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You can use this page to email Florian Beetz, Anja Kammer, and Dr. Simon Harrer about GitOps.
About the Book
GitOps is a way of implementing Continuous Deployment for cloud native applications. It focuses on a developer-centric experience when operating infrastructure, by using tools developers are already familiar with, including Git and Continuous Deployment tools.
Early Praise
"Software development nowadays requires to be fast and iterative, infrastructure needs to adapt and evolve with the same velocity. GitOps is fundamental for modern infrastructure implementation. With GitOps your source of truth is one or more Git repositories, your process is automated and, most likely, your infrastructure is implemented in a declarative manner. For over four years I've been helping companies implementing GitOps. In this book, you find a great introduction to GitOps and how to apply it to real-world use cases with great hands-on examples."
Vincenzo Ferme, Cloud Native Tech Lead at Kiratech
"GitOps - Cloud-native Continuous Deployment is at the heart of modern Cloud development, automation is king and efficiency is what you get. This GitOps book is very much the same as GitOps development: nice and handy."
Dr. Andreas Schönberger, Founder Lion5 GmbH
"Informative and concise introduction to a neat CI/CD method built around Git."
Dr. Michael Oberparleiter, Software consultant at TNG Technology Consulting
About the Authors
Florian Beetz is a software engineer at Lion5. He graduated from University of Bamberg in 2020 with a Master's degree in International Software Systems Science and is interested in cloud computing, clean code, and software engineering techniques. In his free time, he likes to go rock climbing in the mountains.
Anja Kammer is a consultant at INNOQ and creates cloud-native web applications. She deals with deployment automation and CI/CD systems in particular. Her focus is on the topics DevOps, cloud infrastructure and Kubernetes.
Dr. Simon Harrer is a senior consultant at INNOQ. In his daily business, he fights for simple solutions with domain-driven design, fitting architectures such as microservices or monoliths, and clean code in Java, Ruby or even JavaScript. Most recently, he wrote the book Java by Comparison that helps Java beginners to write cleaner code through before/after comparisons.