Happy Monday!
Here's the next "Donations Monday" updates, and I want to share with you the UA Responders foundation.
They mostly specialize in tactical medicine, but also cover other urgent needs.
How do I know them: my wife is helping them with some organizational stuff and my classmate takes care of their warehouse logistics.
They also have registration in Poland, so you can donate via IBAN in Zloty. However, there are other ways such as PayPal available as well.
P.S. A message for all the salespeople from ruzzia, who think this is a good idea to come to my dm and ask to promote your shit: go fuck yourself!
#donations #Ukraine
Notify is a simple Go library to send notifications to various channels e.g. popular messengers, social apps and message services such as SNS.
You can find the list of all supported destinations as well as an example of usage in the README.
#programming #go
Your SSO session can be stolen.
At least Grammarly, with their white partner prepared an internal phishing attack and get access to their OTP SSO session.
As a result, they choose to move to FIDO2, to prevent the possibility of that attack vector.
More about the attack and why choose FIDO2 in Part 1.
About implementation and problems - in Part 2.
#security
A new Monday column!
As you might have noticed, each CatOps post
has a button which leads to the page with various links on where to
donate and how to support Ukraine in other ways.
There are the
links to big foundations, which is fine. Those folks have earned their
reputation. However, I want to help my friends, who also gather
donations for AFU. Those are people I know personally and I want to help
them not just monetary, but with some visibility as well.
So, Pavlo and Naya are gathering funds for various needs, but mostly recon drones and other electronics.
You can follow each of them on Twitter to get updates on each round of donations.
- Pavlo
- Naya
Their requisites for donations:
- Pavlo
- Naya
Thank you for your help!
#donations #ukraine
My ISP decided to make me a digital detox but now my connection is back, so I can resume posting again!
Here’s a nice Twitter thread by Daniele Palencic about how a Kubernetes Ingress controller works. There’s also an unrolled version, if you prefer it this way.
Btw, I highly recommend subscribing to Daniele. He has some wonderful content on Kubernetes and also he has workshops on learnk8s.io
#kubernetes
Fluent Bit 2.0.0 with support for traces is released!
It means that now Fluent Bit fully integrates with systems like Prometheus and OpenTelemetry natively.
#observability
Sup! I'm back from vacationing.
First, I wanted to share something serious and fundamental-ish as the first post of the year. Unfortunately, I haven't read anything worthful yet :\
So, I want to share an episode from the ShipIT podcast, which is called "Fundametals". It was published a while ago, but I listened to it just recently.
I think it fits perfectly my idea to start this year on CatOps with something more interesting than just a link to a tool, etc. Enjoy!
BTW, this episode is also available on the major streaming platforms (I listened to it on Spotify). I won't provide the links, though, because I don't know which platform do you use. Also, their website has a transcript. So, if you prefer reading to listening, it's possible as well.
#podcast
cURL is going to support an output of server certificates in PEM format using -w
(write-out) options.
Support for these new -w
variables has been merged into curl’s master branch and is scheduled to be part of the coming release of curl version 7.88.0 on February 15th, 2023.
I like graphical representations of complex systems.
So, here you are: a zine-like scheme of the RAFT consensus algorithm
#raft #zine
Disk encryption in AWS is close to useless and potentially harmful.
No, it’s not like AWS is going to do anything with your data.
tl;dr: Encryption at rest protects you from cases when someone steals your disk. However, such an attack vector is so hard in a cloud environment that it’s completely worthless for an attacker.
However, the correct implementation of the encryption at rest will take time and effort that you can put into real risk mitigation and security hardening instead.
#security #aws
Last week we recorded one of our usual voice chats as a test. So, more people who were unable to join because of blackouts could listen to it.
Moreover, the topic of our voice chats was: “How to work without electricity, Internet access, and utilities”.
Although, we have touched other topics as well, as it usually happens:
- Starlinks and external antennas
- M1/2 MacBooks
- Ancient communication technologies
The recording is in Ukrainian and available on:
- YouTube as a static image
- Spotify
- Apple Podcasts
- Google Podcasts
- Anchor
Enjoy!
#voice #говорилка
A quite old article on debugging a NodeJS AWS Lambda function.
Yet, I still want to share this one, because even if you don‘t have NodeJS functions specifically, the article has some insights on how to debug Lambda functions in general.
Also, there some take away points that would be relevant for any HTTP workload, not just JS.
#aws #serverless
Not a technical post.
Today is the Volunteer Day. I want to dedicate this post to all the people who help daily our military forces as well as civilians.
