The document discusses best practices for building application development release pipelines, including:
- Implementing continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) practices like committing code frequently and building on every commit.
- Deploying code to running environments for further testing before production.
- Storing all code, including applications, infrastructure, and documentation in code repositories.
- Starting with continuous delivery and gated deployments, then moving to continuous deployment with excellent testing.
- Conducting code reviews to ensure code quality and understandability.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Chalk Talk: Succeeding at Infrastructure-as-Code (GPSCT312)Amazon Web Services
The days of manually managing infrastructure tasks are quickly coming to an end; businesses increasingly need their infrastructure teams to react with the same agility of their development teams. In this session, we discuss various approaches to infrastructure-as-code utilizing AWS solutions across the areas of templated infrastructure provisioning, configuration management, and policy as code. We invite you to bring your questions and join AWS Solutions Architects as we dive deeper into the concepts and best practices behind infrastructure-as-code.
Enterprise DevOps at Scale with AWS | AWS Public Sector Summit 2016Amazon Web Services
Ellucian has been migrating its entire organization from a myriad of software delivery mechanisms, many of them manual, to a highly automated and advanced suite of DevOps tools. Using tools such as Jenkins, Terraform, and Ansible along with native AWS tooling, we have built a highly customized DevOps pipeline on top of the AWS platform. In this talk, we go over some of the challenges we have faced and also discuss our thoughts on the evolution of DevOps and the emerging patterns of managing AWS-based environments.
Why does DevOps matter? How can you use continuous integration to build your product faster, make it more highly available, and be able to recover from bugs quickly? Let one of our solutions architects walk you through continuous integration and continuous delivery on AWS. This session includes live demos of our tools AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy.
Speaker: Leo Zhandovsky, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web services
recordings to the Canberra Summit can be found here
https://aws.amazon.com/events/anz/on-demand/canberra-summit/
AWS re:Invent 2016: Automated Governance of Your AWS Resources (DEV302)Amazon Web Services
AWS CloudTrail, Amazon CloudWatch Events, AWS Identity & Access Management (IAM), Trusted Advisor, AWS Config Rules, other services? In this session, we will help you use existing and recently launched services to automate configuration governance so that security is embedded in the development process. We outline four easy steps (Control, Monitor, Fix, and Audit) and demonstrate how different services can be used to meet your governance needs. We will showcase real-life examples and you can take home a blog post with code examples and the full source code for scripts and tooling that AWS professional services have built using these services.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Chalk Talk: Succeeding at Infrastructure-as-Code (GPSCT312)Amazon Web Services
The days of manually managing infrastructure tasks are quickly coming to an end; businesses increasingly need their infrastructure teams to react with the same agility of their development teams. In this session, we discuss various approaches to infrastructure-as-code utilizing AWS solutions across the areas of templated infrastructure provisioning, configuration management, and policy as code. We invite you to bring your questions and join AWS Solutions Architects as we dive deeper into the concepts and best practices behind infrastructure-as-code.
Enterprise DevOps at Scale with AWS | AWS Public Sector Summit 2016Amazon Web Services
Ellucian has been migrating its entire organization from a myriad of software delivery mechanisms, many of them manual, to a highly automated and advanced suite of DevOps tools. Using tools such as Jenkins, Terraform, and Ansible along with native AWS tooling, we have built a highly customized DevOps pipeline on top of the AWS platform. In this talk, we go over some of the challenges we have faced and also discuss our thoughts on the evolution of DevOps and the emerging patterns of managing AWS-based environments.
Why does DevOps matter? How can you use continuous integration to build your product faster, make it more highly available, and be able to recover from bugs quickly? Let one of our solutions architects walk you through continuous integration and continuous delivery on AWS. This session includes live demos of our tools AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy.
Speaker: Leo Zhandovsky, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web services
recordings to the Canberra Summit can be found here
https://aws.amazon.com/events/anz/on-demand/canberra-summit/
AWS re:Invent 2016: Automated Governance of Your AWS Resources (DEV302)Amazon Web Services
AWS CloudTrail, Amazon CloudWatch Events, AWS Identity & Access Management (IAM), Trusted Advisor, AWS Config Rules, other services? In this session, we will help you use existing and recently launched services to automate configuration governance so that security is embedded in the development process. We outline four easy steps (Control, Monitor, Fix, and Audit) and demonstrate how different services can be used to meet your governance needs. We will showcase real-life examples and you can take home a blog post with code examples and the full source code for scripts and tooling that AWS professional services have built using these services.
DevOps, Continuous Integration and Deployment on AWS: Putting Money Back into...Amazon Web Services
Organizations around the globe are leveraging the cloud to accomplish world-changing missions. This session will address how AWS can help organizations put more money toward their mission and scale outreach and operations to achieve more with less. Hear some of AWS’s most advanced customers on how their organizations handle DevOps, continuous integration and deployment. Learn how these practices allow them to rapidly develop, iterate, test and deploy highly-scalable web applications and core operational systems on AWS. The discussion will focus on best practices, lessons learned, and the specific technologies and services they use.
(DVO202) DevOps at Amazon: A Look At Our Tools & ProcessesAmazon Web Services
As software teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt more agile processes, the tools they need to support their development cycles will change. In this session, we'll take you through the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago. We will share the lessons we learned, the processes we adopted, and the tools we built to increase both our agility and reliability. We will also introduce you to AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy, three new services born out of Amazon's internal DevOps experience.
Deploy, scale and manage your application with AWS Elastic BeanstalAmazon Web Services
AWS Elastic Beanstalk provides an easy way to quickly deploy, manage, and scale applications in the AWS cloud. Through interactive demos, this session will discuss the best practices for deploying and scaling your application, provisioning additional AWS resources and performance tuning.
Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda provide a new way of building applications by removing servers from the picture. But what does the removal of servers mean to tasks like deployment, monitoring, and debugging? How should you set up blue-green deployments or set alarms? Come learn all this and more, including how to use AWS services and tools like AWS CodePipeline, AWS CloudFormation, and Amazon CloudWatch to manage your serverless applications at high quality.
AWS re:Invent 2016: How A Federal Agency Transformed Work and Adopted DevOps ...Amazon Web Services
In this session, you’ll hear from GitHub and Accenture Federal Services, a trusted advisor to the US government, on why they have continued to invest in the adoption of and transition to cloud services. After migrating to AWS cloud, one agency deployed GitHub, the cloud-hosted, distributed version control and collaboration platform, as the backbone of its DevOps program.
