The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20160420055259/http://cloudcomputing.sys-con.com:80/node/3769312

Welcome!

@CloudExpo Authors: Elizabeth White, Greg O'Connor, Aruna Ravichandran, Liz McMillan, Jason Bloomberg

Related Topics: IoT User Interface, Microservices Expo, Linux Containers, Containers Expo Blog, @CloudExpo, @DevOpsSummit

IoT User Interface: Blog Post

Rugged DevOps | @DevOpsSummit #DevOps #Microservices #ContinuousIntegration

An interview with Chris Corriere at Autotrader on the definition of Rugged DevOps and how it interacts with security.

I had the opportunity to catch up with Chris Corriere - DevOps Engineer at AutoTrader - to talk about his experiences in the realm of Rugged DevOps.  We discussed automation, culture and collaboration, and which thought leaders he is following.

Chris Corriere:  Hey, I'm Chris Corriere. I'm a DevOps Engineer AutoTrader.

Derek Weeks:  Today we're going to talk about Rugged DevOps. It's a subject that's gaining a lot of traction in the community but not a lot of people are really familiar with what it is.

DW: What's your definition of Rugged DevOps?

CC:  Rugged DevOps to me is definitely manifested in the security sector but it's a shifting quality and awareness left in doing the best we can with the tools we have, the constraints we're given, and in the environment we're in.  It's about being more experimental, understanding that we're going to encounter failure, and learning to adapt accordingly.  We're very much having to make tough decisions in real time.  If you're running anything in production these days, you need to do that as safely and as consistently as you can.

DW:  Is Rugged DevOps only about security?

CC: No. Security is really about mitigating risks. I think a lot of this ties into situational awareness about understanding your company's risk. Is it user data? Is it credit card transactions or do you have a Russian botnet running in your infrastructure that you're not aware of? What's the asset you need to protect? Are you trying to protect an asset that is not there?

You can't have security come in and become suffocating where it's not needed. In other situations you can't leave things wide open that really do need to be protected because you're more concerned with moving quickly than moving safely.

________________

"You can't leave things wide open that really do need to be protected because you're more concerned with moving quickly than moving safely."

________________

DW:  Security teams have been one of the last parts of the organization to come into DevOps practices. What's been your experience with engaging security teams at Auto Trader?

CC: That's a good question. I've had experience with more than just security teams at Auto Trader.  I've been involved in security a few places and they've approached me first when they found out I was into the DevOps stuff. They often come looking for assistance. They want to know:  How do we get this baked in? How do we make this a priority?

It really ties back into multi-factor authentication. It's a good way to frame it up where you want developers and operations (those people who aren't permanently rooted in security) to be aware of these things, to have automated scans, to be aware of cross-site scripting, and to understand how to remediate those kinds of issues.

We've been implementing open source tools earlier in the development lifecycle to give us quicker feedback loops in order to be able to triage these things. Security applauds that but they can't trust us too much with it.  They've got to verify that we're doing a good job with this, right? It's a give and take where I've seen security come and offer automated solutions to DevOps teams and those solutions get adopted. The DevOps teams then take that and really start to run with it. Then security wanted to slow down a little bit because they were concerned about the quality of the vulnerability remediation. There is some back and forth there that has to be anticipated.

________________

"We've been implementing open source tools earlier in the development lifecycle to give us quicker feedback loops."

________________

For security to trust you you've got to trust security to a large extent. If you're putting more automation into the left side of your process and doing things before they hit production should be making your job easier. One of the side effects of that security may start going through some systems with a finer tooth comb because they're not doing as much fire fighting.  That may result in another ask from security. Understanding that this isn't a declaration of war - we are simply continuing with an incremental progression toward further improvements.  Interactions are cyclic and will happen again.

We need to help security understand our pipeline, determine what's going to be a good fit, and keep that communication level high so the trust is there. In these symbiotic relationships, cooperation is dependent on that trust. If that trust goes away you end up in something more competitive.

