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Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks

Because the DevOps movement has redefined engineering responsibilities, SREs now have to become stewards of observability strategy.

Apache Cassandra combines the benefits of major NoSQL databases to support data management needs not covered by traditional RDBMS vendors.

The software you build is only as secure as the code that powers it. Learn how malicious code creeps into your software supply chain.

Generative AI has transformed nearly every industry. How can you leverage GenAI to improve your productivity and efficiency?

The Latest Open Source Topics

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How To Use Open Source Cadence for Polling
Open source Cadence is an advantageous new tool for any application developer. Learn how to use the project for polling with these step-by-step instructions.
Updated June 24, 2022
by Adam Zegelin
· 7,962 Views · 2 Likes
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11 Reasons To Use Selenium for Automation Testing
Is the popularity of the suite of Selenium tools enough of a reason to use it over other tools?
Updated June 23, 2022
by Jaswant Kaur
· 90,834 Views · 7 Likes
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Major PostgreSQL Features You Should Know About
Understanding PostgreSQL’s major’s major features is very important when making decisions about your project’s database architecture
June 22, 2022
by Zach Naimon
· 9,068 Views · 2 Likes
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Top ALM Tools and Solutions Providers
The increasing complexity of the software development task has been answered by an increasing number of tools for managing that development. Here's our top ALM solutions.
June 21, 2022
by Mitch Pronschinske
· 102,110 Views · 2 Likes
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Top 10 Automated Software Testing Tools
Here's an overview of the most trending software testing automation tools to help all the software testing folks out there.
Updated June 21, 2022
by Pratik Satasiya
· 1,085,497 Views · 46 Likes
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Open Source Software (OSS) Quality Assurance — A Milvus Case Study
We aim to provide you with optimal user experience with Milvus by conducting various types of QA tests and leveraging multiple tools.
Updated June 14, 2022
by Wx Zhu
· 4,881 Views · 4 Likes
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How I Built My Own Insomnia Plugin
Insomnia helps with building, testing, and debugging APIs. Plugins extend functionality. Build your own and add new functionality with just a few lines of code!
June 9, 2022
by Tyler Hawkins DZone Core CORE
· 6,012 Views · 1 Like
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How to Build Reliability Into Your Data Stack
Data has become more integral to the day-to-day operations of modern business and powers digital products; the need for reliable data will only increase.
June 8, 2022
by Lior Gavish
· 5,479 Views · 1 Like
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Writing a Chat With Akka
Do you want to know more about WebSockets? Here you will find some more information about them and learn how to create a simple chat application.
June 7, 2022
by Bartłomiej Żyliński DZone Core CORE
· 7,359 Views · 2 Likes
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News Roundup From KubeCon Europe 2022
The dust has settled following a wildly successful KubeCon/CloudNativeCon 2022 in Valencia, Spain. Learn about the wide range of exciting announcements made there.
Updated June 6, 2022
by stephen Duetzmann
· 3,900 Views · 1 Like
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Is SASE the Solution for Third-Party Risk?
In addition to zero trust, using appropriate tooling like SASE can help secure an organization’s IT infrastructure from threats posed by third-party access.
June 1, 2022
by Gilad David Maayan DZone Core CORE
· 6,303 Views · 1 Like
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Instrumenting a JavaScript Application for OpenTelemetry, Part 1: Setup
This post looks at the first steps for instrumenting a JavaScript application to report OpenTelemetry metrics.
Updated June 1, 2022
by Chris Ward DZone Core CORE
· 5,902 Views · 1 Like
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Are You Getting What You Need from Your UI Testing Tool?
The UI testing tool you have should check all the boxes for your business requirements.
Updated May 26, 2022
by Chris Colosimo
· 4,301 Views · 2 Likes
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Apache Harmony Finally Defeated
Some have probably been expecting it for a long time, and this week it finally happened. Apache Harmony, an open source cleanroom implementation of Java was moved to the Apache Attic, where inactive projects are sent. The project management committee voted 20 to 2 in favor of discontinuing the project. One of the votes against moving Harmony to the Attic was PMC chair Tim Ellison, who thought it was too early to deactivate Harmony. But Harmony was probably already dead and buried once it's primary corporate sponsor, IBM, switched its support to OpenJDK last year. Android has not gotten invovled in the Harmony project recently because of their ongoing lawsuit with Oracle. Developers may still use the code while it resides, inactive, in the Apache Attic. Here were some comments from last year when most predicted the death of Harmony: "Well, pragmatically I would prefer one great open source JVM, rather than multiple average ones. So as long as OpenJDK is still GPL, I see no reason to cry over this. Reality is that I don't know of a single project going into production using Harmony. " --Jacek Furmankiewicz "Google has single handedly turned around the disaster that was J2ME. Assuming they'll eventually sort out the patent mess (and given the stakes, they will) that removes from the equation all the partners that had very little to bring to the table when it comes to mobile Java. Meanwhile, Oracle and IBM need to demonstrate through actual technical innovation that they are still relevant in the Java world. Last time I checked, the enterprise Java world was dominated by things like Spring (under the Apache license) rather than any JCP efforts. Oracle bought an empty shell. Filing patent related lawsuits left and right is probably not going to be very helpful since that tends to scare away customers. So, I'm hoping that this will end pretty quickly. Once it does, all parties can get back to moving the agenda forward on the run-time, language, and APIs. There is a lot of stuff that needs to start happening there and if Oracle won't do it, others will do it for them. In a nutshell, that's why Google is shipping Harmony rather than CDC. I'm pretty sure Google would have preferred to stay in the Sun community a few years ago if only Sun was not being so unreasonable." --Jilles van Gurp "For me, the question is: what to we, as coder, expect from Java? I don't think I will ever use a self patched SDK/openSDK in any production; I even doubt I would ever work in a project which would like todo that. Oracle might be the bad boy here, but -man!