Thank you for your work and dedication!
Now, I add a Linktree to each post that contains links to various volunteer organizations as well as other useful things. Today I want to share individuals and foundations I regularly support personally.
- Pavlo Bondarenko and Naya are collecting funds for recon drones and Starlinks for AFU. The both have PayPal, so it’s easy to send money from outside Ukraine. Pavlo is a friend of mine, we’ve been to Sziget Festival together a couple of times. Before the full scale invasion he was running a Ukrainian podcast production “Radio Podil”.
Pavlo’s links
Naya’s links
- UA Responders a foundation specialized on tactical medicine and other medical things. I know them, because my wife is actively helping there and my classmate helps them with logistics. They have Polish IBAN, so it’s handy to send money from within the EU. Obviously, they have other ways to accept donations as well.
- Come Back Alive. I mean, they do not require an introduction. This is the most famous and probably the oldest volunteer organization in Ukraine that helps UA military. Also, now they have a convenient web form to accept donations right in their website.
(image via @lachentyt)
#volunteers #Ukraine
Here the FireHydrant company writes that MTTR (mean time to recovery) metric is overrated.
I tend to agree with their justification: not all incidents are the same. Not all systems are equally critical as well as not always the cause or rather a set of causes is easy to mitigate.
However, it’s still important to measure the quality of your incident response somehow. The propose two metrics instead:
- Mean time to detection - basically, how long it takes for you to spot a problem. I would also ask an additional question here: was a problem reported by your observability systems, or by your colleagues or customers?
- Mean time to retrospective - or mean time to postmortem if you wish. I think this is a good one. It’s true that some details may fade away from memory, so sooner you do a retrospective - the better! Also, it’s f you actually measure this time, it can help you to prioritize meetings and put postmortems as a higher priority comparing to, for example, a team standup.
#observability
I remember people creating NAT instances in AWS because NAT Gateway was not available at a time.
Now, some claim that NAT Gateway is too expensive, thus nat instances is the way.
The circle is complete, I guess.
Anyways, here’s alterNAT - self provisioned NAT instances in AWS.
To be completely honest, there are use cases for NAT instances indeed and they do not claim that this solution is for everyone.
#aws #networking
Folks at Cloudflare describe how they work with Terraform there.
This article contains some examples of using Cloudflare's Terraform provider, so those might be handy if you're using their product.
Also, there's a controversial opinion about the usage of Tf modules. This article claims that one should avoid modules, because they decrease clarity in the long run. Like, if you have multiple environments or accounts, or applications that are similar but slightly different from each other, the cardinality of modules' variables may become unbearable.
I won't comment on this. I think this is one of those cases, when context matters the most. Such an approach may suit you or may not. You need to decide whether you'd better use modules or not yourself.
#terraform
A short article on how to deploy an application into multiple Kubernetes clusters using ArgoCD. And also Vcluster and Kyverno.
It starts with cluster creation and walks you through the whole thing up to a running app. An interesting point for me was an ability of Kyverno to create resources based on event. I didn’t know about this ability and it seems very powerful (now, I’m wondering if one can create a resource in a cluster by an event in another using Kyverno).
However, I’ve missed some things here as well. It’s not like an example is a “hello world” one, it’s fine. Yet, I would appreciate it, if there were more in-depth glance into Argo. How does it manage an app in several clusters? Can one use multiple clusters for HA purposes, but abstract an app via Argo? What would happen if one needs an odd number of replicas, how is it going to be distributed between clusters?
If you know the answer, I’d be happy to have a chat with you. Also, if you have an article on that, I would happily check it out and also share it here!
#kubernetes #argocd
Usually, Sundays are for the newsletter. However, there was not that many posts on CatOps yet due to holidays and other stuff.
Yet, here’s another digest. Or more precisely, a list of articles about Internal Development Platforms aka IDPs, things such as Backstage.
There are articles starting from 2019 and the most recent one is from 2023!
#idp
A couple of days ago I attended a CNCF meetup here in Berlin (full recording is available on YouTube). So, I want to share some things that were presented there.
- NeuVector - an open-source security solution for Kubernetes recently bought by Suse. It has UI, so one can do click-ops if they want, but one can then export all the rules into custom definitions and apply in any other cluster. Obviously, you can configure NeuVector using only YAML as well. Feel free to explore their GitHub. Although, the website has more information about the tool.
