DevOps&SRE Library
Библиотека статей по теме DevOps и SRE. Реклама: @ostinostin Контент: @mxssl РКН: https://www.gosuslugi.ru/snet/67704b536aa9672b963777b3
Mostrar más📈 Análisis del canal de Telegram DevOps&SRE Library
El canal DevOps&SRE Library (@devopslibrary) en el segmento lingüístico de Inglés es un actor destacado. Actualmente la comunidad reúne a 19 407 suscriptores, ocupando la posición 6 929 en la categoría Tecnologías y Aplicaciones y el puesto 34 717 en la región Rusia.
📊 Métricas de audiencia y dinámica
Desde su creación el невідомо, el proyecto ha mostrado un crecimiento acelerado, reuniendo a 19 407 suscriptores.
Según los últimos datos del 20 junio, 2026, el canal mantiene una actividad estable. En los últimos 30 días la variación de miembros fue de 109, y en las últimas 24 horas de -1, conservando un alto alcance.
- Estado de verificación: No verificado
- Tasa de interacción (ER): El promedio de interacción de la audiencia es 14.80%. Durante las primeras 24 horas tras publicar, el contenido suele obtener 7.24% de reacciones respecto al total de suscriptores.
- Alcance de las publicaciones: Cada publicación recibe en promedio 2 873 visualizaciones. En el primer día suele acumular 1 405 visualizaciones.
- Reacciones e interacción: La audiencia responde de forma activa: el promedio de reacciones por publicación es 1.
- Intereses temáticos: El contenido se centra en temas clave como kubernete, cluster, infrastructure, storage, configuration.
📝 Descripción y política de contenido
El autor describe el recurso como un espacio para expresar opiniones subjetivas:
“Библиотека статей по теме DevOps и SRE.
Реклама: @ostinostin
Контент: @mxssl
РКН: https://www.gosuslugi.ru/snet/67704b536aa9672b963777b3”
Gracias a la alta frecuencia de actualizaciones (últimos datos recibidos el 21 junio, 2026), el canal mantiene la vigencia y un amplio alcance. La analítica demuestra que la audiencia interactúa activamente con el contenido, lo que lo convierte en un punto de referencia dentro de la categoría Tecnologías y Aplicaciones.
A CLI for creating better commits following the conventional commits specificationhttps://github.com/Everduin94/better-commits
As your environment changes, new trends can quickly make your existing monitoring less accurate. At the same time, building alerts after every new incident can turn a straightforward strategy into a convoluted one. Treating monitoring as a one-time or reactive effort can both result in alert fatigue. Alert fatigue occurs when an excessive number of alerts are generated by monitoring systems or when alerts are irrelevant or unhelpful, leading to a diminished ability to see critical issues. Updating your alerts infrequently or too often can cause false positive alarms and redundant alerts that overwhelm your team. A desensitized team won’t be able to detect issues early and will lose trust in their monitoring systems, which can disrupt production and negatively impact your business.https://www.datadoghq.com/blog/best-practices-to-prevent-alert-fatigue
1️⃣ Tougher Job Market for SREs With many companies looking to cut costs due to worsening economic conditions, dedicated SRE roles may be seen as expendable - so SRE headcount and budgets could be reduced. Many organizations transition to Amazon-like model, where SWEs would "do it all". Infrastructure management, operational hardening, incident tracking and being oncall are becoming a part of the job, so reliability engineers would be slowly pushed out or would have to transition into development. We can already see these trends among colleagues being laid off in 2023, including SRE-minded companies like Google. This combination of factors means the SRE job market will likely tighten considerably in 2024. Openings will be harder to find and competition will be steeper. SREs will need to clearly demonstrate their value to stay relevant. 2️⃣ Rise of the Hybrid Cloud The economic realities of running workloads on major public clouds like AWS, GCP and Azure will lead companies to look for alternatives. The costs of using public cloud infrastructure and services have been climbing, eating into budgets. As companies look to reduce spending, running applications on public clouds may no longer make economic sense. We'll see a migration back towards private data centers, colocation facilities, and on-prem infrastructure. SREs skilled in on-prem operations, bare metal provisioning, etc. will be in higher demand. 3️⃣ Kubernetes will continue its dominance. While Kubernetes benefits and operational costs are questioned a lot recently, it has become the clear leader as the orchestration platform of choice for containerized workloads. Engineers and companies are heavily invested in Kubernetes workflows and tools, both in cloud and on-prem. As companies look to further invest in efficiency of infrastructure and application management, SREs will need strong Kubernetes expertise. 4️⃣ Increased major outages due to AI-written code (and fewer SREs) While the automated code generation promises improved developer productivity, it also poses new reliability challenges. As code generation by AI systems increases, companies may end up with insufficiently supervised software. With fewer SREs around to establish robust testing and deployment practices, outages caused by bugs in AI-generated code could become more frequent. Companies will be caught off guard by disruptions caused by their overreliance on AI. Quick mitigations for these outages would be problematic as well, as fundamentally it'd be harder to fix code issues in AI-written code. 5️⃣ Platform Engineering Matures In 2024, unifying infrastructure, applications, data, and services under common APIs and self-service platforms will accelerate. These platforms will provide standardized building blocks and streamlined workflows so engineering teams can quickly build, connect and deploy applications without wasting time in infrastructure complexities. Platforms will handle provisioning, networking, monitoring, access controls, and other operational aspects behind the scenes. With job opportunities for traditional SRE roles declining, many SREs will look to transition into platform engineering positions. The broad technical skills required by platform roles align well with strengths many SREs already have. However, to successfully land a platform engineering role, you will need to skill up on software development as well. Programming and coding will become mandatory for those looking to get into platform engineering.https://www.codereliant.io/5-sre-predictions-for-2024
From bare metal to cloud VMs, deploy web apps anywhere with zero downtime. Kamal has the dynamic reverse-proxy Traefik hold requests while a new app container is started and the old one is stopped. Works seamlessly across multiple hosts, using SSHKit to execute commands. Originally built for Rails apps, Kamal will work with any type of web app that can be containerized with Docker.https://github.com/basecamp/kamal
Marmot is a distributed SQLite replicator with leaderless, and eventual consistency. It allows you to build a robust replication between your nodes by building on top of fault-tolerant NATS JetStream. So if you are running a read heavy website based on SQLite, you should be easily able to scale it out by adding more SQLite replicated nodes. SQLite is probably the most ubiquitous DB that exists almost everywhere, Marmot aims to make it even more ubiquitous for server side applications by building a replication layer on top.https://github.com/maxpert/marmot
ParadeDB is an ElasticSearch alternative built on Postgres. We're building the features of ElasticSearch's product suite, starting with search.https://github.com/paradedb/paradedb
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