Home Page Icon
Home Page
Table of Contents for
Cover
Close
Cover
by Ali Basiri, Nora Jones, Aaron Blohowiak, Lorin Hochstein, Casey Rosenthal
Chaos Engineering
I. Introduction
1. Why Do Chaos Engineering?
How Does Chaos Engineering Differ from Testing?
It’s Not Just for Netflix
Prerequisites for Chaos Engineering
2. Managing Complexity
Understanding Complex Systems
Example of Systemic Complexity
Takeaway from the Example
II. The Principles of Chaos
Experimentation
Advanced Principles
3. Hypothesize about Steady State
Characterizing Steady State
Forming Hypotheses
4. Vary Real-World Events
5. Run Experiments in Production
State and Services
Input in Production
Other People’s Systems
Agents Making Changes
External Validity
Poor Excuses for Not Practicing Chaos
I’m pretty sure it will break!
If it does break, we’re in big trouble!
Get as Close as You Can
6. Automate Experiments to Run Continuously
Automatically Executing Experiments
Automatically Creating Experiments
7. Minimize Blast Radius
III. Chaos In Practice
8. Designing Experiments
1. Pick a Hypothesis
2. Choose the Scope of the Experiment
3. Identify the Metrics You’re Going to Watch
4. Notify the Organization
5. Run the Experiment
6. Analyze the Results
7. Increase the Scope
8. Automate
9. Chaos Maturity Model
Sophistication
Adoption
Draw the Map
10. Conclusion
Resources
Search in book...
Toggle Font Controls
Playlists
Add To
Create new playlist
Name your new playlist
Playlist description (optional)
Cancel
Create playlist
Sign In
Email address
Password
Forgot Password?
Create account
Login
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Sign Up
Full Name
Email address
Confirm Email Address
Password
Login
Create account
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Next
Next Chapter
Chaos Engineering
Add Highlight
No Comment
..................Content has been hidden....................
You can't read the all page of ebook, please click
here
login for view all page.
Day Mode
Cloud Mode
Night Mode
Reset