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Implementing DevSecOps Practices

You're reading from  Implementing DevSecOps Practices

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803231495
Pages 258 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Vandana Verma Sehgal Vandana Verma Sehgal
Profile icon Vandana Verma Sehgal

Table of Contents (25) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1:DevSecOps – What and How?
2. Chapter 1: Introducing DevSecOps 3. Part 2: DevSecOps Principles and Processes
4. Chapter 2: DevSecOps Principles 5. Chapter 3: Understanding the Security Posture 6. Chapter 4: Understanding Observability 7. Chapter 5: Understanding Chaos Engineering 8. Part 3:Technology
9. Chapter 6: Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment 10. Chapter 7: Threat Modeling 11. Chapter 8: Software Composition Analysis (SCA) 12. Chapter 9: Static Application Security Testing (SAST) 13. Chapter 10: Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC) Scanning 14. Chapter 11: Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) 15. Part 4: Tools
16. Chapter 12: Setting Up a DevSecOps Program with Open Source Tools 17. Part 5: Governance and an Effective Security Champions Program
18. Chapter 13: License Compliance, Code Coverage, and Baseline Policies 19. Chapter 14: Setting Up a Security Champions Program 20. Part 6: Case Studies and Conclusion
21. Chapter 15: Case Studies 22. Chapter 16: Conclusion 23. Index 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing chaos engineering

Chaos engineering has its roots in things such as safety engineering in contexts such as aerospace engineering, where structures and components are tested to just before the point of failure.

Chaos engineering can be applied to various systems, including IT infrastructure, software systems, and business processes. It is typically performed by injecting simulated failures or “chaos” into the system and observing how it responds.

This allows engineers to identify and fix problems before they cause a real-world loss or outage.

Several different techniques can be used to perform chaos engineering, including the following:

  • Randomly killing or failing processes or services
  • Introducing network delays or packet loss
  • Increasing or decreasing the system load
  • Removing or adding resources
  • Changing system configurations

A team of engineers usually conducts the process of chaos engineering, and it is often automated...

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