When we talk about automation in software development, we immediately think of automated builds and deployments. We may also be using scripts to help make our daily work easier. But this is really just the beginning of the rise of the machines.
I show you how leading developers in our industry are using open source and commercial tools for automating much more. They've got "robots" for monitoring production servers, updating issues, supporting customers, reviewing code, setting up laptops, doing development reporting, conducting customer feedback -- even automating daily standups. In what instances is it useful to automate? In what cases does it not make sense? Automation prevents us from having to do the same thing twice, helps us to work better together, reduces workflow errors and frees up time to write production code. Plus, as it turns out, spending time on automation is fun! Don't be afraid of robots in software development, embrace them! Even if I save you just half an hour a week, this talk will be a beneficial investment of your time.
Linux containers and Docker specifically have revolutionized the way applications are run at scale, but testing can greatly benefit from those technologies too.Containers allow to run tests in isolation with a minimum performance penalty, increased speed with respect to virtual machine based tests and easier configuration and less complexity for integration testing. Testing with containers allows running tests in a new, clean environment for each execution, minimizing false positives and environment corruption. At the same time it allows reusing container clusters to run development, testing and production workloads.You will learn to effectively use Jenkins with Docker and Kubernetes, a multi host Docker clustering technology, to run your Jenkins jobs in isolated containers for each execution at scale.
http://www.agiletestingdays.com/session/using-docker-for-testing/
Seven Habits of Highly Effective Jenkins Users (2014 edition!)Andrew Bayer
What plugins, tools and behaviors can help you get the most out of your Jenkins setup without all of the pain? We'll find out as we go over a set of Jenkins power tools, habits and best practices that will help with any Jenkins setup.
DevOps and Continuous Delivery reference architectures for DockerSonatype
People want to understand how to architect continuous delivery and DevOps environments using containerized applications and artifacts. We assembled this deck to represent best practices across a number of different organizations. These may look like the tool chains and infrastructure that you have built or would like to build.
Linux containers and Docker specifically have revolutionized the way applications are run at scale, but testing can greatly benefit from those technologies too.Containers allow to run tests in isolation with a minimum performance penalty, increased speed with respect to virtual machine based tests and easier configuration and less complexity for integration testing. Testing with containers allows running tests in a new, clean environment for each execution, minimizing false positives and environment corruption. At the same time it allows reusing container clusters to run development, testing and production workloads.You will learn to effectively use Jenkins with Docker and Kubernetes, a multi host Docker clustering technology, to run your Jenkins jobs in isolated containers for each execution at scale.
http://www.agiletestingdays.com/session/using-docker-for-testing/
Seven Habits of Highly Effective Jenkins Users (2014 edition!)Andrew Bayer
What plugins, tools and behaviors can help you get the most out of your Jenkins setup without all of the pain? We'll find out as we go over a set of Jenkins power tools, habits and best practices that will help with any Jenkins setup.
DevOps and Continuous Delivery reference architectures for DockerSonatype
People want to understand how to architect continuous delivery and DevOps environments using containerized applications and artifacts. We assembled this deck to represent best practices across a number of different organizations. These may look like the tool chains and infrastructure that you have built or would like to build.
Git 101 - Crash Course in Version Control using GitGeoff Hoffman
Find out why more and more developers are switching to Git - distributed version control. This intro to Git covers the basics, from cloning to pushing for beginners.
Docker and Jenkins. Orchestrating Continuous Delivery
Through the use of build pipelines, Continuous Delivery will enable faster and more frequent build, test and deployment cycles of software.
To ensure that what you are delivering has the required quality: how do we build a continuous delivery pipeline in the real world?
In this session, instead of relying on static step configurations, we are going to demonstrate how to code a pipeline using Jenkins and Gradle and how Docker can help on this task. The end result is faster application releases with higher quality.
Docker and Puppet for Continuous IntegrationGiacomo Vacca
Today developers want to change the code, build and deploy often, even several times per day.
New versions of software may need to be tested on different distributions, and with different configurations.
Achieving this with Virtual Machines it’s possible, but it’s very resource and time consuming. Docker provides an incredibly good solution for this, in particular if combined with Continuous Integration tools like Jenkins and Configuration Management tools like Puppet.
This presentation focuses on the opportunities to configure automatically Docker images, use Docker containers as disposable workers during your tests, and even running your Continuous Integration system inside Docker.
DockerCon EU 2015: Continuous Integration with Jenkins, Docker and ComposeDocker, Inc.
