While more businesses are moving their apps to the cloud, they must also ensure that cloud-based services such as Amazon Web Services (AWS) and other resources remain available. So, how can you make sure these cloud services aren't turned off? You can accomplish this using a tool like Amazon CloudWatch, which monitors applications. What is AWS CloudWatch will be the subject of this article.
00:10 Why are there some issues and PRs that have not been looked at for some time?
01:34 Are there plans to increase the number of people working on the Director?
01:51 Why is there such a discrepancy between the HA functionality in Icinga 2 versus Icinga Web 2 and its modules? And will this improve in the future?
03:17 Will it be possible to tunnel module traffic with the Icinga traffic? Is something planned for managing for example x509 in a distributed setup?
An explanation of the meaning of SLA, SLO and SLI, and how SREs should use each concept to manage reliability.
Is it possible to use just one tool to test everything? Although it may sound like a developer’s daydream, it is almost possible with Cypress, a JavaScript frontend testing framework. Cypress is built specifically for JavaScript frontend developers, and they can use it to start writing tests quickly without needing to add third-party dependencies or packages. This is a benefit missing from other tools like Selenium. In this tutorial, I will guide you through using Cypress to test an API.
Seasonal spikes in consumer activity are expected, if not depended on, by online retailers throughout the calendar year. However, as shoppers rush to compete over door-buster deals and order holiday must-haves, web traffic escalates to levels standard resource allocation cannot easily sustain. This spike in traffic can lead to unresponsive checkouts, lost or abandoned carts, and slow-loading pages, ultimately resulting in thousands of dollars in lost revenue.