100 lines
No EOL
4.8 KiB
JSON
100 lines
No EOL
4.8 KiB
JSON
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"value": "2025-04-21T01:21:40+00:00"
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"title": [
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{
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"value": "Fail fast, fix fast\n"
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}
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],
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"created": [
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"value": "2023-12-17T00:00:00+00:00"
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{
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"value": "\n <p>I recently listened to a podcast that discussed Elon Musk and quoted something like, \"If 20% of attempts aren't failing, you aren't taking enough risk\".<\/p>\n\n<p>In a software context, I'm not advocating that one in five production releases should fail, but I like trying new ideas and approaches.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you're releasing small changes regularly or practising continuous deployment, changes are easy to revert if there's a problem or the smaller the deployment and the more recently the code was written, then it should be easier to resolve the issue and \"fix forward\" instead of rolling back.<\/p>\n\n<p>Using feature flags lets you quickly turn off a feature flag while investigating and resolving the issue without needing another deployment.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you have an appropriate plan to follow in the case of an issue, that mitigates the risk and minimises the impact of a potential issue - making it quicker to resolve and restore the service.<\/p>\n\n<p>Two of the DORA metrics refer to failure rate and restoration time:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n<li>Deployment frequency<\/li>\n<li>Lead time for changes<\/li>\n<li>Change failure rate<\/li>\n<li>Time to restore service<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Then, it depends on your organisation's tolerance for risk and what's acceptable.<\/p>\n\n<p>But, the more frequent the releases, the lower the failure rate and the quicker it will be to restore the service if there is an issue.<\/p>\n\n ",
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"processed": "\n <p>I recently listened to a podcast that discussed Elon Musk and quoted something like, \"If 20% of attempts aren't failing, you aren't taking enough risk\".<\/p>\n\n<p>In a software context, I'm not advocating that one in five production releases should fail, but I like trying new ideas and approaches.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you're releasing small changes regularly or practising continuous deployment, changes are easy to revert if there's a problem or the smaller the deployment and the more recently the code was written, then it should be easier to resolve the issue and \"fix forward\" instead of rolling back.<\/p>\n\n<p>Using feature flags lets you quickly turn off a feature flag while investigating and resolving the issue without needing another deployment.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you have an appropriate plan to follow in the case of an issue, that mitigates the risk and minimises the impact of a potential issue - making it quicker to resolve and restore the service.<\/p>\n\n<p>Two of the DORA metrics refer to failure rate and restoration time:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n<li>Deployment frequency<\/li>\n<li>Lead time for changes<\/li>\n<li>Change failure rate<\/li>\n<li>Time to restore service<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Then, it depends on your organisation's tolerance for risk and what's acceptable.<\/p>\n\n<p>But, the more frequent the releases, the lower the failure rate and the quicker it will be to restore the service if there is an issue.<\/p>\n\n ",
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"summary": null
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