DevOps and cloud computing have become two of the ways companies can achieve this needed transformation, though the relationship between the two is not easily reconciled—DevOps is about the process and process improvement, while cloud computing is about technology and services. It’s important to understand how the cloud and DevOps work together to help businesses achieve their transformation goals.
Different organizations outline DevOps in different ways. This article does not debate which definition is correct, but rather presents them both to focus on the cloud’s benefit to DevOps. That said, DevOps definitions generally fall into two terms:
- In organizations it is defined as developer-friendly operations—IT operations are run separately yet in a way that is much more friendly to developers (e.g., self-service catalogs are provided to developers for stipulating infrastructure or providing technology-enabled pipelines for deploying new code).
- DevOps as a single consolidated team is habituated in organizations—developers take on operations responsibilities and vice versa.
Companies that focus on developers for operations often use cloud computing to speed developer productivity and efficiency. Cloud computing permits developers more control over their own components, resulting in smaller wait times. This application-specific architecture makes it easy for developers to own more components. By using cloud tools and services to automate the process of building, managing and provisioning through the code, service teams speed up the development process, eliminate possible human error and establish repeatability.
Read more at DevOps.com