Now, thousands of users on software development teams at the agency collaborate both internally and with other agencies faster and more efficiently than ever before. Learn how they decreased duplicative work, raised the quality of their code, and greatly increased delivery velocity.
Our Accenture Federal Services speaker will share details on what it’s like to run GitHub Enterprise on AWS for a federal agency, including the unique challenges and solutions that stem from running an appliance in the cloud, and advice for others considering this path. Session sponsored by GitHub.
AWS Competency Partner
AWS re:Invent 2016: DevOps on AWS: Advanced Continuous Delivery Techniques (D...Amazon Web Services
Continuous delivery makes teams more agile and quickens the pace of innovation. Too often, though, teams adopt continuous delivery without putting the right safety mechanisms in place. In this talk, we'll transform a simple but typical software release process into one that is safe. We'll use DevOps techniques like continuous integration, a variety of non-production testing stages, rollbacks, machine redundancy, Availability Zone redundancy, canary deployments, canary tests, and dashboards. We'll use AWS Lambda, AWS CloudFormation, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, Amazon CloudWatch alarms and dashboards, and AWS Elastic Beanstalk.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Development Workflow with Docker and Amazon ECS (CON302)Amazon Web Services
Keeping consistent environments across your development, test, and production systems can be a complex task. Docker containers offer a way to develop and test your application in the same environment in which it runs in production. You can use tools such as the ECS CLI and Docker Compose for local testing of applications; Jenkins and AWS CodePipeline for building and workflow orchestration; Amazon EC2 Container Registry to store your container images; and Amazon EC2 Container Service to manage and scale containers. In this session, you will learn how to build containers into your development workflow and orchestrate container deployments using Amazon ECS. You will hear how Okta runs 30,000 tests per developer commit and releases 10,000 new lines of code each week to production with a CI system based on 100% AWS services. We'll also discuss how Okta uses ECS for parallelized testing in CI and for production microservices in a multi-region, always on cloud service.
Announcing AWS CodeBuild - January 2017 Online Teck TalksAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous integration and delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes followed by Amazon engineers and discuss how you can bring them to your company by using a set of application lifecycle management tools from AWS: the newly announced AWS CodeBuild service, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy.
Learning Objectives:
• Understand the concepts of DevOps, continuous integration, and continuous delivery
• Learn about Amazon’s DevOps practices
• Hear an overview of how to build a continuous integration and continuous delivery workflow using the combination of CodeBuild, CodePipeline, and CodeDeploy
Managing Your Application Lifecycle on AWS: Continuous Integration and Deploy...Amazon Web Services
In this session you’ll learn best practices for managing your application lifecycle with these tools with a particular focus on development speed and release agility. Through interactive demonstrations, this session shows you how to get an application running using AWS Elastic Beanstalk, CloudFormation and CodeDeploy. You will also see how advanced techniques such as blue/green deployment, AMI baking, customer resources and in-place deployment reduce deployment friction and rapid change in your environment.
Microservices is a software architectural method where you decompose complex applications into smaller, independent services. Containers are great for running small decoupled services, but how do you coordinate running microservices in production at scale and what AWS services do you use? In this session, we will explore the reasoning and concepts behind microservices and how containers simplify building microservices based applications. We will also demonstrate how you can easily launch microservices on Amazon EC2 Container Service and how you can use ELB and Route 53 to easily do service discovery between microservices.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Application Lifecycle Management in a Serverless World (S...Amazon Web Services
Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda provide a new way of building applications by removing servers from the picture. But what does the removal of servers mean to tasks like deployment, monitoring, and debugging? How should you set up blue-green deployments or set alarms? Come learn all this and more, including how to use AWS services and tools like AWS CodePipeline, AWS CloudFormation, and Amazon CloudWatch to manage your serverless applications at high quality.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Continuous Integration and Deployment Best Practices on AWS (ARC307) | AWS re...Amazon Web Services
With AWS, companies now have the ability to develop and run their applications with speed and flexibility like never before. Working with an infrastructure that can be 100 percent API driven enables businesses to use lean methodologies and realize these benefits. This in turn leads to greater success for those who make use of these practices. In this session, we talk about some key concepts and design patterns for continuous deployment and continuous integration, two elements of lean development of applications and infrastructures.
Much has been said about DevOps culture, this webinar talks about exactly what it means to exercise a DevOps methodology inside your organization and takes a more detailed look at Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment – two of the elements of a successful DevOps framework. With AWS’s API driven infrastructure, running a lean platform becomes possible and the ability to treat ‘Infrastructure as Code’.
Reasons to attend:
Learn how to set up and experience the benefits of 'Continuous Integration' and 'Continuous Deployment' for your Development Environment.
Learn about DevOps best practices and the agility that the AWS Cloud can bring your business.
Learn how business have successfully implemented DevOps methodologies.
Serverless architectures let you build and deploy applications and services with infrastructure resources that require zero administration. In the past, you had to provision and scale servers to run your application code, install and operate distributed databases, and build and run custom software to handle API requests. Now, AWS provides a stack of scalable, fully-managed services that eliminates these operational complexities.
In this session, you will learn about the benefits of serverless architectures and the basics of the serverless stack AWS provides. We will also walk through how you can use serverless architectures for everything from data processing to mobile and web backends.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Jeremy Edberg, Co-Founder, CloudNative, & AWS Community Hero
In this session, we will help you use existing and recently launched services to automate configuration governance so that security is embedded in the development process. We outline four easy steps (Control, Monitor, Fix, and Audit) and demonstrate how different services can be used to meet your governance needs.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Automated DevOps and Continuous Delivery (DEV211)Amazon Web Services
In the digital economy, the fast development and deployment of applications is critical to success. To thrive in this application-oriented business environment, IT organizations are acting now to change their tools and processes to better support agile development methodologies. This session will cover performance benchmarking, benefits of migrating existing workloads, use of key services like Amazon RDS and AWS CloudHSM, and demonstrate how to deploy applications securely and at scale. Session sponsored by Cisco.
Continuous Integration and Deployment Best Practices on AWSAmazon Web Services
With AWS, organizations now have the ability to develop and run their applications with speed and flexibility like never before. Working with an infrastructure that can be 100% API-driven enables organizations to use lean methodologies and realize these benefits. In this session, we will explore some key concepts and design patterns for continuous deployment and continuous integration, two elements of lean application and infrastructure development. We will look at several use cases where IT organizations leveraged AWS to rapidly develop and iterate on applications for scale, high availability and cost optimization.
