PERHAPS A GIFT VOUCHER FOR MUM?: MOTHER'S DAY

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

The DevOps Handbook

How to Create World-Class Agility, Reliability, & Security in Technology Organizations

Gene Kim Jez Humble Patrick Debois John Willis

$76.99

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
IT Revolution Press
30 November 2021
This award-winning and bestselling business handbook for digital transformation is now fully updated and expanded with the latest research and new case studies!

“[The DevOps Handbook] remains a must-read for any organization seeking to scale up its IT capability and expand DevOps practices across multiple departments or lines of business.” —Mike Perrow, TechBeacon

For years, The DevOps Handbook has been the definitive guide for taking the successes laid out in the bestselling The Phoenix Project and applying them in any organization. Now, with this fully updated and expanded edition, it's time to take DevOps out of the IT department and apply it across the full business.

Technology is now at the core of every company, no matter the business model or product. The theories and practices laid out in The DevOps Handbook are tools to be used by anyone from across the organization to create joy and succeed in the marketplace.

The second edition features 15 new case studies, including stories from Adidas, American Airlines, Fannie Mae, Target, and the US Air Force. In addition, renowned researcher and coauthor of Accelerate, Dr. Nicole Forsgren, provides her insights through new and updated material and research. With over 100 pages of new content throughout the book, this expanded edition is a must read for anyone who works with technology.

“[The DevOps Handbook is] a practical roadmap to improving IT in any organization. It's also the most valuable book on software development I've read in the past 10 years.” —Adam Hawkins, software developer and host of the podcast SmallBatches

