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Based on our record, Google Site Reliability Engineering should be more popular than Ganeti. It has been mentiond 84 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
In my view it is having a dedicated team focusing their full mental bandwidth on pro-actively understanding and managing robustness of the system. In Pure DevOps, it seems to me developers often don't have the full picture of the system, and not enough bandwidth to foresee complex interactions from their changes. These are from my experiences spending one year as a developer in somewhat large a greenfield... - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
Site Reliability Engineering, introduced by Google, extends the principles of software engineering to operations. Unlike DevOps, SRE places a stronger emphasis on reliability, availability, and scalability. SRE teams are tasked with maintaining the health and performance of systems by applying engineering practices to operations. The ultimate objective is to achieve a balance between service reliability and... Source: 8 months ago
Define SLOs for availability and latency. Google's SRE book is good reading for this. Source: 11 months ago
Have you gone through the SRE Books? Source: 11 months ago
Google SRE books is always a good read. Source: 12 months ago
We use ganeti and I'm ridiculously happy with it. When I came on board we were using ganeti for dev/stg and VMWare for production. But the difficulty of monitoring VMWare (we were moving away from SAN to local storage, and doing a RAID array monitor was a PITA) and administering (via Windows GUI, which I had to run via a VM on my Linux workstations), plus the licensing weirdness (clusters of size 5 were a sweet... - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Yep, happily using https://ganeti.org/ and KVM live migrations - mirrors across hosts. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
It's more focused on clusters, but you could check out Ganeti. Source: 9 months ago
I've been using CEPH as a backend for Ganeti storage for a long time. It's not as complex as some people like to make it out to be. But just like an distributed redundant storage, you really want to have networking that has closer to the bandwidth of your storage devices in order to make it feel like local storage speeds. Usually means 10Gbe or better. Source: about 1 year ago
Try Ganeti. It can build VM clusters using DRBD or Ceph (or both at the same time if you want). It takes the pain out of managing DRBD. Source: about 1 year ago
Apache Helix - A cluster management framework for partitioned and replicated distributed resources
Kubernetes - Kubernetes is an open source orchestration system for Docker containers
Linux Foundation Training - Linux Foundation Training is a complete web-based platform that offers you advanced-level and updated courses and tutorials to learn the developing and programming skills.
xCAT - xCAT is an open-source distributed computing management software used for the deployment and administration of Linux or AIX based clusters.
Educative.io - Interactive courses for developers by developers
oneSIS - oneSIS is an open-source software package aimed at simplifying diskless cluster management.