Speaker: Adrian White, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services
DevOps, Continuous Integration and Deployment on AWS: Putting Money Back into...Amazon Web Services
Organizations around the globe are leveraging the cloud to accomplish world-changing missions. This session will address how AWS can help organizations put more money toward their mission and scale outreach and operations to achieve more with less. Hear some of AWS’s most advanced customers on how their organizations handle DevOps, continuous integration and deployment. Learn how these practices allow them to rapidly develop, iterate, test and deploy highly-scalable web applications and core operational systems on AWS. The discussion will focus on best practices, lessons learned, and the specific technologies and services they use.
(DVO202) DevOps at Amazon: A Look At Our Tools & ProcessesAmazon Web Services
As software teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt more agile processes, the tools they need to support their development cycles will change. In this session, we'll take you through the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago. We will share the lessons we learned, the processes we adopted, and the tools we built to increase both our agility and reliability. We will also introduce you to AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy, three new services born out of Amazon's internal DevOps experience.
Deploy, scale and manage your application with AWS Elastic BeanstalAmazon Web Services
AWS Elastic Beanstalk provides an easy way to quickly deploy, manage, and scale applications in the AWS cloud. Through interactive demos, this session will discuss the best practices for deploying and scaling your application, provisioning additional AWS resources and performance tuning.
Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda provide a new way of building applications by removing servers from the picture. But what does the removal of servers mean to tasks like deployment, monitoring, and debugging? How should you set up blue-green deployments or set alarms? Come learn all this and more, including how to use AWS services and tools like AWS CodePipeline, AWS CloudFormation, and Amazon CloudWatch to manage your serverless applications at high quality.
AWS re:Invent 2016: How A Federal Agency Transformed Work and Adopted DevOps ...Amazon Web Services
In this session, you’ll hear from GitHub and Accenture Federal Services, a trusted advisor to the US government, on why they have continued to invest in the adoption of and transition to cloud services. After migrating to AWS cloud, one agency deployed GitHub, the cloud-hosted, distributed version control and collaboration platform, as the backbone of its DevOps program.
Now, thousands of users on software development teams at the agency collaborate both internally and with other agencies faster and more efficiently than ever before. Learn how they decreased duplicative work, raised the quality of their code, and greatly increased delivery velocity.
Our Accenture Federal Services speaker will share details on what it’s like to run GitHub Enterprise on AWS for a federal agency, including the unique challenges and solutions that stem from running an appliance in the cloud, and advice for others considering this path. Session sponsored by GitHub.
AWS Competency Partner
AWS re:Invent 2016: DevOps on AWS: Advanced Continuous Delivery Techniques (D...Amazon Web Services
Continuous delivery makes teams more agile and quickens the pace of innovation. Too often, though, teams adopt continuous delivery without putting the right safety mechanisms in place. In this talk, we'll transform a simple but typical software release process into one that is safe. We'll use DevOps techniques like continuous integration, a variety of non-production testing stages, rollbacks, machine redundancy, Availability Zone redundancy, canary deployments, canary tests, and dashboards. We'll use AWS Lambda, AWS CloudFormation, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, Amazon CloudWatch alarms and dashboards, and AWS Elastic Beanstalk.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Development Workflow with Docker and Amazon ECS (CON302)Amazon Web Services
Keeping consistent environments across your development, test, and production systems can be a complex task. Docker containers offer a way to develop and test your application in the same environment in which it runs in production. You can use tools such as the ECS CLI and Docker Compose for local testing of applications; Jenkins and AWS CodePipeline for building and workflow orchestration; Amazon EC2 Container Registry to store your container images; and Amazon EC2 Container Service to manage and scale containers. In this session, you will learn how to build containers into your development workflow and orchestrate container deployments using Amazon ECS. You will hear how Okta runs 30,000 tests per developer commit and releases 10,000 new lines of code each week to production with a CI system based on 100% AWS services. We'll also discuss how Okta uses ECS for parallelized testing in CI and for production microservices in a multi-region, always on cloud service.
Announcing AWS CodeBuild - January 2017 Online Teck TalksAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous integration and delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes followed by Amazon engineers and discuss how you can bring them to your company by using a set of application lifecycle management tools from AWS: the newly announced AWS CodeBuild service, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy.
Learning Objectives:
• Understand the concepts of DevOps, continuous integration, and continuous delivery
• Learn about Amazon’s DevOps practices
• Hear an overview of how to build a continuous integration and continuous delivery workflow using the combination of CodeBuild, CodePipeline, and CodeDeploy
Managing Your Application Lifecycle on AWS: Continuous Integration and Deploy...Amazon Web Services
In this session you’ll learn best practices for managing your application lifecycle with these tools with a particular focus on development speed and release agility. Through interactive demonstrations, this session shows you how to get an application running using AWS Elastic Beanstalk, CloudFormation and CodeDeploy. You will also see how advanced techniques such as blue/green deployment, AMI baking, customer resources and in-place deployment reduce deployment friction and rapid change in your environment.
Microservices is a software architectural method where you decompose complex applications into smaller, independent services. Containers are great for running small decoupled services, but how do you coordinate running microservices in production at scale and what AWS services do you use? In this session, we will explore the reasoning and concepts behind microservices and how containers simplify building microservices based applications. We will also demonstrate how you can easily launch microservices on Amazon EC2 Container Service and how you can use ELB and Route 53 to easily do service discovery between microservices.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Application Lifecycle Management in a Serverless World (S...Amazon Web Services
Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda provide a new way of building applications by removing servers from the picture. But what does the removal of servers mean to tasks like deployment, monitoring, and debugging? How should you set up blue-green deployments or set alarms? Come learn all this and more, including how to use AWS services and tools like AWS CodePipeline, AWS CloudFormation, and Amazon CloudWatch to manage your serverless applications at high quality.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Continuous Integration and Deployment Best Practices on AWS (ARC307) | AWS re...Amazon Web Services
With AWS, companies now have the ability to develop and run their applications with speed and flexibility like never before. Working with an infrastructure that can be 100 percent API driven enables businesses to use lean methodologies and realize these benefits. This in turn leads to greater success for those who make use of these practices. In this session, we talk about some key concepts and design patterns for continuous deployment and continuous integration, two elements of lean development of applications and infrastructures.
Much has been said about DevOps culture, this webinar talks about exactly what it means to exercise a DevOps methodology inside your organization and takes a more detailed look at Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment – two of the elements of a successful DevOps framework. With AWS’s API driven infrastructure, running a lean platform becomes possible and the ability to treat ‘Infrastructure as Code’.
Reasons to attend:
Learn how to set up and experience the benefits of 'Continuous Integration' and 'Continuous Deployment' for your Development Environment.