There's always room to drop back to where it's more commensal and knowing when the kitchen's gotten too hot.  At those times, everybody needs to take a cool down lap and come back to it at the beginning of the next month. It goes back to that situation awareness, knowing where you're at right now before you try to get to where you're going.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgMPKkM1NdY

DW: We talked earlier today about red teams, blue teams, purple teams. What are they and can you describe some of the practices you've used to end up with more purple teams?

CC: Yeah. Red teams take an attacking, reactive posture. Red security teams are worried about internal compromise, and when they find gray areas - for example, things that haven't been fully signed off and authorized - it can result in unplanned work cropping up for the DevOps team. Generally that kind of unplanned work is introduced because the "Red" team felt they were not able to accomplish their job another way.

Then the blue team side of the equation is really trying to stomp all that out.  Blue teams keep things standard and locked down.  They make sure everything's approved in triplicate before it gets implemented, which can be rigid and very frustrating for developers.

Purple teams allow that experimentation in earlier in the development lifecycle where they've got a little bit more leash. They're allowed to experiment and stand up new things and make those things work before they getting it approved. Again, it's about being transparent.  Teams first want to understand what change was introduced and what the advantages of it are.  They may also acknowledge that you need more than one solution to some problems, and that one tool might not fit everybody.  If they're using tools to automate that's good. We can't box them all into one necessarily. That's where you see this go from blue and red to more of a purple. There's more communication. There's more conversation. There's less capture the flag, more teamwork.

________________

"There's more communication. There's more conversation. There's less capture the flag, more teamwork."

________________

DW: You've been involved in the conversations around Rugged DevOps for awhile. Who are some of the other thought leaders you learn from?

CC: Jamesha Fisher out of San Francisco is one.  She's done some neat security stuff and is starting to look more into the vulnerabilities around some of the automation tools.  Where are those vulnerable and where can they be leveraged against us?  Automation is great until it automatically starts doing things we didn't want. Another aspect of that is really trying to think more like an attacker; we need to think about: how would I break into this thing instead of just thinking how do I protect it.

Georgia Weidman is popular in a lot of security circles and I've missed her workshop once. I'd like to catch it. She's got a book out on pen testing, which covers a lot of operations and concepts from an attack perspective. I would say that can be a fault of some Rugged DevOps practices; you're so quick to get the thing working and provide business value that you don't realize where you've left something vulnerable. Sometimes you've got questions about why that thing you work with frequently is always locked down.  Perhaps you find you can't use it the way you want to.  At those moments, it's time to read through Georgia's book. You'll get some information as to why that thing is not open the way you want and where someone might use it for reasons might not expect..

________________

"You're so quick to get the thing working to provide business value that you don't realize where you've left something vulnerable."

________________

DW:  As we wrap up I know you're on the organizing committee for DevOpsDays Atlanta. Do you want to give us an insight on the dates of when that's coming up and call for papers, et cetera or we can help you share that?

CC: Our event is going to be in April. It's the 26th and 27th which is a Tuesday and Wednesday. Monday, the 25th of April, we have Jeff Sussna coming in to do a full day workshop on continuous design. He's going to be giving the keynote on our first day. We're excited to have Jeff in town and excited to have him as a keynote. John Willis is going to be giving our keynote on the second day.

We've got a lot of bright people in the space. We've got a lot of people learning as they go. We need to be more vocal about that learning process and how we find our way through it.  There's not always this instantaneous vision that strikes us. We understand how to convert a shop into continuous delivery every night. There are definitely steps in between that. We need to have more conversations about those step in our industry.

DW: Awesome. Thanks, Chris.

CW: Thank you.

If you are interested in learning more about this subject, I invite you to download Amy DeMartine's Forrester research paper, "The 7 Habits of Rugged DevOps."

As Amy notes, "DevOps practices can only increase speed and quality up to a point without security and risk (S&R) pros' expertise. Old application security practices hinder speedy releases, and security vulnerabilities represent defects that can leave a company open to cyberattacks. But DevOps practitioners can leap forward with both increased speed and quality by including S&R pros in DevOps feedback loops and including security practices in the automated life cycle. These new practices are called Rugged DevOps."

