Join us

ContentUpdates from FAUN.dev()...
Link
@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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  

Link
@varbear shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

Before You Push: Implementing Quality Gates in Your Software Project

This post discusses best practices for automated testing in software engineering, including unit tests and integration tests for databases, APIs, and emulators. It also covers end-to-end tests using tools like Cypress, Appium, Postman, and more. Additionally, it highlights the importance of environm.. read more  

Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

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
Link
@kaptain shared a link, 4 months, 4 weeks ago
FAUN.dev()

You Want Microservices—But Do You Need Them?

Amazon Prime Video ditched its pricey microservices maze and rebuilt as asingle-process monolith, cutting ops costs by 90%. No big press release. Just results. Same move from Twilio Segment. And Shopify. Both pulled their tangled systems back intomodular monoliths- cleaner, faster, easier to test, a.. read more  

You Want Microservices—But Do You Need Them?
FAUN.dev() is a developer-first platform built with a simple goal: help engineers stay sharp without wasting their time. It curates practical newsletters, thoughtful technical blogs, and useful developer tools that focus on signal over noise.

Created by engineers, for engineers, FAUN.dev() is where experienced developers turn to keep up with the fast-moving world of DevOps, Kubernetes, Cloud Native, AI, and modern programming. We handpick what matters and skip the fluff.

If it’s on FAUN.dev(), it’s worth your attention.

Beyond curation, we run a course marketplace (WIP) designed to keep developers current. These courses go deep into the subjects that shape real-world work—things like Kubernetes internals, modern DevOps workflows, cloud-native architecture, and using AI tools to build faster and smarter. It’s practical learning, taught by people who’ve done the work. Developers from companies like GitHub, Netflix, and Shopify already rely on FAUN.dev() to stay on top of their game. They trust us because we keep it real: no hype, no filler, just what you need to grow and do your best work. For sponsors and partners, FAUN.dev() offers access to a focused, engaged audience of technical professionals. This isn’t just another broad developer community—it’s a place where smart engineers go to get smarter. If you have something meaningful to offer them, you’ll be in good company. In short, FAUN.dev() is more than a content hub. It’s a place to grow, to learn, and to connect with what really matters in software today.