Presented by Sandro Cirulli, Platform Tech Lead, Oxford University Press
Oxford University Press (OUP) recently started the Oxford Global Languages (OGL) initiative (http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/words/oxfordlanguages) which aims at providing language resources for digitally under represented languages. In August 2015 OUP launched two African languages websites for Zulu (http://zu.oxforddictionaries.com) and Northern Sotho (http://nso.oxforddictionaries.com). The backend of these websites is based on an API retrieving data in RDF from a triple store and delivering data to the frontend in JSON-LD.
The entire micro-service infrastructure for development, staging, and production runs on Docker containers in Amazon EC2 instances. In particular, we use Jenkins to rebuild the Docker image for the API based on a Python Flask application and Docker Compose to orchestrate the containers. A typical CI workflow is as follows:
- a developer commits code to the codebase
- Jenkins triggers a job to run unit tests
- if the unit tests are successful, the Docker image of the Python Flask application is rebuilt and the container is restarted via Docker Compose
- if the unit tests or the Docker build failed, the monitor view shows the Jenkins jobs in red and displays the name of the possible culprit who broke the build.
A demo of this CI workflow is available at http://www.sandrocirulli.net/continuous-integration-with-jenkins-docker-and-compose
Anatomy of a Continuous Integration and Delivery (CICD) PipelineRobert McDermott
This presentation covers the anatomy of a production CICD pipeline that is used to develop and deploy the cancer research application Oncoscape (https://oncoscape.sttrcancer.org)
SD DevOps Meet-up - Jenkins 2.0 and Pipeline-as-CodeBrian Dawson
This is a presentation given at the March 16th San Diego DevOps Meet-up covering some of the upcoming activities around Jenkin 2.0 and the Pipeline plugins which provide for Pipeline-as-Code and enable Jenkins with 1st class pipelines and stages.
Pimp your Continuous Delivery Pipeline with Jenkins workflow (W-JAX 14)CloudBees
Continuous delivery pipelines are, by definition, workflows with parallel job executions, join points, retries of jobs (Selenium tests are fragile) and manual steps (validation by a QA team). Come and discover how the new workflow engine of Jenkins CI and its Groovy-based DSL will give another dimension to your continuous delivery pipelines and greatly simplify your life.
Sample workflow groovy script used in this presentation: https://gist.github.com/cyrille-leclerc/796085e19d9cec4a71ef
Jenkins workflow syntax reference card: https://github.com/cyrille-leclerc/workflow-plugin/blob/master/SYNTAX-REFERENCE-CARD.md
Jenkins is the leading open source continuous integration tool. It builds and tests our software continuously and monitors the execution and status of remote jobs, making it easier for team members and users to regularly obtain the latest stable code.
Atlassian faces the same issues as any other software company in the world. The battle for continuous integration glory is fought every day, and at stake is nothing less than our development and delivery speed. Join us to find out how we do it at Atlassian, powered by Bamboo. Because in the Game of Codes, you win... or you die.
Jenkins is a unique piece of software, lots of people and enterprises use it to deploy and build their software and also their infrastructure. It has tons of plugins, and can do virtually anything. It is important for both devs and ops. This talk will be about how you can automate and test your Jenkins instances. In the past, the tooling around it was not so great, but it has changed. Tools like Jenkins Pipeline and Job DSL plugin has entered the game and are here to stay.
A talk given to the San Francisco Jenkins Area Meetup (JAM) in January of 2016 on the current state of the Jenkins project and some ideas we're looking at for the future.
I have evidence that using git and GitHub for documentation and community doc techniques can give us 300 doc changes in a month. I’ve bet my career on these methods and I want to share with you.
Best practices with git - The essentials you should know about git to use if efficiently
Workshop by Otto Kekäläinen at OpenFest 7.11.2015, Sofia, Bulagaria.
This 68 slides beast surely has something new even for seasoned git developers!
Git 101 - Crash Course in Version Control using GitGeoff Hoffman
Find out why more and more developers are switching to Git - distributed version control. This intro to Git covers the basics, from cloning to pushing for beginners.
Docker and Jenkins. Orchestrating Continuous Delivery
Through the use of build pipelines, Continuous Delivery will enable faster and more frequent build, test and deployment cycles of software.
To ensure that what you are delivering has the required quality: how do we build a continuous delivery pipeline in the real world?
In this session, instead of relying on static step configurations, we are going to demonstrate how to code a pipeline using Jenkins and Gradle and how Docker can help on this task. The end result is faster application releases with higher quality.
Docker and Puppet for Continuous IntegrationGiacomo Vacca
Today developers want to change the code, build and deploy often, even several times per day.