Learn about DevOps best practices and the agility that the AWS Cloud can bring your business.
Learn how business have successfully implemented DevOps methodologies.
Serverless architectures let you build and deploy applications and services with infrastructure resources that require zero administration. In the past, you had to provision and scale servers to run your application code, install and operate distributed databases, and build and run custom software to handle API requests. Now, AWS provides a stack of scalable, fully-managed services that eliminates these operational complexities.
In this session, you will learn about the benefits of serverless architectures and the basics of the serverless stack AWS provides. We will also walk through how you can use serverless architectures for everything from data processing to mobile and web backends.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Jeremy Edberg, Co-Founder, CloudNative, & AWS Community Hero
In this session, we will help you use existing and recently launched services to automate configuration governance so that security is embedded in the development process. We outline four easy steps (Control, Monitor, Fix, and Audit) and demonstrate how different services can be used to meet your governance needs.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Automated DevOps and Continuous Delivery (DEV211)Amazon Web Services
In the digital economy, the fast development and deployment of applications is critical to success. To thrive in this application-oriented business environment, IT organizations are acting now to change their tools and processes to better support agile development methodologies. This session will cover performance benchmarking, benefits of migrating existing workloads, use of key services like Amazon RDS and AWS CloudHSM, and demonstrate how to deploy applications securely and at scale. Session sponsored by Cisco.
Continuous Integration and Deployment Best Practices on AWSAmazon Web Services
With AWS, organizations now have the ability to develop and run their applications with speed and flexibility like never before. Working with an infrastructure that can be 100% API-driven enables organizations to use lean methodologies and realize these benefits. In this session, we will explore some key concepts and design patterns for continuous deployment and continuous integration, two elements of lean application and infrastructure development. We will look at several use cases where IT organizations leveraged AWS to rapidly develop and iterate on applications for scale, high availability and cost optimization.
Speaker: Adrian White, Solutions Architect, Amazon Web Services
This session provides a holistic framework that can be used to build a Cloud Strategy that is tailor made for your organization. The Cloud Strategy covers 7 different perspectives of consideration including Business, People, Process, Operations, Security, Maturity, and Platform.
As software teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt more agile processes, the tools they need to support their development cycles will change. In this session, we'll take you through the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago. We will share the lessons we learned, the processes we adopted, and the tools we built to increase both our agility and reliability. We will also introduce you to AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy, three new services born out of Amazon's internal DevOps.
Presentation at the Manchester Java Community, October 2016, about how to build and manage a scalable Continuous Integration / Continuous Deployment pipeline.
- what is infrastructure as code
- principles of infrastructure as code
- practices of infrastructure as code
- benefits
- introduction to cloudformation
- examples
- references
Slides from STV Tech Talks (Glasgow, UK) - 27 August 2013
--
Based on the experience of leading the current initiative to move towards Continuous Delivery at Skyscanner, I presented a view on 5 key focus areas that must be considered to make Continuous Delivery an achievable objective within a very complex Service Oriented Architecture.
Managing the deployment of code to multiple AWS Lambda functions and updating your API Gateway methods can be manual and time consuming.
In this session, we will show you how to build a deployment pipeline to AWS Lambda using AWS CodePipeline, a continuous delivery service based on Amazon’s internal release automation tooling. We will discuss how to use versioning, which enables you to better manage the different variations of your Lambda functions and API Gateway methods in your development workflow (e.g., development, staging, and production). We will walk through how to automate the entire release process of your application from development, to staging, and finally to production; performing automated integration tests at each stage.
Continuous Integration (CI) - An effective development practiceDao Ngoc Kien
This document introduces a very effective practice of software development method called Continuous Integration.
CTO/Manager of IT company (outsource/startup company) should have a look.
DevOps in the Amazon Warehouse - Shawn GandhiTriNimbus
Presentation from Toronto's 2016 Canadian Executive Cloud & DevOps Summit on Friday, November 4th.
Speaker: Shawn Gandhi, Head of Solutions Architecture, AWS Canada
Title: Rogue Development: DevOps in the Amazon Warehouse
Continuous Integration using Hudson and Fitnesse at Ingenuity Systems (Silico...Jen Wong
Continuous Integration using Hudson and Fitnesse
Speaker: Vasu Durgavarjhula , Jennifer Wong , Norman Boccone
Level: Intermediate | Room: 4221 | 11:15 AM Saturday
Learn about Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Deployment(CD) and how Ingenuity Systems moved from a traditional release process to a more agile frequent release model. In this talk we will discuss specifics and show demos on:
using Hudson as a framework for continuous integration, deployment, and build promotion
deployment and configuration management
changes we made to make our architecture more service-oriented
our automated test strategy using JUnit, FitNesse, and Selenium
migrating our build and deployment process from Ant to Maven
challenges to overcome and lessons learned in implementing a successful CI system
Continuous Delivery offers a proven solution for streamlining software design that enables rapid, reliable, and repeated delivery code enhancements at low risk and with minimal overhead. Using a framework that automates processes from code design to deployment, software can be developed to high standards while reducing time-to-market. Continuous Delivery not only establishes consistent delivery of higher quality software with greater reliability, it does so at a lower overall cost.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Turbocharge Your Microsoft .NET Developments with AWS (DE...Amazon Web Services
In this session, you will discover how to integrate the AWS developer tools into your development process. We will demonstrate how to leverage AWS services, the .NET SDK, and the Visual Studio Toolkit to simplify and streamline your development processes. This session is targeted at development teams using Microsoft Visual Studio and the Microsoft ecosystem of products. Most of the presentation will be in Visual Studio.
Deploying systems using AWS DevOps tools
You've heard a lot about DevOps, but have you ever wondered which tools to use to deploy your systems? Join Karl Schwirz and Matt Parr from Slalom Consulting as they walk through a code pipeline deployment on AWS. In this MassTLC DevOps session, Matt and Karl will walk through a real-world application deployment using CloudFormation, CodeDeploy, CodePipeline and Chef.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Building the Future of DevOps with Amazon Web Services (D...Amazon Web Services
At Dynatrace, we challenged ourselves to build a virtual team member to help operations teams run large-scale cloud infrastructures. Think J.A.R.V.I.S. from Iron Man, but for operations. We built our cloud infrastructure on Amazon EC2, Elastic Load Balancing load balancers, and Auto Scaling groups for real-time scalability, Amazon Route 53 for instant customer access, Amazon Echo and Alexa for voice interaction, AWS Lambda for fast prototyping of the human-interaction layer, and Amazon DynamoDB for handling complex conversations. In this session, we will also discuss how we extend the service by using Amazon Machine Learning and AWS IoT to more naturally integrate our virtual assistant into the real world. Session sponsored by Dynatrace. This session sponsored by Dynatrace.