- Tetragon - another real-time observability/security tool based on eBPF by the developers of Cilium. It doesn’t do CVE scans like NeuVector, but provides some real-time visibility and rules enforcement. Also, it doesn’t have a fancy UI.
- Cilium service mesh. It’s also based on eBPF. Check it out if you want to have a service mesh, but not sure about heavyweight solutions like Istio.
- Despite that several Cilium-based tools I mentioned before, the second talk was about the Cilium Cluster Mesh. It’s not new, but this solution looks very promising, especially if you’re running multiple clusters for HA or multi-region purposes.
#Kubernetes #security #networking
A new OPS-ish books collection from Humble Bundle - Linux and Sysadmin Tools.
As usual, you can pay a little bit more than €17 to unlock the whole bundle of 15 books.
Speaking of the books I can see there, I’ve heard that “Linux Pocket Guide” by Daniel J. Barrett is a good entry level book. Also, I’ve heard that “Linux System Programming” by Robert Live is good, although a little bit too specific. I’m personally interested in the AWK book the most. I use it in my day-to-day work quite frequently and I feel like I still too far away from its true potential.
#books
A nice overview of how Docker works on non-Linux hosts as well as an explanation, why I/O operations are so slow. Plus, some hints on how to make it faster for the local development.
tl;dr. Because Docker requires Linux capabilities, thus is has to have Linux VM to run Linux-based images on MacOS and Windows. This VM shares filesystem with the host, which is slow. There’s a new implementation VirtioFS, which is faster, but still not ideal.
We briefly discussed ways of running Docker on the new M-based Macs on our previous voice chat and this article has links to some tools we mentioned there, specifically: Rancher Desktop and Colima.
Also, I recall developers at my previous job complaining about slow-ish Docker performance, but IIRC VirtioFS was not widely adopted back then.
#docker #linux
Monokle CLI is yet another tool to validate cnfiguration for the objects in your
Kubernetes clusters. It's a part of a bigger Monokle project and can be used as a CLI and integrated into your CI/CD pipeline.
For now it can validate:
- YAML syntax
- The schemas of your YAMLs against a configurable K8s version
- Links/references between Kubernetes resources
- A set of predefined OpenPolicyAgent (OPA) policies
- Custom rules written in typescript
Also, it looks like there's an active development around this tool at the moment. So, let's see, how it goes.
#kubernetes
The new issue of the CatOps Digest came a little bit later, but it’s here now 🎉
#newsletter
An “Awesome SLOs” list.
Books, articles, videos, and more.
Also, it’s open source, so feel free to contribute!
#slo #observability
Here’s an article on Currying in Go. Currying is a technique borrowed from the functional programming. It’s essentially a partial implementation of a function.
Anyways, I find such articles interesting, because they show some unconventional angles of a language. I haven’t personally used currying in Go yet. However, examples in that article look reasonable. Maybe, one I day I will try it.
I’m not saying that you should use this technique in your code, but maybe you find it useful. In the latter case, you’re welcome!
#go #programming
I try to be consistent with the digest even when I just want to lay on on a couch and watch some YouTube.
A new issue of the CatOps Digest is out!
#newsletter
Kubeshark is an traffic viewer for Kubernetes providing deep visibility into all API traffic and payloads going in, out and across containers and pods inside a Kubernetes cluster.
I don’t have much to add here. This is basically a Wireshark for Kubernetes. So, if you probably know it if you need something like this. Otherwise, I would say that one can live Ok without it. Yet, if you ever need to analyze, what’s going on with requests in your cluster, you can always use this tool!
#kubernetes #networking
Amazon has made 120 AWS courses available for free.
To get courses, you only need to know English and make a few additional steps:
0. Login OR Create an account in Amazon
After sign in/up, you will be redirected here
1. Choose and go to any course you like
2. Click "Order Now for free"
3. Get the error "Sorry, we couldn't complete your purchase". Press "change your country/region"
4. Click on the "Country / Region Settings". It will open with "Current country/region – Unknown"
5. Click Change
6. Now you need to enter absolutely any address and mobile phone from the USA. You can take any from here. The mobile phone must be indicated without spaces/brackets/dashes - i.e. only numbers.
7. Now you can return and get courses.
P.S. That works up to 9 Dec 2022. You can access courses up to 28 Apr 2023.
P.P.S. You can get only 6 courses if you click them one by one. But if you order many courses at the same time - the number of ordered courses will be limited to the number that you will have time to order before Amazon prepares 6 courses in your Amazon Online Learning cabinet. So click quickly to get more courses :)