New versions of software may need to be tested on different distributions, and with different configurations.
Achieving this with Virtual Machines it’s possible, but it’s very resource and time consuming. Docker provides an incredibly good solution for this, in particular if combined with Continuous Integration tools like Jenkins and Configuration Management tools like Puppet.
This presentation focuses on the opportunities to configure automatically Docker images, use Docker containers as disposable workers during your tests, and even running your Continuous Integration system inside Docker.
DockerCon EU 2015: Continuous Integration with Jenkins, Docker and ComposeDocker, Inc.
Presented by Sandro Cirulli, Platform Tech Lead, Oxford University Press
Oxford University Press (OUP) recently started the Oxford Global Languages (OGL) initiative (http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/words/oxfordlanguages) which aims at providing language resources for digitally under represented languages. In August 2015 OUP launched two African languages websites for Zulu (http://zu.oxforddictionaries.com) and Northern Sotho (http://nso.oxforddictionaries.com). The backend of these websites is based on an API retrieving data in RDF from a triple store and delivering data to the frontend in JSON-LD.
The entire micro-service infrastructure for development, staging, and production runs on Docker containers in Amazon EC2 instances. In particular, we use Jenkins to rebuild the Docker image for the API based on a Python Flask application and Docker Compose to orchestrate the containers. A typical CI workflow is as follows:
- a developer commits code to the codebase
- Jenkins triggers a job to run unit tests
- if the unit tests are successful, the Docker image of the Python Flask application is rebuilt and the container is restarted via Docker Compose
- if the unit tests or the Docker build failed, the monitor view shows the Jenkins jobs in red and displays the name of the possible culprit who broke the build.
A demo of this CI workflow is available at http://www.sandrocirulli.net/continuous-integration-with-jenkins-docker-and-compose
Anatomy of a Continuous Integration and Delivery (CICD) PipelineRobert McDermott
This presentation covers the anatomy of a production CICD pipeline that is used to develop and deploy the cancer research application Oncoscape (https://oncoscape.sttrcancer.org)
SD DevOps Meet-up - Jenkins 2.0 and Pipeline-as-CodeBrian Dawson
This is a presentation given at the March 16th San Diego DevOps Meet-up covering some of the upcoming activities around Jenkin 2.0 and the Pipeline plugins which provide for Pipeline-as-Code and enable Jenkins with 1st class pipelines and stages.
Pimp your Continuous Delivery Pipeline with Jenkins workflow (W-JAX 14)CloudBees
Continuous delivery pipelines are, by definition, workflows with parallel job executions, join points, retries of jobs (Selenium tests are fragile) and manual steps (validation by a QA team). Come and discover how the new workflow engine of Jenkins CI and its Groovy-based DSL will give another dimension to your continuous delivery pipelines and greatly simplify your life.
Sample workflow groovy script used in this presentation: https://gist.github.com/cyrille-leclerc/796085e19d9cec4a71ef
Jenkins workflow syntax reference card: https://github.com/cyrille-leclerc/workflow-plugin/blob/master/SYNTAX-REFERENCE-CARD.md
Jenkins is the leading open source continuous integration tool. It builds and tests our software continuously and monitors the execution and status of remote jobs, making it easier for team members and users to regularly obtain the latest stable code.
Atlassian faces the same issues as any other software company in the world. The battle for continuous integration glory is fought every day, and at stake is nothing less than our development and delivery speed. Join us to find out how we do it at Atlassian, powered by Bamboo. Because in the Game of Codes, you win... or you die.
Jenkins is a unique piece of software, lots of people and enterprises use it to deploy and build their software and also their infrastructure. It has tons of plugins, and can do virtually anything. It is important for both devs and ops. This talk will be about how you can automate and test your Jenkins instances. In the past, the tooling around it was not so great, but it has changed. Tools like Jenkins Pipeline and Job DSL plugin has entered the game and are here to stay.
A talk given to the San Francisco Jenkins Area Meetup (JAM) in January of 2016 on the current state of the Jenkins project and some ideas we're looking at for the future.
I have evidence that using git and GitHub for documentation and community doc techniques can give us 300 doc changes in a month. I’ve bet my career on these methods and I want to share with you.
Best practices with git - The essentials you should know about git to use if efficiently
Workshop by Otto Kekäläinen at OpenFest 7.11.2015, Sofia, Bulagaria.
This 68 slides beast surely has something new even for seasoned git developers!
