Reliability Enablers (SREpath)
Reliability Enablers
#28 - Reacting to Google's SRE Book 2016 (Chapter 1 Part 1)
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#28 - Reacting to Google's SRE Book 2016 (Chapter 1 Part 1)

Sebastian and I got together to react to and discuss 5 passages from Chapter 1 of Google's Site Reliability Engineering book (2016) by Betsy Beyer, Jennifer Pettof, Niall Murphy, et al.

We covered passages like:

  1. The sysadmin approach and the accompanying development ops split have a number of disadvantages and pitfalls

  2. Google has chosen to run our systems with a different approach. Our Site Reliability Engineering teams focus on hiring software engineers to run our products

  3. The term DevOps emerged in industry. One could equivalently view SRE as a specific implementation of DevOps with some idiosyncratic extensions.

  4. Google caps operational work for SREs at 50 percent of their time. Their remaining time should be spent using their coding skills on project work.

  5. Product development and SRE teams can enjoy a productive working relationship by eliminating the structural conflict in their respective goals.

Discussion about this podcast

Reliability Enablers (SREpath)
Reliability Enablers
Software reliability is a tough topic for engineers in many organizations. The Reliability Enablers (Ash Patel and Sebastian Vietz) know this from experience. Join us as we demystify reliability jargon like SRE, DevOps, and more. We interview experts and share practical insights. Our mission is to help you boost your success in reliability-enabling areas like observability, incident response, release engineering, and more.