More Stories By Derek Weeks

In 2015, Derek Weeks led the largest and most comprehensive analysis of software supply chain practices to date across 160,000 development organizations. He is a huge advocate of applying proven supply chain management principles into DevOps practices to improve efficiencies, reduce costs, and sustain long-lasting competitive advantages.

As a 20+ year veteran of the software industry, he has advised leading businesses on IT performance improvement practices covering continuous delivery, business process management, systems and network operations, service management, capacity planning and storage management. As the VP and DevOps Advocate for Sonatype, he is passionate about changing the way people think about software supply chains and improving public safety through improved software integrity. Follow him here @weekstweets, find me here www.linkedin.com/in/derekeweeks, and read me here http://blog.sonatype.com/author/weeks/.

@CloudExpo Stories
Between the mockups and specs produced by analysts, and resulting applications built by developers, there exists a gulf where projects fail, costs spiral, and applications disappoint. Methodologies like Agile attempt to address this with intensified communication, with partial success but many limitations. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Charles Kendrick, CTO & Chief Architect at Isomorphic Software, will present a revolutionary model enabled by new technologies. Learn how business and devel...
Culture is the most important ingredient of DevOps. The challenge for most organizations is defining and communicating a vision of beneficial DevOps culture for their organizations, and then facilitating the changes needed to achieve that. Often this comes down to an ability to provide true leadership. As a CIO, are your direct reports IT managers or are they IT leaders? The hard truth is that many IT managers have risen through the ranks based on their technical skills, not their leadership ab...
This is not a small hotel event. It is also not a big vendor party where politicians and entertainers are more important than real content. This is Cloud Expo, the world's longest-running conference and exhibition focused on Cloud Computing and all that it entails. If you want serious presentations and valuable insight about Cloud Computing for three straight days, then register now for Cloud Expo.
The proper isolation of resources is essential for multi-tenant environments. The traditional approach to isolate resources is, however, rather heavyweight. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Igor Drobiazko, co-founder of elastic.io, will draw upon their own experience with operating a Docker container-based infrastructure on a large scale and present a lightweight solution for resource isolation using microservices. He will also discuss the implementation of microservices in data and applicat...
The paradigm has shifted. A Gartner survey shows that 43% of organizations are using or plan to implement the Internet of Things in 2016. However, not just a handful of companies are still using the old-style ad-hoc trial-and-error ways, unaware of the critical barriers, paint points, traps, and hidden roadblocks. How can you become a winner? In his session at @ThingsExpo, Tony Shan will present a methodical approach to guide the holistic adoption and enablement of IoT implementations. This ov...
Up until last year, enterprises that were looking into cloud services usually undertook a long-term pilot with one of the large cloud providers, running test and dev workloads in the cloud. With cloud’s transition to mainstream adoption in 2015, and with enterprises migrating more and more workloads into the cloud and in between public and private environments, the single-provider approach must be revisited. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Yoav Mor, multi-cloud solution evangelist at Cloudy...
Machine Learning helps make complex systems more efficient. By applying advanced Machine Learning techniques such as Cognitive Fingerprinting, wind project operators can utilize these tools to learn from collected data, detect regular patterns, and optimize their own operations. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Stuart Gillen, Director of Business Development at SparkCognition, will discuss how research has demonstrated the value of Machine Learning in delivering next generation analytics to im...
How do you evaluate a cloud provider for your database platform? How do you coordinate the diverse moving parts that must come together when developing your IoT product? What are the key challenges addressed by Data as a Service? DevOps, Digital, Cloud – three separate transformative trends, or one mega-trend? Which cloud model is right for your company? How can you turn your corporate data into dollars?
The IoT has the potential to create a renaissance of manufacturing in the US and elsewhere. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Florent Solt, CTO and chief architect of Netvibes, will discuss how the expected exponential increase in the amount of data that will be processed, transported, stored, and accessed means there will be a huge demand for smart technologies to deliver it. Florent Solt is the CTO and chief architect of Netvibes. Prior to joining Netvibes in 2007, he co-founded Rift Technol...