Continuous Delivery with Jenkins and Wildfly (2014)Tracy Kennedy
A presentation on a continuous delivery pipeline that leverages Jenkins Enterprise, Jenkins Operations Center, Nexus, HAProxy, and Wildfly. Pipeline components run in Docker containers along with SkyDock/SkyDNS for service discovery and NSEnter for command-line access to containers.
Bamboo is a continuous integrations server from Atlassian. But Bamboo is much more than that. See, how a modern CI-Server goes further with automated building, testing, deploying, and releasing of your software.
Introduction to Git/Github - A beginner's guideRohit Arora
Introduction to Git/Github - A beginner's guide
Agenda:
Installing Git
Introduction to Version Control
Git Basics
Creating a new local Git repository
Cloning a Git repository
Making use of Git commit history
Reverting files to previous states
Creating a Github Repository
Adding, Committing & Pushing changes
Branching
Merging Branches
Sending Pull Requests
Conflict Resolution
and 3 Exercises
Don't Be Mocked by your Mocks - Best Practices using MocksVictor Rentea
Do you ❤️ Mocks? When you write your first unit tests, especially on older codebases, mocking foreign code is key to survival. But as you grow older in the craft, you start piling up hours and days wasted to refactor fragile tests or to fix bugs that those heavy mock-based tests didn't catch. And so you start looking at Mocks differently.
Let's go through the key factors to consider to strike the optimal balance between what needs to be mocked away and what code should be tested in integration. There's sometimes a fine line there, often interwoven with strong emotions:
"Why am I testing this?"
"Argh… these tests take too long"
"Can this ever really break?"
etc...
Among the points that we'll touch on:
- Mocks vs Refactoring
- Mocks vs Reliability
- Fine vs Coarse Mocks
- Reproducibility
- Partial Mocks
- Mocking Statics
- Alternatives to Mocks
Speakers: Victor Rentea
Victor is a Java Champion and Independent Trainer with an impressive experience: thousands of developers in dozens of companies trained in dedicated company sessions. He is the founder of one of the largest developer communities in Romania, Bucharest Software Craftsmanship Community and a top international conference speaker.
To find more about him, join a live masterclass or call him in for a company dedicated training: victorrentea.ro
Continous Delivering a PHP applicationJavier López
For the last few months we've been implementing a Continuous Delivery pipeline for the redesign of Time Out. In this talk I will demonstrate a real life example of what our pipeline looks like, the different tools we've used to get it done (phing, github, jenkins, ansible, AWS S3, ...), and peculiarities for PHP and Symfony2 projects. Most importantly, I'll be looking at things we've struggled with along the way and the lessons we've learnt.
Embedded Recipes 2019 - Testing firmware the devops wayAnne Nicolas
ITRenew is selling recertified OCP servers under the Sesame brand, those servers come either with their original UEFI BIOS or with LinuxBoot. The LinuxBoot project is pushing the Linux kernel inside bios flash and using userland programs as bootloader.
To achieve quality on our software stack, as any project, we need to test it. Traditional BIOS are tested by hand, this is 2019 we need to do it automatically! We already presented the hardware setup behind the LinuxBoot CI, this talk will focus on the software.
We use u-root for our userland bootloader; this software is written in Go so we naturally choose to use Go for our testing too. We will present how we are using and extending the Go native test framework `go test` for testing embedded systems (serial console) and improving the report format for integration to a CI.
Julien Viard de Galbert
Learn why you should put your blackbox (or system/integration) tests into Docker Containers.
Brief (remedial) overview of Docker for software testers who don't know docker, and only need to know the basics to wrap their regression tests inside of a container.
One commit, one release. Continuously delivering a Symfony project.Javier López
For the last few months we've been implementing a Continuous Delivery pipeline for the redesign of Time Out. In this talk I will demonstrate a real life example of what our pipeline looks like, the different tools we've used to get it done (phing, github, jenkins, ansible, AWS S3, ...), and peculiarities for PHP and Symfony2 projects. Most importantly, I'll be looking at things we've struggled with along the way and the lessons we've learnt.
Simple tools to fight bigger quality battleAnand Ramdeo
This presentation was given in GTAC 2008 (Also available on www.TestingGeek.com) and discuss the approach of using SVN commit hooks and batch files as continuous integration system.
Too often in the organization of this conference we have heard "but I don't have scalability issues".
This talk discusses what scalability issues actually are, and details why we all inevitably have them. Avoiding them, or delaying solutions until they are unavoidable, leads to making many bad "temporary" decisions that cannot be fixed further down the line.