- they know techology. I strongly believe, that the SDK will be less stagnant in performance/features and lots of those 10 year old problems in Bugzilla will finally be tackled. Sun let the "open" part of Java start smelling and people started to invest significant time in non-Java languages like Scala and new ways of dealing with partitioning of services aka OSGi containers. Since JVM 1.5 they were not really able to focus this community power to anything bigger then some lame syntactic sugar and a DOA flash clone. Harmony is a nice place to play around with an open JVM, but I think this job moves more over to the more general LLVM. And I don't think that I want to bet my (professional) future on the fact that Google has to step always in when the rest of the industry has just a bad haircut day. IBMs move is logical. Whatever Harmony is or was, the impact was already limited. You simply can't build such infrastructure without more people building it. One company alone wouldn't push Apache or Tomcat, and any serious openJDK shouldn't do either." --Igor Laera Let the conversation now continue.
May 26, 2022
by Mitch Pronschinske
· 24,985 Views · 2 Likes
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Apache Aries: Helping Enterprise Developers Build OSGi Apps
the approval of the blueprint container specification by the osgi alliance enterprise expert group (eeg) inspired members of the eeg to start an open source project centered around implementing the blueprint spec and other technologies for osgi applications. in september the apache aries project was born in the apache incubator. the purpose of the apache aries incubator is to create a new community of people interested in building enterprise osgi technology geared toward the application programming model. for an introduction to the history and the purpose of the aries project, dzone interviewed ian robinson, a distinguished websphere engineer and a member of the osgi eeg. robinson is at the frontrunner for the apache aries project and has begun using its technology for ibm's websphere application server. dzone asked robinson about the factors inspired the aries project. robinson said, "from a standards direction, the work of the osgi alliance eeg was to define a set of specifications that would form part of an enterprise profile for osgi." he says the eeg has approved several specs for technologies that allow osgi applications to consume existing java ee technologies like jta, jpa, jndi, etc. "the purpose of the eeg was not to try and define competing specifications but to take what exists already in the java enterprise space and define how those technologies become consumable for applications running in an osgi framework," robinson said. robinson also observed some point efforts starting up inside existing apache projects that didn't have an enterprise osgi home to host them. one example was an implementation of the blueprint container spec, which started out inside apache geronimo , an open source java ee application server. robinson said that developing a blueprint implementation in geronimo made sense since the app server could use the it, but that didn't provide much visibility of the blueprint work outside of the geronimo project. robinson and his collaborators thought it would be a better idea to start a new incubator project who's primary focus was enterprise osgi, form a community around it, and then gather a set of osgi technologies in that new project so that other projects like geronimo, felix karaf, and servicemix could use that technology in their own runtime environments. apache aries is not an effort to build a new enterprise application server or a new application integration runtime. robinson says the purpose of the project is to build components like the blueprint container that can be used by those enterprise application servers. apache geronimo is currently working on consuming the aries blueprint container and apache felix karaf , which is the kernel of an enterprise integration runtime, is already consuming the aries blueprint container. in its three month existence, the apache aries incubator has already been successful in building a sizable community. including robinson, there are currently 43 committers distributed across a wide variety of companies. robinson says at the end of an incubation period, an incubator is considered a success and a top level project if it builds a vibrant community, and aries is well on its way with companies like red hat, progress, ibm, and sap represented. right now, no timeframe has been determined for when the aries project intends to graduate from incubation. robinson says the community will decide when they've done enough work to become a top level project. dzone asked robinson the most important question for any apache project: 'how did the project get its name?' robinson explains: "we started thinking in ibm about the aries project way back in early april when the blueprint work started in apache geronimo. i mentioned that geronimo is a consumer of blueprint, but not the obvious project to develop it - we thought back then that what we needed was a new incubator for the blueprint container and other enterprise osgi technologies. aries is the star sign for that time of the year - simple as that." hence the logo for apache aries is the ram. ibm's websphere application server v7 already uses some of the technology in the apache aries project for its open alpha , which helps deploy enterprise applications as osgi bundles. to get involved with the apache aries project, you can visit their "getting inolved" page.
May 26, 2022
by Mitch Pronschinske
· 22,442 Views · 3 Likes
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Android Tutorial – Learn Android From Scratch!
In this article, we discuss the basics behind Android app development, including architecture, application anatomy, and a quick "Hello, World"app.
Updated May 26, 2022
by Aayushi Johari
· 17,472 Views · 8 Likes
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Experience Obsolesce: The Glaring Reality of Rapid Technology Change
There is a growing phenomenon in the IT community that challenges the concept of experience and a lifelong dedication to a career or area of study.
May 24, 2022
by Kartik Patel
· 4,170 Views · 1 Like
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June 1-3 Open Source RT-Thread IoT OS Global Tech Conference
Sign up for free!
May 20, 2022
by Nath Abby
· 39,307 Views · 2 Likes
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A Guide to Test Automation Types, Tools, and Benefits
Why should you have to do all that heavy testing lifting by yourself? Or at all?
Updated May 19, 2022
by Praveen Mishra
· 40,455 Views · 23 Likes
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Top 11 Cloud Platforms for Internet of Things (IoT)
Looking over the top 11 cloud platforms for Internet of Things (IoT), we highlight the importance of scalability, cost, and connectivity. Click here for more.
Updated May 19, 2022
by Diksha Rana
· 177,172 Views · 11 Likes
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