Cloud Expo, Inc. has announced today that Andi Mann returns to 'DevOps at Cloud Expo 2016' as Conference Chair The @DevOpsSummit at Cloud Expo will take place on June 7-9, 2016, at the Javits Center in New York City, New York. "DevOps is set to be one of the most profound disruptions to hit IT in decades," said Andi Mann. "It is a natural extension of cloud computing, and I have seen both firsthand and in independent research the fantastic results DevOps delivers. So I am excited to help the g...
Quantum Corp. has announced three new reference architectures to optimize key surveillance and security environments, addressing the storage challenges presented by new fixed cameras, expansions of existing security systems, and law enforcement implementations. The reference architectures provide the storage performance, capacity and accessibility that customers and integrators require at the foundation of today's new surveillance and security installations.
You deployed your app with the Bluemix PaaS and it's gaining some serious traction, so it's time to make some tweaks. Did you design your application in a way that it can scale in the cloud? Were you even thinking about the cloud when you built the app? If not, chances are your app is going to break. Check out this webcast to learn various techniques for designing applications that will scale successfully in Bluemix, for the confidence you need to take your apps to the next level and beyond.
As you respond to increasing requests for new analytics, you need fast and flexible technology in your arsenal so that you can deploy the right workload to the right platform for the need at hand. Do you need self-service and fast time to value? Do you have data and application control and privacy needs, along with strict SLAs to meet? IBM dashDB™ is data warehouse technology powered by in-memory computing and in-database analytics that are designed for fast results, scalability and more.
Based on the open source Cloud Foundry technology, IBM Bluemix is an open-standard, cloud-based platform for building, managing, and running applications of all types such as web, mobile, Big Data, and new smart devices. Bluemix abstracts and hides most of the complexities that are associated with hosting and managing cloud-based applications. As an application developer, you can focus on developing your application without having to manage the infrastructure that is required to host it. For mob...
SYS-CON Events announced today that SuperAdmins will exhibit at SYS-CON's 18th International Cloud Expo®, which will take place on June 7-9, 2016, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY. SuperAdmins specializes in providing high-quality IT infrastructure services for MSPs, hosting and cloud providers. Services they offer include 24/7 NOC - Remote monitoring of the key equipment/services.
SYS-CON Events has announced today that Roger Strukhoff has been named conference chair of Cloud Expo and @ThingsExpo 2016 New York. The 18th Cloud Expo and 5th @ThingsExpo will take place on June 7-9, 2016, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY. "The Internet of Things brings trillions of dollars of opportunity to developers and enterprise IT, no matter how you measure it," stated Roger Strukhoff. "More importantly, it leverages the power of devices and the Internet to enable us all to im...
Join IBM June 8 at 18th Cloud Expo at the Javits Center in New York City, NY, and learn how to innovate like a startup and scale for the enterprise. You need to deliver quality applications faster and cheaper, attract and retain customers with an engaging experience across devices, and seamlessly integrate your enterprise systems. And you can't take 12 months to do it.
SYS-CON Events announced today that (ISC)²® (“ISC-squared”) will exhibit at SYS-CON's 18th International Cloud Expo®, which will take place on June 7-9, 2016, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY. Two leading non-profits focused on cloud and information security, (ISC)² and Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), developed the Certified Cloud Security Professional (CCSP) certification to address the increased demand for cloud security expertise due to rapid growth in cloud. Recently named “The Next...
Struggling to keep up with increasing application demand? Learn how Platform as a Service (PaaS) can streamline application development processes and make resource management easy.
SYS-CON Events announced today that Column Technologies will exhibit at SYS-CON's @DevOpsSummit at Cloud Expo, which will take place on June 7-9, 2016, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY. Established in 1998, Column Technologies is a global technology solutions provider with over 400 employees, headquartered in the United States with offices in Canada, India, and the United Kingdom. Column Technologies provides “Best of Breed” technology solutions that automate the key DevOps principal...