I will discuss the methodologies and best practices that are required in order to be scalable, and describe the common mistakes they will temper, and why they should be implemented immediately. Finally, I will briefly touch on how to deal with rectifying the bad decisions that we all inevitably make, no matter how forward-thinking we are.
All the Laravel things: up and running to making $$Joe Ferguson
Laravel 5 has established itself as one of the best PHP rapid application development frameworks. Come learn about all the tools in the Laravel ecosystem designed to save you time and prevent you from writing the boring cruft you have to write for every application. We'll cover getting started with local development, building a basic application, and deploying to production. We'll review how Laravel easily handles vagrant, testing, oauth login services, billing and subscriptions services through Laravel Spark, and deploying your application with services such as Laravel Envoyer and Forge to manage your servers.
Test First Refresh Second: Test-Driven Development in GrailsTim Berglund
Grails provides solid support for unit testing of parts of your application that are usually very difficult to test. Learn how to enable test-first development practices using the Grails framework.
Windows Server 2008 will be launched in Q1 2008. Come and learn what’s new in this release for developers.
Agenda:
Whether you are building Web applications or writing core server-based system services, Windows Server 2008 provides many new features that you can leverage to build more secure, flexible, and innovative applications. In this 2-session event we will go through the “Top 7 Ways to Light Up Your Apps on Windows Server 2008”. Demos will include IIS7, PowerShell, Transactional File System (TxF), restart/recovery APIs plus more.
For more details and the original slidedeck visit http://www.microsoft.com/uk/msdn/events/new/Detail.aspx?id=136
✊ Join the DEV-olution: A culture of empowered developersSven Peters
Engineering leaders say their organizations struggle with productivity, collaboration, and tracking progress against goals. Some try to fix it by adding more dashboards, making strict rules, and asking for more reports. But just doing more doesn't solve the real issues developers face.
Let’s build a culture that empowers developers to do the right things and starts a dev-olution. Join Sven and hear how empowered teams build trustful relationships, work asynchronously and synchronously, use data smartly, care about outcomes, stay curious, and always try new things. More importantly, you will learn how to establish such a culture evolutionarily.
Empowering your engineers will amplify developer joy and supercharge your development effectiveness.
Team Shaping - Building a shared understandingSven Peters
Teamwork is tough, and it’s not getting easier. As more teams switch to remote or hybrid work models, building and maintaining a sense of connection and shared purpose among team members is becoming increasingly challenging. If we're going to get our teams healthy, we need to hit the teamwork gym!
Learn how to build a healthy team! We'll develop a shared understanding of responsibilities, team goals, how you work together, and our relationship with other teams. With just four simple exercises, you can bring your team in shape to become more productive and innovative. So let's pump...you up!
Developer Joy - How great teams get s%*t doneSven Peters
Join Sven and learn how great software teams measure and improve their developer experience, coordinate work across teams, run autonomous but highly aligned teams, and create a healthy and joyful engineering culture. Always backed up by data (not driven) instead of opinions.
The talk will demonstrate how great teams faced development challenges, reinvented themselves, and created new ways of working to get s%*t done. Without losing sight of what makes this craft fun for engineers.
We all know it and hate it — the dreaded “status meeting.” They’re great when it’s a small team, but they don’t scale and become a waste of time. In this session, we’ll show how to use Confluence and Atlas to keep teams in sync, async, while empowering them to continue using the apps that let them thrive.
The Hitchhiker's Guide to a Great Developer CareerSven Peters
As developers, our job is to write great code, test code, deploy code, fix code, and even delete code, but nobody told us that there is much more to it if we want to have a great developer career.
In this talk, Sven and Helen will share their successes and failures during their 20-year careers to date working for various technology companies. You’ll learn about growing your personal brand (what is it good for?), the trials and tribulations of different roles (so many choices), becoming a manager (or not), mentoring and sponsoring (they are not the same thing), how to care for yourself (prevent burnout), and lots more career advice.
You'll hear about their inevitable bumps in the road (or downright failures), as well as their successes. As it turns out, having a great developer career is not all about the technology and the code; it's also about you and the people around you!
The Effective Developer - Work Smarter, not HarderSven Peters
We’re agile, we’re doing DevOps, we work in cross-functional teams, and we use the latest developer pipeline tooling. With all those methodologies and technologies we should be highly effective, right? Probably not. Most of us still struggle with balancing coding speed and quality, working on the stuff that really makes a difference, and feeling constantly stressed by all the things we should learn.
Effective developers don’t just write clean, simple, and robust code. They also have a strong understanding of the entire development process and the problem that needs to be solved. They take time to learn, practice, and play.
