Vilas Veeraraghavan  |

Walmart Labs

Director Of Engineering

即将开始的GIAC课程

Chaos Engineering – past, present and future

混沌工程

2019-06-22 09:00--10:00

A large number of companies have actively reduced their dependence on a managed data center solution and instead have migrated to a cloud native solution for all of their software needs. The rush to make massive ecosystems of micro services in the cloud has resulted in creating extremely complex cross connections that are not necessarily well-designed. This leads to customer facing outages and problems caused by small glitches in the system which require hours of debugging and almost always result in lost revenue. To prevent this, we propose a solution - create controlled Chaos in the system and learn where your weaknesses are before your customers do. This field of engineering is called - Chaos engineering (or resilience engineering). This is a rapidly growing discipline that began at Netflix and has now spawned an entire industry on its own.

In this talk, I will present the history and the primary motivations that propelled the movement for chaos engineering. I will also touch upon the innovations, the state of the industry and the popular products that are being used to adopt this discipline in companies today. I will draw on my experiences at Netflix and Walmart labs to present a picture of the future where chaos engineering will become a staple for any cloud delivery platform.

Vilas joined Walmart labs in 2017 and leads the Continuous integration and continuous deployment teams which are responsible for the testing and deployment pipelines for eCommerce and Stores. Prior to joining Walmart Labs, he had long stints at Comcast and Netflix where he wore many hats as automation, performance and failure testing lead. He loves breaking things and believes that Chaos engineering is the new normal for testing complex application ecosystems.

即将开始的GIAC课程

Chaos Engineering – past, present and future

混沌工程

2019-06-22 09:00--10:00

A large number of companies have actively reduced their dependence on a managed data center solution and instead have migrated to a cloud native solution for all of their software needs. The rush to make massive ecosystems of micro services in the cloud has resulted in creating extremely complex cross connections that are not necessarily well-designed. This leads to customer facing outages and problems caused by small glitches in the system which require hours of debugging and almost always result in lost revenue. To prevent this, we propose a solution - create controlled Chaos in the system and learn where your weaknesses are before your customers do. This field of engineering is called - Chaos engineering (or resilience engineering). This is a rapidly growing discipline that began at Netflix and has now spawned an entire industry on its own.

In this talk, I will present the history and the primary motivations that propelled the movement for chaos engineering. I will also touch upon the innovations, the state of the industry and the popular products that are being used to adopt this discipline in companies today. I will draw on my experiences at Netflix and Walmart labs to present a picture of the future where chaos engineering will become a staple for any cloud delivery platform.

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