I have some serious questions for you Twitter. What currently prevents the wide adoption of chaos engineering in your organization?
#SRE #AWS #Serverless #Software #ChaosEngineeing
-
Show this thread
-
Replying to @adhorn
Hoping that engineers will maintain tooling in their spare time instead of making the tooling a particular team's responsibility and/or giving it budget
2 replies 0 retweets 6 likes -
Replying to @mendel
Interesting - never heard that one. Can you tell me more?
2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @adhorn
Although a better overview of the situation is that the desire to do chaos experiments got ahead of the tooling to support it, which is admittedly a nice problem to have
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @mendel
So,if I understand, currently it is mostly hard to start, because of the lack of tooling? :)
2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @adhorn
Huh, it's more interesting then that! In the beginning (2013): manual injection. 2017: tooling but still some large scale manual plans. 2019: lack of up to date tooling gets us out of the habit, meaning fewer large manual experiments _too_. Incentives are hard.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @mendel
That's interesting though - when tooling does not keep pace with the rest. Why did that happen? Lack of tooling team (ownership)? Lack of processes?
1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
Definitely lack of tooling team. A lot of the initial tooling was from when we were more engineering-focused than product-focused, and since then has relied quite a bit on hackdays.
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.