Learn how those developers build effective coding habits, think about the outcome first, reserve time for deep work, and much more. You’ll walk away from this talk with lots of ideas on how to work smarter, not harder.
With all conferences going virtual this year, it's easier than ever to give a presentation: no travel days and no hotel costs. So how do you convince the organizers of an event that you're the right person with the right topic?
MongoDB veteran speakers Lauren Schaefer and Sven Peters have spoken at over 300 events and will share their tips and tricks and how to avoid pitfalls when submitting a proposal to speak at a conference.
In this workshop, you'll learn how to identify a topic that is perfect for both you and the conference, create a compelling title, and write a convincing abstract. And don't worry—you don't need to have tons of experience in public speaking to land your first gig.
The Effective Developer - Work Smarter, Not HarderSven Peters
We’re agile, we’re doing DevOps, we work in cross-functional teams, and we use the latest developer pipeline tooling. With all those methodologies and technologies we should be highly effective, right? Probably not. Most of us still struggle with balancing coding speed and quality, working on the stuff that really makes a difference, and feeling constantly stressed by all the things we should learn.
Effective developers don't just write clean, simple, and robust code. They also have a strong understanding of the entire development process and the problem that needs to be solved. They take time to learn, practice, and play.
Learn how those developers build effective coding habits, think about the outcome first, reserve time for deep work, and much more. You’ll walk away from this talk with lots of ideas on how to work smarter, not harder.
Remote work is offering lots of great benefits: access to a larger talent pool, freedom, working in pyjamas, and much more. So why are so many companies failing with remote work or hesitate to give it a try?
Sven works remotely for more than 7 years and will share 5 things how you and your distributed team can be more productive, happier, and feel more fulfilled while working remotely. You'll hear about practices like code review etiquettes, video conference rules, share-it-or-it-didn’t-happen guidelines, and much more. Learn how to best set up your office, how to keep connections with co-workers, and which tools works best in order to rock remote work.
Whether you’re just starting out in Confluence, or working in it every day, join Sven to discover the “hacks” that will maximize your productivity and make work flow more seamlessly.
Transform your content and learn the keyboard shortcuts, layout tricks, automation, and customizations that will make creating beautiful spaces and pages a breeze.
Less Process, more Guidance with a Team PlaybookSven Peters
Teams are different, projects are different, problems are different. Why are we still trying to squeeze teamwork into department processes, adding bureaucracy, and having organizational layers that makes it harder and much slower to get work done?
Join Sven Peters, former lead evangelist at Atlassian now K15t, as he talks about creating a Team Playbook by collecting practices from all teams in an organizations. No end-to-end process, no strict development rules, just some guidelines. You’ll learn tons of plays like goal setting with OKRs, decision making with DACIs, team improvements with health monitors, finding risks with premortem’s, and many more.
This talk will teach you how to utilize a playbook for more autonomy by providing teams with the freedom to pick what works in their environment.
Every software team writes code, but some teams produce fewer bugs than others. Every software team creates new features, but some teams develop them faster than others. What do high performance teams do differently, and why are team members more focused, satisfied and relaxed? They truly work together. No 10x rockstar programmer can achieve what a well rounded, enthusiastic team can.
Sven examines how the best software teams set and follow goals, integrate new members fast, ensure diversity, monitor and continually improve team health, embrace transparency, use a playbook to guide them through every phase of development and much more. He shares techniques including: bugfix rotations, OKRs, feature buddies, open demos, focus days and many more that help teams and team members to work more effectively together, and produce awesome results.
This session shows you how we do Kick-@$$ software development at Atlassian and actually get stuff done. Feedback cycles are short, code quality is awesome and customers get the features they lust after. Hear how we: use pull-requests for better code quality; collaborate fast to develop ideas; avoid meetings; tighten feedback loops to fail fast; shorten release cycles and work together happily on different continents. Sound like paradise? It is!
One day we woke up and realized that our days are filled with all kind of stuff unrelated to code or product, that our goals are driven by product owners, and that our code design is dictated by architects trying to tell us how we should solve problems. A strong coding culture gives the power back to the developer to concentrate on one thing: Create awesome stuff!
Imagine a culture where the input of the whole organization turns an individual idea into a user story in just a couple of hours; where everybody's goal is to make the customer awesome, and where you work on stuff you love instead stuff you loathe. A great coding culture concentrates on making developers productive and happy by removing unnecessary overhead, bringing autonomous teams together, helping the individual programmer to innovate, and raising the awareness among the developers to create better code.