AWS Competency Partner
AWS re:Invent 2016: DevOps on AWS: Accelerating Software Delivery with the AW...Amazon Web Services
Today’s cutting edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes followed by Amazon engineers and discuss how you can bring them to your company by using AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy, services inspired by Amazon's internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Today’s cutting edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share best practices (including ones followed internally at Amazon) and how you can bring them to your company by using open source and AWS services.
Speaker: Raghuraman Balachandran, Solutions Architect, Amazon India
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Dev ops on aws deep dive on continuous delivery - TorontoAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
As software development teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt agile processes, the tools they need to support application development in this new world will change. In this session, we'll take you the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago, and introduce you to some of the processes and tools that we built and adopted along the way. We’ll share what lessons we’ve learned, explain how we’ve achieved better agility and reliability in our software development and deployment processes, and present an overview of tools we’ve used to help get us there that have since become services such as AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, and more.
As software development teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt agile processes, the tools they need to support application development in this new world will change. In this session, we'll take you the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago, and introduce you to some of the processes and tools that we built and adopted along the way. We’ll share what lessons we’ve learned, explain how we’ve achieved better agility and reliability in our software development and deployment processes, and present an overview of tools we’ve used to help get us there that have since become services such as AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, and more.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
As software teams transition to cloud-based architectures and adopt more agile processes, the tools they need to support their development cycles will change. In this session, we'll take you through the transition that Amazon made to a service-oriented architecture over a decade ago. We will share the lessons we learned, the processes we adopted, and the tools we built to increase both our agility and reliability. We will also introduce you to AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodePipeline, and AWS CodeDeploy, three new services born out of Amazon's internal DevOps experience.
Are you tired of the ever-increasing complexity in the world of DevOps? Do Docker and Kubernetes scripts, Ansible configurations, and networking woes make your head spin? It's time for a breath of fresh air.
Join us on a transformative journey where we shatter the myth that DevOps has to be overly complicated. Say goodbye to the days of struggling with incomplete scripts and tangled configurations. In this enlightening talk, we'll guide you through the process of rapidly onboarding your new standard microservice into the DevOps and Cloud universe.
We'll unveil the power of GitHub Actions, AWS, OpenAI API, and MS Teams Incoming Web hooks in a way that's both enlightening and entertaining. Additionally, we'll explore how Language Model APIs (LLMs) can be leveraged to enhance and streamline your DevOps workflows. You'll discover that DevOps doesn't have to be a labyrinth of complexity; it can be a streamlined and enjoyable experience.
So, if you're ready to simplify your DevOps journey and embrace a world where AWS, the OpenAI API, and GitHub Actions collaborate seamlessly while harnessing the potential of LLMs, join us and let's make DevOps a breeze!
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Software release cycles are now measured in days instead of months. Cutting edge companies are continuously delivering high-quality software at a fast pace. In this session, we will cover how you can begin your DevOps journey by sharing best practices and tools used by the engineering teams at Amazon. We will showcase how you can accelerate developer productivity by implementing continuous Integration and delivery workflows. We will also cover an introduction to AWS CodeStar, AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodeBuild, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, AWS Cloud9, and AWS X-Ray the services inspired by Amazon's internal developer tools and DevOps practice.
Level: 200
Speaker: Nick Brandaleone - Solutions Architect, AWS
Building CI/CD Pipelines for Serverless Applications - SRV302 - re:Invent 2017Amazon Web Services
Building and deploying serverless applications introduces new challenges for developers whose development workflows are optimized for traditional VM-based applications. In this session, we discuss a method for automating the deployment of serverless applications running on AWS Lambda. We first cover how you can model and express serverless applications using the open-source AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM). Then, we discuss how you can use CI/CD tooling from AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeBuild, and how to bootstrap the entire toolset using AWS CodeStar. We will also cover best practices to embed in your deployment workflow specific to serverless applications.
You will also hear from iRobot about its approach to serverless deployment. iRobot will share how it achieves coordinated deployments of microservices, maintains long-lived and/or separately-managed resources (like databases), and red/black deployments.
by Nick Brandaleone, Solutions Architect AWS
Join us to learn about continuous integration, continuous delivery, and DevOps. The AWS Developer Tools have been designed based on the tools used by Amazon engineers to rapidly and reliably deliver products and features to customers. We’ll provide overviews of the services and best practices followed by a hands-on workshop to help you learn how to automate your software release processes, deploy application code, and monitor your application and infrastructure performance.
DevOps on AWS: Deep Dive on Continuous Delivery and the AWS Developer ToolsAmazon Web Services
Today’s cutting-edge companies have software release cycles measured in days instead of months. This agility is enabled by the DevOps practice of continuous delivery, which automates building, testing, and deploying all code changes. This automation helps you catch bugs sooner and accelerates developer productivity. In this session, we’ll share the processes that Amazon’s engineers use to practice DevOps and discuss how you can bring these processes to your company by using a new set of AWS tools (AWS CodePipeline and AWS CodeDeploy). These services were inspired by Amazon's own internal developer tools and DevOps culture.
Learn how to use AWS services to automate manual tasks, help teams manage complex environments at scale, and keep engineers in control of the high velocity that is enabled by DevOps. In this session, we will provide an overview of the various AWS development and deployment services and when best to use them. We will show how to build a fully automated infrastructure and software delivery pipeline with AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeBuild, AWS CloudFormation and AWS CodeDeploy. At the end of the session, a GitHub repository of AWS CloudFormation templates will be provided so you can quickly deploy the same pipeline to your AWS account(s).
Come costruire servizi di Forecasting sfruttando algoritmi di ML e deep learn...Amazon Web Services
Il Forecasting è un processo importante per tantissime aziende e viene utilizzato in vari ambiti per cercare di prevedere in modo accurato la crescita e distribuzione di un prodotto, l’utilizzo delle risorse necessarie nelle linee produttive, presentazioni finanziarie e tanto altro. Amazon utilizza delle tecniche avanzate di forecasting, in parte questi servizi sono stati messi a disposizione di tutti i clienti AWS.
In questa sessione illustreremo come pre-processare i dati che contengono una componente temporale e successivamente utilizzare un algoritmo che a partire dal tipo di dato analizzato produce un forecasting accurato.
