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Home » Blogs » DevOps in the Cloud » DevOps and Cloud: A Symbiotic Relationship

DevOps and Cloud: A Symbiotic Relationship

By: Jaymin Vyas on November 7, 2018 5 Comments

Most companies want to increase their competitiveness in today’s swiftly changing world, and so they cannot ignore digital transformation. 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.

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DevOps and Cloud

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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:

  1. 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).
  2. DevOps as a single consolidated team is habituated in organizations—developers take on operations responsibilities and vice versa.

While cloud computing itself has several definitions, the most basic explanation of the cloud is a system that allows the provisioning of infrastructure (e.g., VMs or routers). Thus, it allows to being defined as code or templates, enabling the creation of repeatable processes that are not possible without cloud technologies.

The aesthetics of cloud technologies and services become so easily amalgamated in DevOps vocabulary because they complement DevOps processes, regardless of how your organization defines them—or, regardless of which DevOps routes you travel to digital transformation with the cloud integration.

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.

Cloud computing also enables users to create self-service methods for provisioning infrastructure through AWS Service Catalog. Developers are able to quickly try new things, fail fast and just easily succeed in getting new products to market faster, without having to wait for IT operations to provision services for them.

DevOps as a single term is really a mixture of these approaches, in which developers and operations work together using the cloud as a single common language. In this way, both the DevOps and cloud are able to work together, as everyone is learning new definitions and approaches at the same time. Developers and operations are equally cushy with the new language of the cloud, as developers often teach operations about the code aspect and operations can teach developers about infrastructure and security, developing a meeting point that leads to strong team dynamics.

No matter the definition, the importance of cloud computing to DevOps can’t be accentuated enough. Cloud computing advances IT transformation, and with advanced tools and automation, it can enable companies to double down on their work to streamline and embed DevOps processes for greater efficiencies that are truly transformative.

Inherently, as process improvement, DevOps also requires a culture change. Cloud computing can play a role here, as it can help codify and automate new processes. For example, if there is a new way in which developers should cluster the components they need to deliver a service—such as code, configuration, libraries and pipeline definitions—advanced automation tools can streamline the process and make it distinctly repeatable.

The business case for DevOps combined with cloud technology for a successful IT transformation is fivefold:

  1. Bring products to market faster through faster access to development environments and streamlined developer processes.
  2. Automation and architecture as code reduce cloud complexity and even system maintenance.
  3. Add high security with automated, repeatable processes that serve to eliminate inaccurate error and, even more importantly, develop security controls from the very beginning.
  4. Reduce downtime through cloud-based continuous operations. Moreover, in the process of applying automation, developers can build stateless cloud application development, which increases availability and failover ability, in the process increasing business reliability and customer satisfaction.
  5. Increase scalability. One of the main reasons organizations look to cloud computing in the first place is its scalability, which allows organizations to increase capacity with the click of a button. When combined with DevOps, scalability becomes an integral part of applications as they are developed, while reducing the cost of infrastructure and increasing global reach.

Get Past the Changes

Together, DevOps and cloud computing are a powerhouse. While each offers greater effectiveness and business impact, together they are able to drive meaningful IT transformation that directly impacts business goals, regardless of the DevOps definition.

At the same time, culture within the enterprise and among developers must change around the nuances of DevOps and its role in driving cloud development. Finally, IT companies must invest in these technologies and do so without an immediate goal—which, of course, drives corporate leaders and shareholders crazy.

However, the alternative is doing nothing, which means certain failure. Competitors are likely to pull ahead in terms of time-to-market with solutions and application services. When you can hold up applications and processes in near real-time and do so within an elastic and efficient environment, the market will reward you for putting that effort. If you haven’t commenced on the process yet, it’s time to get started.

— Jaymin Vyas

Filed Under: Blogs, DevOps in the Cloud Tagged With: cloud and DevOps, Cloud Application Development, Cloud Computing, devops

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