I will talk about how to establish and foster a strong engineering-focused culture that scales from a small team to a huge organization with hundreds of developers. I'll give lots of examples from our experience at Atlassian to show that once you're working in a great coding culture, you won't want to work anywhere else.
You can find a video version of the talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRc0FEg46kw
It's the culture, but not as you know itSven Peters
People often start companies with a smart team and great product ideas. But as companies grows, some leaders tend to forget that it's not the product and services that made them successful – it's the culture. Culture may actually be harder to build than any product, but your organization can benefit in every way if you end up with a great one.
Sven works for Atlassian, an Australian software company that grew from 8 to 800 people in the last 10 years. He will share successes – and struggles – with bringing new people into a strong company culture, how culture is upheld in distributed teams, how your team can maintain its core culture, and why innovation and fun should be part of every company's culture.
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
Experience our free, in-depth three-part Tendenci Platform Corporate Membership Management workshop series! In Session 1 on May 14th, 2024, we began with an Introduction and Setup, mastering the configuration of your Corporate Membership Module settings to establish membership types, applications, and more. Then, on May 16th, 2024, in Session 2, we focused on binding individual members to a Corporate Membership and Corporate Reps, teaching you how to add individual members and assign Corporate Representatives to manage dues, renewals, and associated members. Finally, on May 28th, 2024, in Session 3, we covered questions and concerns, addressing any queries or issues you may have.
For more Tendenci AMS events, check out www.tendenci.com/events
Custom Healthcare Software for Managing Chronic Conditions and Remote Patient...Mind IT Systems
Healthcare providers often struggle with the complexities of chronic conditions and remote patient monitoring, as each patient requires personalized care and ongoing monitoring. Off-the-shelf solutions may not meet these diverse needs, leading to inefficiencies and gaps in care. It’s here, custom healthcare software offers a tailored solution, ensuring improved care and effectiveness.
Quarkus Hidden and Forbidden ExtensionsMax Andersen
Quarkus has a vast extension ecosystem and is known for its subsonic and subatomic feature set. Some of these features are not as well known, and some extensions are less talked about, but that does not make them less interesting - quite the opposite.
Come join this talk to see some tips and tricks for using Quarkus and some of the lesser known features, extensions and development techniques.
Paketo Buildpacks : la meilleure façon de construire des images OCI? DevopsDa...Anthony Dahanne
Les Buildpacks existent depuis plus de 10 ans ! D’abord, ils étaient utilisés pour détecter et construire une application avant de la déployer sur certains PaaS. Ensuite, nous avons pu créer des images Docker (OCI) avec leur dernière génération, les Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNCF en incubation). Sont-ils une bonne alternative au Dockerfile ? Que sont les buildpacks Paketo ? Quelles communautés les soutiennent et comment ?
Venez le découvrir lors de cette session ignite
TROUBLESHOOTING 9 TYPES OF OUTOFMEMORYERRORTier1 app
Even though at surface level ‘java.lang.OutOfMemoryError’ appears as one single error; underlyingly there are 9 types of OutOfMemoryError. Each type of OutOfMemoryError has different causes, diagnosis approaches and solutions. This session equips you with the knowledge, tools, and techniques needed to troubleshoot and conquer OutOfMemoryError in all its forms, ensuring smoother, more efficient Java applications.
Globus Connect Server Deep Dive - GlobusWorld 2024Globus
We explore the Globus Connect Server (GCS) architecture and experiment with advanced configuration options and use cases. This content is targeted at system administrators who are familiar with GCS and currently operate—or are planning to operate—broader deployments at their institution.
OpenFOAM solver for Helmholtz equation, helmholtzFoam / helmholtzBubbleFoamtakuyayamamoto1800
In this slide, we show the simulation example and the way to compile this solver.
In this solver, the Helmholtz equation can be solved by helmholtzFoam. Also, the Helmholtz equation with uniformly dispersed bubbles can be simulated by helmholtzBubbleFoam.
Into the Box Keynote Day 2: Unveiling amazing updates and announcements for modern CFML developers! Get ready for exciting releases and updates on Ortus tools and products. Stay tuned for cutting-edge innovations designed to boost your productivity.
Cyaniclab : Software Development Agency Portfolio.pdfCyanic lab
CyanicLab, an offshore custom software development company based in Sweden,India, Finland, is your go-to partner for startup development and innovative web design solutions. Our expert team specializes in crafting cutting-edge software tailored to meet the unique needs of startups and established enterprises alike. From conceptualization to execution, we offer comprehensive services including web and mobile app development, UI/UX design, and ongoing software maintenance. Ready to elevate your business? Contact CyanicLab today and let us propel your vision to success with our top-notch IT solutions.
