It’s funny how technology has a way of sneaking back into your life just when you think you’ve moved on for good. Jenkins and I have quite the history. Think of it as that reliable but slightly temperamental friend from your college days who you haven’t seen in years. A Blast from the Jenkins Past The last time Jenkins and I were on speaking terms was during my tenure at my former workplace, back when the CI/CD landscape looked very different than it does today. We weren’t just casual...| Pulumi Blog
Intro| Techdecline's Blog
Intro| Techdecline's Blog
Learn how to manage Kubernetes secrets securely with Pulumi ESC and the Secrets Store CSI Driver.| pulumi
How we used Pulumi to practice Infrastructure as Code with DigitalOcean| Land of Unknwon
At the PulumiUP virtual event, Pulumi made its security management product, ESC (Environments, Secrets and Configuration) generally available, […]| DEVCLASS
I’ve finally come to the “conclusion” part of my blog series about infrastructure as code. The part I thought was going to be the easiest one to write…| Fear of Oblivion
The 6th entry in my blog series about IaC is dedicated to Pulumi. Pulumi is a very different beast, compared to the previously covered technologies (ARM, Bicep and Terraform), in that it is not based on a Domain Specific Language. Instead, Pulumi allows you to write your IaC in your language of choice. As long as your language of choice is JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, Go or .NET Core (C#, F# and VB). This makes the Pulumi experience a lot different from using a technology that uses a DSL (o...| Fear of Oblivion