Big Data per le Startup: come creare applicazioni Big Data in modalità Server...Amazon Web Services
La varietà e la quantità di dati che si crea ogni giorno accelera sempre più velocemente e rappresenta una opportunità irripetibile per innovare e creare nuove startup.
Tuttavia gestire grandi quantità di dati può apparire complesso: creare cluster Big Data su larga scala sembra essere un investimento accessibile solo ad aziende consolidate. Ma l’elasticità del Cloud e, in particolare, i servizi Serverless ci permettono di rompere questi limiti.
Vediamo quindi come è possibile sviluppare applicazioni Big Data rapidamente, senza preoccuparci dell’infrastruttura, ma dedicando tutte le risorse allo sviluppo delle nostre le nostre idee per creare prodotti innovativi.
Ora puoi utilizzare Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) per eseguire pod Kubernetes su AWS Fargate, il motore di elaborazione serverless creato per container su AWS. Questo rende più semplice che mai costruire ed eseguire le tue applicazioni Kubernetes nel cloud AWS.In questa sessione presenteremo le caratteristiche principali del servizio e come distribuire la tua applicazione in pochi passaggi
Vent'anni fa Amazon ha attraversato una trasformazione radicale con l'obiettivo di aumentare il ritmo dell'innovazione. In questo periodo abbiamo imparato come cambiare il nostro approccio allo sviluppo delle applicazioni ci ha permesso di aumentare notevolmente l'agilità, la velocità di rilascio e, in definitiva, ci ha consentito di creare applicazioni più affidabili e scalabili. In questa sessione illustreremo come definiamo le applicazioni moderne e come la creazione di app moderne influisce non solo sull'architettura dell'applicazione, ma sulla struttura organizzativa, sulle pipeline di rilascio dello sviluppo e persino sul modello operativo. Descriveremo anche approcci comuni alla modernizzazione, compreso l'approccio utilizzato dalla stessa Amazon.com.
Come spendere fino al 90% in meno con i container e le istanze spot Amazon Web Services
L’utilizzo dei container è in continua crescita.
Se correttamente disegnate, le applicazioni basate su Container sono molto spesso stateless e flessibili.
I servizi AWS ECS, EKS e Kubernetes su EC2 possono sfruttare le istanze Spot, portando ad un risparmio medio del 70% rispetto alle istanze On Demand. In questa sessione scopriremo insieme quali sono le caratteristiche delle istanze Spot e come possono essere utilizzate facilmente su AWS. Impareremo inoltre come Spreaker sfrutta le istanze spot per eseguire applicazioni di diverso tipo, in produzione, ad una frazione del costo on-demand!
In recent months, many customers have been asking us the question – how to monetise Open APIs, simplify Fintech integrations and accelerate adoption of various Open Banking business models. Therefore, AWS and FinConecta would like to invite you to Open Finance marketplace presentation on October 20th.
Event Agenda :
Open banking so far (short recap)
• PSD2, OB UK, OB Australia, OB LATAM, OB Israel
Intro to Open Finance marketplace
• Scope
• Features
• Tech overview and Demo
The role of the Cloud
The Future of APIs
• Complying with regulation
• Monetizing data / APIs
• Business models
• Time to market
One platform for all: a Strategic approach
Q&A
Rendi unica l’offerta della tua startup sul mercato con i servizi Machine Lea...Amazon Web Services
Per creare valore e costruire una propria offerta differenziante e riconoscibile, le startup di successo sanno come combinare tecnologie consolidate con componenti innovativi creati ad hoc.
AWS fornisce servizi pronti all'utilizzo e, allo stesso tempo, permette di personalizzare e creare gli elementi differenzianti della propria offerta.
Concentrandoci sulle tecnologie di Machine Learning, vedremo come selezionare i servizi di intelligenza artificiale offerti da AWS e, anche attraverso una demo, come costruire modelli di Machine Learning personalizzati utilizzando SageMaker Studio.
OpsWorks Configuration Management: automatizza la gestione e i deployment del...Amazon Web Services
Con l'approccio tradizionale al mondo IT per molti anni è stato difficile implementare tecniche di DevOps, che finora spesso hanno previsto attività manuali portando di tanto in tanto a dei downtime degli applicativi interrompendo l'operatività dell'utente. Con l'avvento del cloud, le tecniche di DevOps sono ormai a portata di tutti a basso costo per qualsiasi genere di workload, garantendo maggiore affidabilità del sistema e risultando in dei significativi miglioramenti della business continuity.
AWS mette a disposizione AWS OpsWork come strumento di Configuration Management che mira ad automatizzare e semplificare la gestione e i deployment delle istanze EC2 per mezzo di workload Chef e Puppet.
Scopri come sfruttare AWS OpsWork a garanzia e affidabilità del tuo applicativo installato su Instanze EC2.
Microsoft Active Directory su AWS per supportare i tuoi Windows WorkloadsAmazon Web Services
Vuoi conoscere le opzioni per eseguire Microsoft Active Directory su AWS? Quando si spostano carichi di lavoro Microsoft in AWS, è importante considerare come distribuire Microsoft Active Directory per supportare la gestione, l'autenticazione e l'autorizzazione dei criteri di gruppo. In questa sessione, discuteremo le opzioni per la distribuzione di Microsoft Active Directory su AWS, incluso AWS Directory Service per Microsoft Active Directory e la distribuzione di Active Directory su Windows su Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). Trattiamo argomenti quali l'integrazione del tuo ambiente Microsoft Active Directory locale nel cloud e l'utilizzo di applicazioni SaaS, come Office 365, con AWS Single Sign-On.
Dal riconoscimento facciale al riconoscimento di frodi o difetti di fabbricazione, l'analisi di immagini e video che sfruttano tecniche di intelligenza artificiale, si stanno evolvendo e raffinando a ritmi elevati. In questo webinar esploreremo le possibilità messe a disposizione dai servizi AWS per applicare lo stato dell'arte delle tecniche di computer vision a scenari reali.
Amazon Web Services e VMware organizzano un evento virtuale gratuito il prossimo mercoledì 14 Ottobre dalle 12:00 alle 13:00 dedicato a VMware Cloud ™ on AWS, il servizio on demand che consente di eseguire applicazioni in ambienti cloud basati su VMware vSphere® e di accedere ad una vasta gamma di servizi AWS, sfruttando a pieno le potenzialità del cloud AWS e tutelando gli investimenti VMware esistenti.
Molte organizzazioni sfruttano i vantaggi del cloud migrando i propri carichi di lavoro Oracle e assicurandosi notevoli vantaggi in termini di agilità ed efficienza dei costi.
