2 minute read

The first issue of 2016 sees a range of posts from new tools to new arguments for working more closely together. It being January also means we’re only weeks away from FOSDEM and Configuration Management Camp too.

Sponsor

Devops Weekly is sponsored by Brightbox Cloud: the multi-zone cloud platform built for High Availability.

Try an SSD cloud server in 30 seconds with your £20 free credit…
http://brightbox.com/devopsweekly

Sponsored

DevOps: Hidden Risks and How to Achieve Results Get industry insights and practical tips from DevOps experts including Gene Kim, co-author of The Phoenix Project, and the Dynatrace Center of Excellence©.
http://ow.ly/U3KhD

News

A good collection of reading material focusing on the culture and process side of devops, in particular looking at the development of agile practices.
https://medium.com/@millard3/2015-devops-holiday-reading-list-30c36ee260d3#.gdiunvd2j

A quick summary of the new features in the upcoming Postgres 9.5 release. Upsert and the new JSONB output look handy.
http://www.craigkerstiens.com/2015/12/27/postgres-9-5-feature-rundown/

It feels like systems programming is becoming more interesting to a wider range of developers, so intermezzos looks interesting. It’s a teaching OS focused on introducing systems programming concepts to experienced developers from other areas of programming.
http://intermezzos.github.io/

A well argued post that distributed systems, far from just a backend concern, are a user experience problem as well. Collaboration and empathy for different specialisms, as well as usersm is required to solve such problems.
http://bravenewgeek.com/distributed-systems-are-a-ux-problem/

A nicely documented set of experiments to demonstrate how kubernetes works. Demo’s of scheduling under different resource constraints, node and container failures and autoscaling.
https://speakerdeck.com/hasbro17/kubernetes-a-profile-and-evaluation-study

A presentation on architecting for failure in distributed systems such than you present graceful degradation and not unavailability. Focuses on the need to embrace asynchrony everywhere.
https://speakerdeck.com/niteshkant/crossroads-of-asynchrony-and-graceful-degradation-at-qcon-sf-2015

Working with infrastructure software tends to mean a lot of time spend with the command line. For beginners this can be a barrier to entry. Which makes the art of the command line a handy reference.
https://github.com/jlevy/the-art-of-command-line

An argument for splitting your definition of immutable infrastructure into layers, and embracing schedulers as a way of using runtime information to ensure acceptable utilisation.
http://www.infoq.com/articles/immutable-layers

Tools

Caddy is a new web server with out-of-the-box support for HTTP/2, IPv6 and WebSockets. It also has nifty built-in support for Let’s Encrypt to provide HTTPS by default.
https://caddyserver.com/
https://github.com/mholt/caddy

A nice idea for providing minimal help documentation focused on typical examples for common unix tools. A bit like a community contributed and stripped down man.
http://tldr-pages.github.io/

Pash is an Open Source reimplementation of Windows PowerShell, for Mono.
https://github.com/Pash-Project/Pash

Devops Weekly is sponsored by Brightbox Cloud: the multi-zone cloud platform built for High Availability.

Try an SSD cloud server in 30 seconds with your £20 free credit…
http://brightbox.com/devopsweekly

Updated: