Best of GitOpsDecember 2022

  1. 1
    Article
    Avatar of devtoDEV·3y

    DevOps Trends for Developers in 2023

    The year 2022 saw a huge momentum in the topics such as AI/ML, automation, security, etc. DevOps practices are constantly evolving, and it is our job to keep an eye on what to focus on in the coming year. Let us see those trends and how they will impact developers and organizations.

  2. 2
    Article
    Avatar of devtoDEV·3y

    Getting Started With GitOps For Developers!

    GitOps is a methodology for deploying and managing software applications using Git. It is also referred to as "operations-as-code" or "code-driven operations" It uses the principles of DevOps to streamline software updates across an organization. GitOps can have two deployment strategies: push and pull pipelines.

  3. 3
    Article
    Avatar of octopusdeployOctopusDeploy·3y

    What is GitOps?

    GitOps is a relatively new addition to the growing list of "Ops" paradigms taking shape in our industry. It all started with DevOps, and while the term DevOps has been around for some years now, it seems we still can't agree whether it's a process, mindset, job title, set of tools.

  4. 4
    Article
    Avatar of rhdevRed Hat Developer·3y

    GitOps Cookbook: Kubernetes automation in practice

    GitOps is a methodology and practice that uses Git repositories as a single source of truth to deliver infrastructure as code. It takes the pillars and approaches from DevOps culture and provides a framework to start realizing the results. GitOps expands upon existing processes from application development to deployment, app lifecycle management, and infrastructure configuration.

  5. 5
    Article
    Avatar of gitlabGitLab·3y

    Top 10 technical articles of 2022

    With 2022 coming to a close, we wanted to ensure everyone gets one more chance to explore our top 10 technical blog posts of the year. The ultimate to GitLab 10 will get the most of choosing the right pipelines for the job. How to troubleshoot a GitLab pipeline failure is more frustrating than that red X.