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
Accelerate Enterprise Software Engineering with PlatformlessWSO2
Key takeaways:
Challenges of building platforms and the benefits of platformless.
Key principles of platformless, including API-first, cloud-native middleware, platform engineering, and developer experience.
How Choreo enables the platformless experience.
How key concepts like application architecture, domain-driven design, zero trust, and cell-based architecture are inherently a part of Choreo.
Demo of an end-to-end app built and deployed on Choreo.
Enterprise Resource Planning System includes various modules that reduce any business's workload. Additionally, it organizes the workflows, which drives towards enhancing productivity. Here are a detailed explanation of the ERP modules. Going through the points will help you understand how the software is changing the work dynamics.
To know more details here: https://blogs.nyggs.com/nyggs/enterprise-resource-planning-erp-system-modules/
Unleash Unlimited Potential with One-Time Purchase
BoxLang is more than just a language; it's a community. By choosing a Visionary License, you're not just investing in your success, you're actively contributing to the ongoing development and support of BoxLang.
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I ...Juraj Vysvader
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I didn't get rich from it but it did have 63K downloads (powered possible tens of thousands of websites).
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing SuiteGoogle
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing Suite
👉👉 Click Here To Get More Info 👇👇
https://sumonreview.com/ai-pilot-review/
AI Pilot Review: Key Features
✅Deploy AI expert bots in Any Niche With Just A Click
✅With one keyword, generate complete funnels, websites, landing pages, and more.
✅More than 85 AI features are included in the AI pilot.
✅No setup or configuration; use your voice (like Siri) to do whatever you want.
✅You Can Use AI Pilot To Create your version of AI Pilot And Charge People For It…
✅ZERO Manual Work With AI Pilot. Never write, Design, Or Code Again.
✅ZERO Limits On Features Or Usages
✅Use Our AI-powered Traffic To Get Hundreds Of Customers
✅No Complicated Setup: Get Up And Running In 2 Minutes
✅99.99% Up-Time Guaranteed
✅30 Days Money-Back Guarantee
✅ZERO Upfront Cost
See My Other Reviews Article:
(1) TubeTrivia AI Review: https://sumonreview.com/tubetrivia-ai-review
(2) SocioWave Review: https://sumonreview.com/sociowave-review
(3) AI Partner & Profit Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-partner-profit-review
(4) AI Ebook Suite Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-ebook-suite-review
We describe the deployment and use of Globus Compute for remote computation. This content is aimed at researchers who wish to compute on remote resources using a unified programming interface, as well as system administrators who will deploy and operate Globus Compute services on their research computing infrastructure.
12. Automation in Software Development
my personal story
build scripts (make)
1996
JUnit
2001
2004
ant -> later maven
2005
Eclipse (code generation)
Hudson
2006
2009
Puppet
1998
GUI builder
2013
Docker
69. Freud Bot
&:hover {
text-decoration: none;
color: @invertedBodyTextColor
background-color: #366ca6;
cursor: pointer;
}
You should use a variable instead for . I suggest that you use a variable of similar color:#366CA6
@globalHeaderPrimaryActionFallbackColor @globalHeaderTopColor @primaryLinkColor
88. public abstract class Task {
public final void executeWith(Callback callback) {
execute();
if (callback != null) {
callback.call();
}
}
public abstract void execute();
}
public abstract class Task {
public final void executeWith(Callback callback) {
execute();
if (callback != null) {
callback.call(20);
}
}
public abstract void execute();
}
Old version New version
89. public abstract class Task {
public final void executeWith(Callback callback) {
execute();
if (callback != null) {
callback.call();
}
}
public abstract void execute();
}
public abstract class Task {
public final void executeWith(Callback callback) {
execute();
if (callback != null) {
callback.call(20);
}
}
public abstract void execute();
}
Old version New version
170. is serious fun!
Automation
Go - Ruby - PHP - Python
Languages
Puppet - Chef - Ansible - Docker
Technologies
Fast feedback
Success
Your Problems
Motivation
191. Photo
Credits
“VW Golf TDI Clean Diesel was 2010 8983" by Mariordo
Mario Roberto Duran Ortiz - Own work. Licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons - https://
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
Backyard Series by syauqee mohamad "http://
www.flickr.com/photos/7901820@N07/6945260735"
Tesla Model S by Chrishmt0423 from flickr
Burnt & Abandoned Computer "http://www.flickr.com/
photos/99649389@N02/13262802714"