DevOps&SRE Library
Библиотека статей по теме DevOps и SRE. Реклама: @ostinostin Контент: @mxssl РКН: https://www.gosuslugi.ru/snet/67704b536aa9672b963777b3
Show more📈 Analytical overview of Telegram channel DevOps&SRE Library
Channel DevOps&SRE Library (@devopslibrary) in the English language segment is an active participant. Currently, the community unites 19 414 subscribers, ranking 6 946 in the Technologies & Applications category and 34 835 in the Russia region.
📊 Audience metrics and dynamics
Since its creation on невідомо, the project has demonstrated rapid growth, gathering an audience of 19 414 subscribers.
According to the latest data from 12 June, 2026, the channel demonstrates stable activity. Although there has been a change in the number of participants by 166 over the last 30 days and by 13 over the last 24 hours, overall reach remains high.
- Verification status: Not verified
- Engagement rate (ER): The average audience engagement rate is 14.98%. Within the first 24 hours after publication, content typically collects 7.10% reactions from the total number of subscribers.
- Post reach: On average, each post receives 2 908 views. Within the first day, a publication typically gains 1 377 views.
- Reactions and interaction: The audience actively supports content: the average number of reactions per post is 1.
- Thematic interests: Content is focused on key topics such as kubernete, cluster, infrastructure, storage, configuration.
📝 Description and content policy
The author describes the resource as a platform for expressing subjective opinions:
“Библиотека статей по теме DevOps и SRE.
Реклама: @ostinostin
Контент: @mxssl
РКН: https://www.gosuslugi.ru/snet/67704b536aa9672b963777b3”
Thanks to the high frequency of updates (latest data received on 13 June, 2026), the channel maintains relevance and a high level of publication reach. Analytics show that the audience actively interacts with content, making it an important point of influence in the Technologies & Applications category.
Have you heard of Kubernetes (also known as k8s)? Until a few months back, I knew it existed and that it was like infrastructure’s holy grail. It has to cover the basics, like auto-scaling and load balancing or automated rollbacks… And then there are millions of tools to build on top of it. As we recently migrated our deployment from AWS Elastic Container Service (ECS) to AWS Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS; managed Kubernetes cluster), I wanted to share some tips. It also feels nice to do that on the 10th anniversary of “Kubernetes: The Future of Cloud Hosting” MeteorHack’s blog post. Please keep in mind that a Kubernetes cluster is an extremely complex beast, and I’m pretty far from being able to explain all the “whys” you may have. Our amazing DevOps Engineer managed to make it work, and I’m really happy with the current setup. Both because the app performs better at a lower cost and because I learned a lot along the way.https://radekmie.dev/blog/on-how-we-moved-to-kubernetes
Self-hosted task management that combines the simplicity of personal with the power of professional project organization. Built for individuals and teams who value privacy, control, and efficiency.https://github.com/chrisvel/tududi
Terminal-based group chat app with real-time WebSocket messaging, file sharing, themes, and admin tools — built with Go and Bubble Tea.https://github.com/Cod-e-Codes/marchat
At RudderStack, we decided to use PostgreSQL as our main streaming engine and queuing system instead of specialized tools like Apache Kafka. We picked PostgreSQL because it's flexible, reliable for transactions, and easier to debug. If you are curious to learn more about that decision, read the previous post about the rationale behind why we chose Postgres over Apache Kafka and the initial architectural patterns we employed. Over the past six years, this system has proven reliable and has scaled to handle 100,000 events per second—but only after we successfully navigated challenges like table bloat, query performance degradation, index bottlenecks, and retry storms. This post is a chronicle of the critical, hard-won lessons learned while maturing PostgreSQL into a highly performant and resilient queuing system.https://www.rudderstack.com/blog/scaling-postgres-queue
Nelm is a Helm 3 alternative. It is a Kubernetes deployment tool that manages Helm Charts and deploys them to Kubernetes. It is also the deployment engine of werf. Nelm can do (almost) everything that Helm does, but better, and even quite some on top of it.https://github.com/werf/nelm
Kubetail is a general-purpose logging dashboard for Kubernetes, optimized for tailing logs across multi-container workloads in real-time. With Kubetail, you can view logs from all the containers in a workload (e.g. Deployment or DaemonSet) merged into a single, chronological timeline, delivered to your browser or terminal.https://github.com/kubetail-org/kubetail
Freelens is a free and open-source user interface designed for managing Kubernetes clusters. It provides a standalone application compatible with macOS, Windows, and Linux operating systems, making it accessible to a wide range of users. The application aims to simplify the complexities of Kubernetes management by offering an intuitive and user-friendly interface.https://github.com/freelensapp/freelens
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