La migrazione di questi carichi di lavoro, può creare complessità durante la modernizzazione e il refactoring delle applicazioni e a questo si possono aggiungere rischi di prestazione che possono essere introdotti quando si spostano le applicazioni dai data center locali.
Crea la tua prima serverless ledger-based app con QLDB e NodeJSAmazon Web Services
Molte aziende oggi, costruiscono applicazioni con funzionalità di tipo ledger ad esempio per verificare lo storico di accrediti o addebiti nelle transazioni bancarie o ancora per tenere traccia del flusso supply chain dei propri prodotti.
Alla base di queste soluzioni ci sono i database ledger che permettono di avere un log delle transazioni trasparente, immutabile e crittograficamente verificabile, ma sono strumenti complessi e onerosi da gestire.
Amazon QLDB elimina la necessità di costruire sistemi personalizzati e complessi fornendo un database ledger serverless completamente gestito.
In questa sessione scopriremo come realizzare un'applicazione serverless completa che utilizzi le funzionalità di QLDB.
Con l’ascesa delle architetture di microservizi e delle ricche applicazioni mobili e Web, le API sono più importanti che mai per offrire agli utenti finali una user experience eccezionale. In questa sessione impareremo come affrontare le moderne sfide di progettazione delle API con GraphQL, un linguaggio di query API open source utilizzato da Facebook, Amazon e altro e come utilizzare AWS AppSync, un servizio GraphQL serverless gestito su AWS. Approfondiremo diversi scenari, comprendendo come AppSync può aiutare a risolvere questi casi d’uso creando API moderne con funzionalità di aggiornamento dati in tempo reale e offline.
Inoltre, impareremo come Sky Italia utilizza AWS AppSync per fornire aggiornamenti sportivi in tempo reale agli utenti del proprio portale web.
Database Oracle e VMware Cloud™ on AWS: i miti da sfatareAmazon Web Services
Molte organizzazioni sfruttano i vantaggi del cloud migrando i propri carichi di lavoro Oracle e assicurandosi notevoli vantaggi in termini di agilità ed efficienza dei costi.
La migrazione di questi carichi di lavoro, può creare complessità durante la modernizzazione e il refactoring delle applicazioni e a questo si possono aggiungere rischi di prestazione che possono essere introdotti quando si spostano le applicazioni dai data center locali.
In queste slide, gli esperti AWS e VMware presentano semplici e pratici accorgimenti per facilitare e semplificare la migrazione dei carichi di lavoro Oracle accelerando la trasformazione verso il cloud, approfondiranno l’architettura e dimostreranno come sfruttare a pieno le potenzialità di VMware Cloud ™ on AWS.
Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) è un servizio di gestione dei container altamente scalabile, che semplifica la gestione dei contenitori Docker attraverso un layer di orchestrazione per il controllo del deployment e del relativo lifecycle. In questa sessione presenteremo le principali caratteristiche del servizio, le architetture di riferimento per i differenti carichi di lavoro e i semplici passi necessari per poter velocemente migrare uno o più dei tuo container.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
3. Software moves faster today
Software creation and distribution is
easier and faster than ever:
• Startups can now take on giants with little to
no funding ahead of time
• Getting your software into the hands of
millions is a download away
• Your ability to move fast is paramount to your
ability to fight off disruption
4. Old software delivery model
The software delivery model has drastically changed
New software delivery model
5. What tools do you need to move fast?
Releasing software in this new software driven world
requires a number of tools:
• Tools to manage the flow of your software development
release process
• Tools to properly test and inspect your code for defects
and potential issues
• Tools to deploy your applications
6. First, we need to
understand a little bit
about software release
processes
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jurvetson/5201796697/
7. • Integration
tests with
other systems
• Load testing
• UI tests
• Penetration
testing
Release processes have four major phases
Source Build Test Production
• Check-in
source code
such as .java
files.
• Peer review
new code
• Compile code
• Unit tests
• Style checkers
• Code metrics
• Create
container
images
• Deployment
to production
environments
9. We move pretty fast at Amazon:
In 2014:
• Thousands of service teams across Amazon
• + Building microservices
• + Practicing continuous delivery
• + Many environments (staging, beta, production,
multiple regions)
=50 million deploys
11. DevOps: Culture + Practices + Tools
Each 2-pizza team “owns” their
product:
• Creates product (software
typically)
• Handles Q/A of that product
• Responds to issues, is on-call
• “you build it, you run it”
• Supports service & tracks/goals
against business and technical
metrics
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/lox/9408028555
12. DevOps: Culture + Practices + Tools
Each 2-pizza team’s practices
largely open so far as standards are
met:
• Agile? Scrum? Daily standups?
Weekly? None? Whatever you
works for your team!
• No centralized change
management board/team/
approval, but tools that require a
degree of sign-off/process review
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/lox/9408028555
13. DevOps: Culture + Practices + Tools
Each 2-pizza team developers given
a “box of tools”:
• Use these, or operationalize your
own:
• Time spent on operations is less
time to spend on development
• Less time spent on development
is increased risk of missing goals
• Tools provide “guard rails” that
enforce best/better practices
• Tools maintained by other 2-pizza
teams
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/lox/9408028555
14. 2 Pizza Team Responsibility Venn Diagram
Responsible for
THEIR
PRODUCT
Deployment tools
CI/CD tools
Monitoring tools
Metrics tool
Logging tools
APM tools
Infrastructure provisioning
tools
Security tools
Database management
tools
Testing tools
….
Not responsible for
*
*Unless their product belongs in the blue
15. We built tools to
automate our software
release process
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/lindseygee/5894617854/
17. Automated actions and
transitions; from check-
in to production
Development benefits:
• Faster
• Safer
• Consistent &
Standardized
• Visualization of the
process
Pipelines
18. Every year we survey our
software developers and in 2014
results found only one
development tool/service could
be correlated statistically with
happier developers:
Our pipelines service!
27. AWS Code Services
Commit Build Test Production
AWS CodeCommit
AWS CodePipeline
AWS CodeDeployThird Party
Tooling
Third Party
Tooling
Software Release Steps:
28. Continuous delivery service for fast and
reliable application updates
Model and visualize your software release
process
Builds, tests, and deploys your code every time
there is a code change
Integrates with third-party tools and AWS
AWS CodePipeline
35. We have a strong partner list, and it’s growing
Source Build Test Deploy
36. Extend AWS CodePipeline Using Custom Actions
Update tickets Provision resources
Update dashboards
Mobile testing
Send notifications Security scan
37. Build & test your
application
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/spenceyc/7481166880
38. Building Your Code
“Building” code typically refers to languages that
require compiled binaries:
• .NET languages: C#, F#, VB.net, etc.
