DevOps

DevOps is Killing Maintenance. Let’s Celebrate.

DevOps probably isn’t killing developers.

But it is changing how people think about development – from running projects to a focus on building and running services. And more importantly, DevOps is killing maintenance, or sustaining engineering, or whatever managers want to call it. And that’s something that we should all celebrate.

High-bandwidth collaboration and rapid response to change in Agile put a bullet in the head of offshore development done by outsourced CMMI Level 5 certified development factories. DevOps, by extending collaboration between development teams and operations teams and by increasing the velocity of delivery to production (up to hundreds or even thousands of times per day), and by using real feedback from production to drive development priorities and design decisions, has pulled the plug on the sick idea that maintenance should be done by sustaining engineering teams, offshored together with the help desk to somewhere far away in order to get access to cheap talent.

Agile started the job. Devops can finish it

While large companies were busy finding offshore development and testing partners, Agile changed the rules of the game on them.

Off shoring coding and testing work made sense in large-scale waterfall projects with lots of upfront planning and detailed specs that could be handed off from analysts to farms of programmers and testers.

But the success of Agile adoption in so many organizations, including large enterprises, made outsourcing or offshoring development work less practical and less effective. Instead of detailed analysis and documented hand-offs, Agile teams rely on high-bandwidth face-to-face collaboration with each other and especially with the Customer, and rapid iteration and feedback. Everything happens faster. Customers change priorities and requirements. Developers respond and build and deliver features faster.

Time-intensive and people-intensive work like manual testing and reviews are replaced with automated testing and static analysis in Continuous Integration, pair programming, and continuous review and improvement.

In this dynamic world, it doesn’t make sense to try to shovel work offshore. You have to give up too much in return for saving on staff costs. Teleconferencing across time zones and cultures, “virtual team rooms” using webcams, remote pair programming over Skype… these are all poor compromises that lead to misunderstandings, inefficiencies and mistakes. Sure you can do offshore Agile development, but just because you can do something doesn’t mean that it is a good idea.

Devops is going to finish the job

In DevOps, with Continuous Delivery and Continuous Deployment, changes happen even faster. Cycle times and response times get shorter, from months or weeks to days or hours. And feedback cycles are extended from development into production, letting the entire IT organization experiment and learn and improve from real customer use.

Developers collaborate even more, not just with each other and with customers, but with operations too, in order to make sure that the system is setup correctly and running optimally. This can’t be done effectively by development and operations teams working in different time zones. And it doesn’t need to be.

We all know how outsourcing has played out. In the name of efficiency we sliced out non-strategic parts of core IT and farmed them out to other companies, whether offshore or domestic. CIOs loved it because of the budgetary benefits. Meanwhile, it sparked a thousand conversations about what outsourcing meant for IT, the US economy, individual careers, and the relationship between people and businesses.

But it turned out that we took outsourcing too far. It makes sense for some functions, but it can also mean losing control over management, quality, and security, among other things. Now we’re seeing a lot of those big contracts being pulled back, and the word of the day is insourcing.

InformationWeek, DevOps: The New Outsourcing

Blurred Lines

DevOps intentionally blurs the lines between developers and operations, between coding and support. Engineering is engineering. Project work gets broken down into piece work: individual features or fixes or upgrades that can be completed quickly and pushed into production as soon as possible. Development work is prioritized together with operations and support tasks. What matters is whatever is important to the business, whatever is needed for the system to run. If the business needs something fixed now, your best people are fixing it, instead of giving it to some kids or shipping it overseas.

In DevOps, developers are accountable for making sure that their code works in production:

You build it, you run it

Which means making sure that the code gets into production, monitoring to make sure that it is working correctly, diagnosing and fixing any problems if something breaks.

New features, changes, fixes, upgrades, support work, deployment… everything is done by the same people, working together. Which means that maintenance and support gets the same management focus as new development. Which means that nobody is stuck in dead end job sustaining a dead end system. Which means that customers get better results, when they need them.

Except for enterprise legacy systems on life support, maintenance as most of us think of it today should die soon, thanks to DevOps. That alone makes DevOps worth adopting.

Jim Bird

Jim is an experienced CTO, software development manager and project manager, who has worked on high-performance, high-reliability mission-critical systems for many years, as well as building software development tools. His current interests include scaling Lean and Agile software development methodologies, software security and software assurance.
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