shell $ sudo apt-get upgrade Retrieve the IP address of the VM. You can do so by hovering over the network icon at the right bottom of the VM or by executing the following command in a terminal window. Shell $ ip a Install openssh-server in order to be able to connect via SSH from your host to the VM. Shell $ sudo apt install openssh-server As a last step, try to connect from your host to the VM via a terminal window, and replace the IP address with the IP address of your Controller VM. Shell $ ssh [email protected] Shutdown the VM. 3. Create Target Machines In this section the two target machines will be created. In VirtualBox, right-click the Ansible Controller and choose Clone… Fill in the following and click the Next button: Name: Target1 MAC Address Policy: Generate new MAC addresses for all network adapters Choose for Linked clone (you can also choose for a full clone, but when it is only for testing purposes, there is no harm for chosing a linked clone). Click the Clone button. Again, log in to the VM, retrieve the IP address and try to SSH to the VM from your host. Lastly, create in a similar way a Target2 machine. 4. Install Ansible The controller needs an Ansible installation in order to be able to run playbooks from the Ansible controller. Several options are available for installing Ansible, these can be found in the documentation. The steps below were successfully executed inside the controller VM. The third command did not really execute successfully or it took too long. Nevertheless, the installation seems to be successful. Shell $ sudo apt update $ sudo apt install software-properties-common $ sudo add-apt-repository --yes --update ppa:ansible/ansible $ sudo apt install ansible Verify whether the Ansible installation was successful. Shell $ ansible --version ansible [core 2.12.4] config file = /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg configured module search path = ['/home/osboxes/.ansible/plugins/modules', '/usr/share/ansible/plugins/modules'] ansible python module location = /home/osboxes/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/ansible ansible collection location = /home/osboxes/.ansible/collections:/usr/share/ansible/collections executable location = /usr/bin/ansible python version = 3.8.10 (default, Mar 15 2022, 12:22:08) [GCC 9.4.0] jinja version = 3.1.1 libyaml = True 5. IDE Configuration Although it is perfectly possible to create Ansible files with a text editor, it is easier and better to use an IDE for this. When you are developing with Java, you probably already have IntelliJ installed onto your host machine and with the help of some plugins, creating Ansible scripts will make your life a lot easier. Install via File – Settings… – Plugins the Ansible plugin (for autocompletion during development of Ansible scripts) and the yamllint plugin (for verifying your yaml syntax). In order to be able to use the yamllint plugin, you also need to install yamllint itself. See the yamllint documentation how to do this. You also need to enable yamllint in IntelliJ. Navigate to File – Settings… and search for yamllint. Enable yamllint and click the OK button. Create a new empty project MyAnsiblePlanet via File – New – Project… and click the Finish button. The project files are located on your host machine, you now have to find a way to sync them to the controller. This can be done with the help of the rsync command. In the project directory a file transferdata.sh is available with the rsync command to copy the project files to the controller. Do not forget to change the IP address of the controller when it is different than the one in the script. Shell rsync -avz . [email protected]:MyAnsiblePlanet Execute the script (do not forget to start the controller). Login via SSH to the controller and verify whether the files are correctly synced. 6. Conclusion In this post, you created an Ansible controller VM and two target VMs. You also setup your IDE and you have a way to sync your local project files to the Ansible controller machine. You are now all setup for experimenting with Ansible.
September 6, 2022
by Gunter Rotsaert DZone Core CORE
· 6,347 Views · 1 Like
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Connect Azure Data Factory (ADF) With Azure DevOps
The article includes detailed step-by-step instructions along with helpful screenshots to help users connect Azure Data Factory (ADF) with Azure DevOps.
September 6, 2022
by Komal Chauhan Saini
· 9,070 Views · 5 Likes
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Reverse Pull Requests
This article explains how we used GitHub PRs in a trunk-based, continuous deployment development team.
September 6, 2022
by Lukasz Gryzbon
· 8,304 Views · 3 Likes
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Cloud Migration Manual: The Adjustment to SaaS Model
Moving to SaaS software is a huge step to take, and it requires deep analysis and proper process setup. This post intends to guide you on how to move to SaaS.
Updated September 6, 2022
by Tetiana Stoyko
· 8,825 Views · 3 Likes
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How to Install Pixie for Kubernetes Monitoring: The Complete Guide
Pixie is an open-source observability tool for Kubernetes applications that allows software engineers to view the high-level state of Kubernetes clusters.
September 4, 2022
by Florian Pialoux
· 7,365 Views · 2 Likes
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Amazon EKS Case Studies: How Are Businesses Benefiting from EKS?
How are organizations leveraging Amazon EKS?
September 4, 2022
by Hiren Dhaduk
· 6,443 Views · 1 Like
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