By:   , , , ,
Imprint:   IT Revolution Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   Second Edition
Dimensions:   Height: 230mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 29mm
Weight:   626g
ISBN:   9781950508402
ISBN 10:   1950508404
Pages:   528
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"CONTENTS Figures & Tables xii Note from the Publisher on the Second Edition xv Foreword to the Second Edition: Nicole Forsgren xix Foreword to the First Edition: John Allspaw xxi Preface: Aha! xxiii Introduction xxxi Part I—The Three Ways Part I Introduction 3 01 Agile, Continuous Delivery, and the Three Ways 7 NEW Case Study: Approaching Cruising Altitude: American Airlines' DevOps Journey Part 1 (2020) 15 02 The First Way: The Principles of Flow 19 NEW Case Study: Flow and Constraint Management in Healthcare (2021) 29 03 The Second Way: The Principles of Feedback 33 NEW Case Study: Pulling the Andon Cord at Excella (2019) 39 04 The Third Way: The Principles of Continual Learning and Experimentation 45 NEW Case Study: The Story of Bell Labs 54 Part 1 Conclusion 57 Part II—Where to Start Part II Introduction 61 05 Selecting Which Value Stream to Start With 63 Case Study: Nordstrom's DevOps Transformation 63 NEW Case Study: Kessel Run: The Brownfield Transformation of a Mid-Air Refueling System (2020) 69 NEW Case Study: Scaling DevOps Across the Business: American Airlines' DevOps Journey (Part 2) (2020) 74 viii CONTENTS NEW Case Study: Saving the Economy From Ruin (With a Hyperscale PaaS) (2021) 77 06 Understanding the Work in Our Value Stream, Making it Visible, and Expanding it Across the Organization 81 Case Study: Nordstrom's Experience with Value Stream Mapping 81 Case Study: Operation InVersion at LinkedIn (2011) 91 07 How to Design Our Organization and Architecture with Conway's Law in Mind 97 Case Study: Conway's Law at Etsy 98 Case Study: API Enablement at Target (2015) 112 08 How to Get Great Outcomes by Integrating Operations into the Daily Work of Development 115 Case Study: Big Fish Games 115 NEW Case Study: Better Ways of Working at Nationwide Building Society 124 Part II Conclusion 129 Part III—The First Way: The Technical Practices of Flow Part III Introduction 133 09 Create the Foundations of Our Deployment Pipeline 135 Case Study: Enterprise Data Warehouse 135 NEW Case Study: How a Hotel Company Ran $30B of Revenue in Containers (2020) 143 10 Enable Fast and Reliable Automated Testing 147 Case Study: Google Web Server 148 11 Enable and Practice Continuous Integration 167 Case Study: HP LaserJet Firmware 168 Case Study: Continuous Integration of Bazaarvoice (2012) 173 12 Automate and Enable Low-Risk Releases 177 Case Study: Daily Deployments at CSG International (2013) 181 Case Study: Etsy—Self-Service Developer Deployment: An Example of Continuous Deployment (2014) 186 Case Study: Dixons Retail—Blue-Green Deployment for Point-of-Sale System (2008) 193 Case Study: Dark Launch of Facebook Chat (2008) 198 CONTENTS ix NEW Case Study: Creating a Win-Win for Dev & Ops at CSG (2016) 201 13 Architect for Low-Risk Releases 207 Case Study: Evolutionary Architecture at Amazon (2002) 202 Case Study: Strangler Pattern at Blackboard Learn (2011) 215 Part III Conclusion 219 Part IV—The Second Way: The Technical Practices of Feedback Part IV Introduction 223 14 Create Telemetry to Enable Seeing and Solving Problems 225 Case Study: DevOps Transformation at Etsy (2012) 226 Case Study: Creating Self-Service Metrics at LinkedIn (2011) 237 15 Analyze Telemetry to Better Anticipate Problems and Achieve Goals 245 Case Study: Telemetry at Netflix (2012–2020) 245 Case Study: Auto-Scaling Capacity at Netflix (2012) 251 Case Study: Advanced Anomaly Detection (2014) 255 16 Enable Feedback So Development and Operations Can Safely Deploy Code 259 Case Study: Right Media (2006) 259 Case Study: The Launch and Hand-Off Readiness Review Google (2010) 269 17 Integrate Hypothesis-Driven Development and A/B Testing into Our Daily Work 273 Case Study: Hypothesis-Driven Development at Intuit, Inc. (2012) 273 Case Study: Doubling Revenue Growth through Fast Release Cycle Experimentation at Yahoo! Answers (2010) 278 18 Create Review and Coordination Processes to Increase Quality of Our Current Work 281 Case Study: Peer Review at GitHub (2011) 286 NEW Case Study: From Six-Eye Principle to Release at Scale at Adidas (2021) 286 Case Study: Code Reviews at Google (2010) 290 Case Study: Pair Programming Replacing Broken Code Review Processes at Pivotal Labs (2011) 293 Part IV Conclusion 299 x CONTENTS Part V—The Third Way: The Technical Practices of Continual Learning and Experimentation Part V Introduction 303 19 Enable and Inject Learning into Daily Work 305 Case Study: AWS US-EAST and Netflix (2011) 305 NEW Case Study: Turning an Outage into a Powerful Learning Opportunity at CSG (2020) 318 20 Convert Local Discoveries into Global Improvements 321 Case Study: Standardizing a New Technology Stack at Etsy (2010) 332 NEW Case Study: Crowdsourcing Technology Governance at Target (2018) 333 21 Reserve Time to Create Organizational Learning and Improvement 335 Case Study: 30-Day Challenge at Target (2015) 335 Case Study: Internal Technology Conferences at Nationwide Insurance, Capital One, and Target (2014) 342 Part V Conclusion 347 Part VI—The Technological Practices of Integrating Information Security, Change Management, and Compliance Part VI Introduction 351 22 Information Security Is Everyone's Job Every Day 353 Case Study: Static Security Testing at Twitter (2009) 360 Case Study: 18F Automating Compliance for the Federal Government with Compliance Masonry (2016) 369 Case Study: Instrumenting the Environment at Etsy (2010) 373 NEW Case Study: Shifting Security Left at Fannie Mae (2020) 376 23 Protecting the Deployment Pipeline, and Integrating into Change Management and Other Security and Compliance Controls 379 Case Study: Automated Infrastructure Changes as Standard Changes at Salesforce.com (2012) 383 CONTENTS xi Case Study: PCI Compliance and a Cautionary Tale of Separating Duties at Etsy (2014) 385 NEW Case Study: Biz and Tech Partnership toward 10 ""No Fear Releases"" Per Day at Capital One (2020) 387 Case Study: Proving Compliance in Regulated Environments (2015) 389 Case Study: Relying on Production Telemetry for ATM Systems 392 Part VI Conclusion 395 A Call to Action: Conclusion to the DevOps Handbook 397 Afterword to the Second Edition 401 Appendices 409 Bibliography 423 Notes 441 Index 461 Acknowledgments 479 Author Biographies 482"