• Java and JVM languages: Java, Scala,
JRuby
• Go
• iOS languages: Swift, Objective-C
We also refer to the process of creating Docker
container images as “building” the image. EC2
39. No Building Required!
Many languages don’t require building. These
are considered interpreted languages:
• PHP
• Ruby
• Python
• Node.js
You can just deploy your code!
EC2
40. Testing Your Code
Testing is both a science and an art form!
Goals for testing your code:
• Want to confirm desired functionality
• Catch programming syntax errors
• Standardize code patterns and format
• Reduce bugs due to non-desired application
usage and logic failures
• Make applications more secure
42. Automates code deployments to any instance
Handles the complexity of updating your
applications
Avoid downtime during application deployment
Rollback automatically if failure detected
Deploy to Amazon EC2 or on-premises
servers, in any language and on any operating
system
Integrates with third-party tools and AWS
AWS CodeDeploy
44. appspec.yml Example
version:
0.0
os:
linux
files:
-‐
source:
/
destination:
/var/www/html
permissions:
-‐
object:
/var/www/html
pattern:
“*.html”
owner:
root
group:
root
mode:
755
hooks:
ApplicationStop:
-‐
location:
scripts/deregister_from_elb.sh
BeforeInstall:
-‐
location:
scripts/install_dependencies.sh
ApplicationStart:
-‐
location:
scripts/start_httpd.sh
ValidateService:
-‐
location:
scripts/test_site.sh
-‐
location:
scripts/register_with_elb.sh
• Remove/add instance to ELB
• Install dependency packages
• Start Apache
• Confirm successful deploy
• More!
• Send application files to one
directory and configuration
files to another
• Set specific permissions on
specific directories & files
45. v2 v2 v2 v2 v2 v2
one at a time
half at a time
all at once
v2 v2 v2 v1 v1 v1
v2 v1 v1 v1 v1 v1 Agent Agent
Dev Deployment group
OR
Prod Deployment group
Agent
AgentAgent
Agent Agent
Agent
Choose Deployment Speed and Group
48. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers
• CI/CD is a MUST!
• Commit frequently
• Builds on every commit
• Build once in a given execution flow
• Deploy to a running environment for further testing
49. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers
• CI/CD is a MUST!
• Commit frequently
• Builds on every commit
• Build once in a given execution flow
• Deploy to a running environment for further testing
• Everything that is code (application, infrastructure, documentation)
goes into a repository
• If its not in a repository, it doesn’t go into Production environments!
50. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers
• CI/CD is a MUST!
• Commit frequently
• Builds on every commit
• Build once in a given execution flow
• Deploy to a running environment for further testing
• Everything that is code (application, infrastructure, documentation)
goes into a repository
• If its not in a repository, it doesn’t go into production environments!
• Start with continuous delivery (“gated” promotion) and build up to
continuous deployment once evidence of a high-level of excellence in
testing is clear
51. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers
• CI/CD is a MUST!
• Commit frequently
• Builds on every commit
• Build once in a given execution flow
• Deploy to a running environment for further testing
• Everything that is code (application, infrastructure, documentation)
goes into a repository
• If its not in a repository, it doesn’t go into production environments!
• Start with continuous delivery (“gated” promotion) and build up to
continuous deployment once evidence of a high-level of excellence in
testing is clear
• Deploy to canaries, test, deploy to an AZ, test, deploy to a Region,
test
52. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers (cont.)
• Code Reviews are one of the best mechanisms for “good” code:
• Does this code look clean and can someone else understand it?
• Is the design of it meeting the expectations of its needs?
• Are there better/easier ways to do this same thing?
53. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers (cont.)
• Code Reviews are one of the best mechanisms for “good” code:
• Does this code look clean and can someone else understand it?
• Is the design of it meeting the expectations of its needs?
• Are there better/easier ways to do this same thing?
• Style checkers
• Will someone else in the company be able to update/fix/maintain this code?
54. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers (cont.)
• Code Reviews are one of the best mechanisms for “good” code:
• Does this code look clean and can someone else understand it?
• Is the design of it meeting the expectations of its needs?
• Are there better/easier ways to do this same thing?
• Style checkers
• Will someone else in the company be able to update/fix/maintain this code?
• Auto-rollbacks can be the quickest recovery mechanism after failure
• Rollback first, then debug what went wrong with logs/graphs/etc.
55. General Best Practices used by Amazon Developers (cont.)
• Code Reviews are one of the best mechanisms for “good” code:
• Does this code look clean and can someone else understand it?
• Is the design of it meeting the expectations of its needs?
• Are there better/easier ways to do this same thing?
• Style checkers
• Will someone else in the company be able to update/fix/maintain this code?
• Auto-rollbacks can be the quickest recovery mechanism after failure
• Rollback first, then debug what went wrong with logs/graphs/etc.
• Thorough dashboards
• What is happening now?
• What ”normal” looks like typically over some period of time?
• What do I do if this graph looks wrong/an alarm has been triggered?
• What events can I correlate with a move in a graph?
56. Code* Tips and Tricks
• All Code* products can(and should) be provisioned and managed
with AWS CloudFormation!
• You could literally store the CloudFormation templates that provision
your Code* resources in CodeCommit and update them via
CodePipeline (It’s like Code* Inception!)
• Deep integration with IAM. You can assign permissions on who can
commit code, approve manual approvals, deploy to certain
deployment groups and more!
• Integrate with AWS Lambda to do almost anything:
• CodeCommit has Repository Triggers
• CodeDeploy has Event Notifications
• CodePipeline has native Lambda invoke
AWS CodePipeline AWS CodeDeploy AWS CodeCommit
57. FIN, ACK
We’ve quickly run through the AWS Code* services today
at a high level and have talked a little bit about how we do
things here at Amazon:
• Automate CI & CD to reduce errors from manual testing
and deployment, increase release velocity, minimize
errors that make it out in front of your users
• Store everything as code
• > 20 talks here at re:Invent about DevOps so check
them out! (on the web)
58. Some of the other DevOps talks this week!
o DEV303 - Deploying and Managing .NET Pipelines and Microsoft Workloads
o DEV310 - DevOps on AWS: Choosing the Right Software Deployment Technique
o DEV313 - Infrastructure Continuous Deployment Using AWS CloudFormation
o DEV403 - DevOps on AWS: Advanced Continuous Delivery Techniques
o SVR307 - Application Lifecycle Management in a Serverless World