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Enterprise DevOps for Architects

You're reading from  Enterprise DevOps for Architects

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801812153
Pages 288 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Jeroen Mulder Jeroen Mulder
Profile icon Jeroen Mulder

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Architecting DevOps for Enterprises
2. Chapter 1: Defining the Reference Architecture for Enterprise DevOps 3. Chapter 2: Managing DevOps from Architecture 4. Chapter 3: Architecting for DevOps Quality 5. Chapter 4: Scaling DevOps 6. Chapter 5: Architecting Next-Level DevOps with SRE 7. Section 2: Creating the Shift Left with AIOps
8. Chapter 6: Defining Operations in Architecture 9. Chapter 7: Understanding the Impact of AI on DevOps 10. Chapter 8: Architecting AIOps 11. Chapter 9: Integrating AIOps in DevOps 12. Chapter 10: Making the Final Step to NoOps 13. Section 3: Bridging Security with DevSecOps
14. Chapter 11: Understanding Security in DevOps 15. Chapter 12: Architecting for DevSecOps 16. Chapter 13: Working with DevSecOps Using Industry Security Frameworks 17. Chapter 14: Integrating DevSecOps with DevOps 18. Chapter 15: Implementing Zero Trust Architecture 19. Assessments 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Architecting SRE using KPIs

Before we dive into the definition of KPIs, we need to get back to the basic principles of SRE. SRE teams focus on reliability, scalability, availability, performance, efficiency, and response. These are all measurable items, so we can transform them into KPIs. In this section, we will learn how to do that using SLOs, Service-Level Indicators (SLIs), and the error budget.

The main KPIs that we use in SRE are as follows:

  • SLOs: In SRE, this is defined as how good a system should be. An SLO is much more precise than an SLA, which comprises a lot of different KPIs. You could also state that the SLA comprises a number of SLOs. However, an SLO is an agreement between the developers in the SRE team and the product owner of the service, whereas an SLA is an agreement between the service supplier and the end user.

    The SLO is a target value. For example, the web frontend should be able to handle hundreds of requests per minute. Don't make it too complex...

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