Gene Kim is a multiple award-winning CTO, researcher and bestselling author. He was founder and CTO of Tripwire for 13 years. He has written six books. Since 2014, he has been the founder of IT Revolution and the organizer of the DevOps Enterprise Summit. Jez Humble is co-author of several books on software including Shingo Publication Award winner Accelerate, Jolt Award winner Continuous Delivery, and The DevOps Handbook. He has spent his career tinkering with code, infrastructure, and product development in companies of varying sizes across three continents. He works for Google Cloud as a technology advocate and teaches at UC Berkeley. Patrick Debois is the Director of DevOps Relations and Advisor at Snyk. In 2009 he coined the word DevOps by organizing the first devopsdays event, as is now often known as one of the grandfathers of DevOps. He organized conferences all over the world to collect and spread new ideas. John Willis is Senior Director of the Global Transformation Office at Red Hat. Prior to Red Hat, he was the Director of Ecosystem Development for Docker. John was one of the earliest cloud evangelists and is considered one of the founders of the DevOps movement. John is the author of 7 IBM Redbooks, as well as co-author of the The DevOps Handbook and Beyond the Phoenix Project. Nicole Forsgren, PhD, is a Partner at Microsoft Research. She is author of the Shingo Publication Award-winning book Accelerate: The Science of Lean Software and DevOps and is best known as lead investigator on the largest DevOps studies to date. She has been a successful entrepreneur (with an exit to Google), professor, performance engineer, and sysadmin. Her work has been published in several peer-reviewed journals.

Reviews for The DevOps Handbook: How to Create World-Class Agility, Reliability, & Security in Technology Organizations

...it's tone is as inviting as the case it makes is compelling. Business leaders looking for guidance about DevOps practices, or to get started on an implementation plan, will find much to work with here.-- Publishers Weekly DevOps can be somewhat mysterious. What does it really mean to 'break down silos?' The DevOps Handbook is just what's needed: a practical guide that shows you how to get started making real progress.--Jeff Sussna, CEO, Sussna Associates Five years on, The DevOps Handbook is still an anchor in a sea of ever changing technical currents and topical winds. As relevant now as it was in the beginning.--Shane Carlson, Principal Executive Architect at ServiceNow The DevOps Handbook has been a critical resource when working with clients to transform their software delivery culture and processes. The book provides easy to understand, practical patterns for improving workflow, communication, and product delivery.--Sam McLeod, DevOps Consultant The DevOps Handbook is an amazing guide for anyone trying to improve their DevOps Kung-Fu in their companies. It literally covers everything you may need to know, and is filled with interesting case studies and real-life examples of how people have achieved success in their DevOps transformations.--Ross Clanton, Chief Architect, Managing Director, American Airlines There are a lot of DevOps books, but very few that offer concrete, practical, and implementable advice and a roadmap for not just adopting DevOps practices and principles, but for also measuring their success. The DevOps Handbook is the definitive long-form guide for achieving success with DevOps methodologies.--Nigel Kersten, Field CTO, Puppet This has become the defacto, must read reference book for organizations pursuing a DevOps strategy. The book's knowledge provides insightful and practical advice aimed at increasing DevOps success for every staffer, manager, executive, and team.--Stephen Elliot, Program Vice President, I&O, DevOps, and Cloud Operations at IDC


See Also