Skip to content

Serves as documentation, starter code, and companion guide for a DevOps 101 workshop using the JFrog platform.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

katcosgrove/devops-101-workshop

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

93 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Workshop: DevOps 101

Maintained by: Kat Cosgrove, kat.cosgrove@gmail.com, @dixie3flatline

Course Description

When you’re new to an industry, you encounter a lot of new concepts. This can make it really difficult to get your feet underneath you on an unfamiliar landscape, especially for junior engineers. What does DevOps really mean? What’s all this software? What’s all this jargon? Is DevOps a methodology, or a toolset? Is any of this actually going to make my life easier, or is it just a bunch of industry buzzwords? I’ll answer all of these questions (and more) during this hands-on workshop, and get you set up with an end-to-end DevOps solution to automate your build artifact storage, vulnerability detection, testing, and deployment. For profit and glory!

Skill Level: Beginner

Attendees do not need to be experts in or have experience using any of the technologies or pre-requisites involved in conducting this workshop, aside from a functional understanding of Git and GitHub. The intended audience is people still in school, junior developers, or anyone from a technical or tech-adjacent background who has no hands-on experience with DevOps practices and tooling.

Prerequisites

  1. JFrog Cloud account

    This is free, no credit card required. It includes access to Artifactory, Pipelines, and Xray, with a limited amount of storage, transfer, and build minutes. NOTE: To follow this workshop, you must choose either AWS or Azure as your cloud provider. JFrog Pipelines is not currently available on GCP.

  2. Docker

    The Docker client should be installed and configured on your machine.

  3. Python3

    We will need to package a simple Python application. Python 3.6 or higher is required.

  4. Git + GitHub A GitHub account is required so that you can fork this repository, and Git must be configured in your terminal.

  5. Code editor

    Whatever you are most comfortable with. I will be using SublimeText.

Course Outline

  • What is the definition of DevOps?
  • What does DevOps mean for developers?
  • What is all of this jargon?
  • What is binary repository manager?
  • What are build artifacts?
  • Why might you need to manage your build artifacts?
  • Binary repository setup in Artifactory
    • Docker
    • PyPi
  • Why do devs need to worry about vulnerability detection and license compliance?
  • Security and License policies
  • Scan a Build
  • Running Reports
  • Reading Results
  • What is CI/CD?
  • Pipelines Integrations
  • Writing a “Hello World” pipeline

Additional Resources

Glossary of Terms

Artifactory Documentation

Xray Documentation

Pipelines Documentation

About

Serves as documentation, starter code, and companion guide for a DevOps 101 workshop using the JFrog platform.

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published