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@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Building Mac Farm: Running 2000+ iOS Pipelines Daily

At Trendyol, they runover 2,000 iOSpipelines daily across130 Mac machines, executing50,000+ unit testsand10,000+ UI testsfor their iOS apps. The team initiated a mobile CI transformation to address the challenges of scale and performance as their team grew and AI usage increased. They built a macOS .. read more  

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@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Partitions, Sharding, and Split-for-Heat in DynamoDB

DynamoDB starts to grumble when a single partition gets hit with more than 1,000WCU. To dodge throttling, writes need to fan out across shards. Recommended move: start with10 logical shards. WatchCloudWatch metrics. DialNup or down. Letburstandadaptive capacitybuy you breathing room - untilSplit-for.. read more  

Partitions, Sharding, and Split-for-Heat in DynamoDB
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@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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How to Get Developers in Your Team to Contribute to Your Test Automation

A fresh blog post dives into how to get devs pulling their weight ontest automation- not as extra credit, but as part of shipping code. The playbook: tie automation work straight to thedefinition of done, clear up who owns what, and stop pretending delivery pressure is a mystery. The big idea? Most .. read more  

How to Get Developers in Your Team to Contribute to Your Test Automation
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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In-place Pod resizing in Kubernetes: How it works and how to use it

Kubernetes 1.33 and 1.34 takein-place Pod resource updatesfrom beta to battle-ready. You can now tweak CPU and memory on the fly - no Pod restarts needed. It's on by default. What’s new: memory downsizing with guardrails, kubelet metrics that actually tell you what’s going on, and smarter retries th.. read more  

In-place Pod resizing in Kubernetes: How it works and how to use it
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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KubeCon North America 2025 Recap: Federation and

HAProxy just droppedUniversal Mesh, a fresh spin on service mesh design. Forget the per-service sidecars - this model plants high-speed gateways at the network edges instead. Result? Lighter by 30–50% on resources, easier to upgrade, and way less hassle routing traffic across Kubernetes, VMs, and cl.. read more  

KubeCon North America 2025 Recap: Federation and
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Ingress NGINX Is Retiring. Here’s Your Path Forward with HAProxy

TheIngress NGINX projectis riding off into the sunset by March 2026. Time to pick a new horse. One strong contender: theHAProxy Kubernetes Ingress Controller. It matches feature-for-feature, comes with deeper observability, and reloads configs without taking your cluster offline. HAProxy’s not stopp.. read more  

Ingress NGINX Is Retiring. Here’s Your Path Forward with HAProxy
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Developers don’t care about Kubernetes clusters

Most cloud-native tools obsess over clusters. Not developers. That means poor support for things like promoting code between environments or deploying by feature - not just by repo. The author pushes for a better way: platforms that hide the Kubernetes mess and tame CI/CD. Think feature-driven deplo.. read more  

Developers don’t care about Kubernetes clusters
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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udwall: A Tool for Making UFW and Docker Play Nice With Each Other

Hexmos droppedudwall, a declarative firewall manager that finally makesUFWandDockerplay nice. Docker’s notorious for bulldozing past UFW rules via iptables. udwall patches that hole. It syncs rules across both, auto-reconciles changes, backs up configs, and plugs cleanly intoAnsible. No more duct-ta.. read more  

udwall: A Tool for Making UFW and Docker Play Nice With Each Other
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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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The Grafana trust problem

Grafana’s been busy clearing the shelves.Grafana Agent,Agent Flow, andOnCall? All deprecated. The replacement:Grafana Alloy- a one-stop observability agent that handles logs, metrics, traces, and OTEL without flinching. Meanwhile,Mimir 3.0ships with a Kafka-powered ingestion pipeline. More scalabili.. read more  

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@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Turning Kubernetes Last Access to Kubernetes Least Access Using KIEMPossible

KIEMPossible is a new open-source tool for Kubernetes entitlement cleanup. It maps out who has access to what - roles, entities, permissions - and shows how those are actually used across your clusters. Think of it as a permission microscope for AKS, EKS, GKE, and even the DIY K8s crowd. It breaks d.. read more  

Turning Kubernetes Last Access to Kubernetes Least Access Using KIEMPossible
DevOpsDayLA is Southern California's premier conference focused on the human side of technology delivery. For 15 years, we've brought together SoCal practitioners who understand that great software isn't just about tools, it's about people working together effectively.

The 2026 Lens: DevOps in an AI World: You're working in a world where AI is everywhere, embedded in your tools, requested by your management, and reshaping how teams deliver software. Whether you're embracing these changes or navigating the challenges they create, your experience matters.

We're looking for stories about how you and your organizations are adapting your mindsets, processes, and team dynamics in this rapidly evolving landscape. How did your team integrate AI into existing workflows? What changed about collaboration when AI entered the picture? Where do humans remain critical in automated processes? How do you build the next generation of engineers when entry-level work is automated? What are the real implementation challenges you're facing in Southern California's entertainment, gaming, aerospace, retail, healthcare, and manufacturing companies?

What makes DevOpsDayLA different: We focus on culture, collaboration, and cross-industry implementation stories rather than pure technical deep-dives. We're all about the people and processes that make technology successful in an AI world, not the technology itself.

We especially welcome new speakers, under-represented voices, and fresh perspectives from across SoCal's diverse tech landscape.

Attending

To attend DevOps Day LA purchase a  SCALE ticket via the SCALE website. Your ticket will provide access to both events.

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DevOpsDayLA sponsors have the opportunity to offer job opportunities, demonstrations of the latest tools, and world-class service offerings to facilitate organizations’ DevOps journey. The conference is presented with the support of the Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE). It provides a relaxed, casual, and diverse environment where experienced professionals, evangelists, agile practitioners, developers, job seekers, business executives, educators, students, and curiosity seekers can connect and attend talks on current topics.

For additional information, please contact us at los-angeles@devopsdays.org.

Speak at DevOpsDay LA

DevOpsDay LA sessions are selected through our calling for presentations for our 2026 event. We have posted a list of desired topics and best practices for submissions.

Friday, March 6, 2026 - 10:00 to 17:00