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 19 420 subscribers, ranking 6 935 in the Technologies & Applications category and 34 746 in the Russia region.
📊 Audience metrics and dynamics
Since its creation on невідомо, the project has demonstrated rapid growth, gathering an audience of 19 420 subscribers.
According to the latest data from 16 June, 2026, the channel demonstrates stable activity. Although there has been a change in the number of participants by 151 over the last 30 days and by -4 over the last 24 hours, overall reach remains high.
- Verification status: Not verified
- Engagement rate (ER): The average audience engagement rate is 15.05%. Within the first 24 hours after publication, content typically collects 7.12% reactions from the total number of subscribers.
- Post reach: On average, each post receives 2 923 views. Within the first day, a publication typically gains 1 383 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 17 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.
In this article we’ll create a two-node cluster with one control-plane node and one worker node as a proof-of-concept. As an extra challenge we’ll also take a look at how to do PCIe passthrough for the worker node.https://blog.stonegarden.dev/articles/2024/03/proxmox-k8s-with-cilium
Learn how easy it is to manage multiple Helm Charts from one deployment project using Kluctl.https://kluctl.io/blog/2023/02/28/managing-many-helm-charts-with-kluctl
In the early days of Kubernetes adoption, single-cluster deployments were the norm, offering a straightforward approach to managing applications and services. As the adoption of Kubernetes expanded, the limitations of single-cluster models surfaced. The increasing demand for Kubernetes clusters requires a shift to multicluster deployments and an innovative Hosted Control Plane architecture.https://clastix.io/post/the-raise-of-hosted-control-plane-in-kubernetes
How Chick-fil-A provides observability for 2,800+ K8s clustershttps://medium.com/chick-fil-atech/observability-at-the-edge-b2385065ab6e
This blog post describes the case study of how we diagnosed, root caused and then mitigated a performance issue in one of our applications in Flipkart. As part of this journey, we describe the different tools (eBPF and traditional) that can debug performance issues.https://blog.flipkart.tech/the-art-of-system-debugging-decoding-cpu-utilization-da75f09ef1ff
grpcmd is a simple, easy-to-use, and developer-friendly CLI tool for gRPC.https://github.com/grpcmd/grpcmd
Реклама. ООО «Отус онлайн-образование», ОГРН 1177746618576, erid: 2VtzqvP3Fc1Kardinal is a framework for creating extremely lightweight ephemeral development environments within a shared Kubernetes cluster. In Kardinal, an environment is called a "flow" because it represents a path that a request takes through the cluster. Versions of services that are under development are deployed on-demand, and then shared across all development work that depends on that version. Read more about Kardinal in our docs.https://github.com/kurtosis-tech/kardinal
Put your DevOps skills to the test with our hands-on capstone project. Designed for anyone interested in gaining practical experience, this project challenges you to integrate AWS, Terraform, Kubernetes, GitHub Actions, ArgoCD, Datadog, and PagerDuty to build and manage a production-like environment. Showcase your ability to create a complete, real-world solution by building cloud infrastructure, implementing observability, developing CI/CD pipelines, and managing incidents.https://github.com/tntk-io/tntk-infra
CAP? Again? Still?https://brooker.co.za/blog/2024/07/25/cap-again.html
In this article we discuss three open source load-balancer controllers that can be used with any distribution of Kubernetes.https://medium.com/thermokline/comparing-k8s-load-balancers-2f5c76ea8f31
Bare metal servers are awesome. They let you pick where to run your software and how to deploy it. You get full control to make the most of the server's resources. No limits, no compromises. That's real freedom. Viking makes it easier to work with them.https://github.com/d3witt/viking
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