You are awesome. I also transitioned to DevOps after being a Network engineer for 5 years. Network automation is a great practise to move towards DevOps fiield.
Thank you. You have a very clear and structured way to teach. This was very informative. A lot of videos on youtube are too messy and all over the place, just scaring away good people. Thanks for helping newcomers.
As a recovering network engineer myself it's great to hear your perspective. I'd love to see some ETL and AI and ML devops coverage. I have a feeling these topics are going to be increasingly in high demand and it'd be interesting to get your take.
Awesome. Seems like a road map to follow. I'been into SoftDev + AWS for a while and this sequence of learning steps seem to make a lot of sense. Thanks much. Appreciate your content 👍
You don't how much you have made my life easier with this video😀... I battle with the temptation of going too deep in learning those applications/services. Thank you so much!
I’m working as a network engineer at the moment and looking at making the same move but I never considered myself as a “developer”, seems like too far of a jump
Man you are a life saver. I'm going to subscribe to your channel and save this video. I'm currently studying AWS, I'm going to sit for the solutions architect professional exam. I did a bit on Linux but now I know to go back and refocus on it. I'm going to follow this roadmap
Thank you so much for creating this video, I Iearned so much from this video. I was overwhelmed with all these tools that i need to know to become a devops Engineer but, this road map got me highly motivated to keep learning and this is what i needed now. Because, i was almost giving up. I find Kubernetes quite complex and a little hard to setup but if all the tools you mentioned can land me a job i am still willing to learn Kubernetes and the monitoring tools which works hand in hand. I look forward for more devops content thank you
Thank you so much for making this much needed tutorial. I have a question though. On your older video, you mentioned that programming skill like Python is essential to be a DevOps engineer. But you did not mention it here .If programming is required. How deep one should learn?
I'd like to see a part two of this for things to learn after you learn all this. Thanks for this video, it helped me clear out a reliable path. I look forward to watching more of your content
Yeah, my friend after studying 2 years as a normal programmer. Trust me, he barely made it, he got lucky and got hired by a company that needed desperately DevOps engineers. Now I’m on the lookout for a job, my friend said that in a month there is an opening for a DevOps engineer. (I’m a Java backend developer). He said that the job is mine if I want it, with good pay. I have absolutely 0 clue about DevOps. When I asked why, my friend told me the company would rather teach a guy devops instead of paying 55k for a senior. (I live in Spain, you live VERY comfortably with this pay). My point is, you can, it will just be a steeper learning curve
I live in Latam and the only open positions for Junior DevOps seem to be learning programs at EPAM. But Spain offers a lot of opportunities in this field, not sure why. I’m currently a backend developer with Node.js and PHP. Been learning RoR for the past month for a freelance project, but not sure if follow that path (RoR) or get into DevOps via those learning courses. I have already 3 yoe as a developer, and use Python at work for some automation and been using Ubuntu for the last few years before switching to Mac.
So I've just discovered your channel, thank you for putting out this content! Im going to explore your channel further as I'm interested in self teaching devops with no prior background in tech. For further video idea(s) I wondered if you could break down these steps into videos for further details about each -- I know you mentioned you've already done Ansible which I will be watching. Maybe from the prespective of someone completely new to tech, like what elements of Networking are most important to know, further filtering topics down. Self teaching is really confusing and as we know theres a lot of information to sift through and if you've never been in tech before you don't really know which networking topics/videos/books are useful use of your time, to gwt you the job, especially if you'd like to move your career as soon as possible (within reason). Also, Id really like to know how a day in the life actually is and what problems are devops engineers faced with during the day? Id like to get a deeper understanding of day to day work, so maybe videos about that? -- thank you once again!
Wow, thats crazy, I have some experience wth almost all of the components you went over today, including networking knowledge. DevOps is one of the 3 categories of job I'm actually looking for today.
Where would programming fall in this path? I have a foundation in Networking, System Adminstration, AD, Azure, Linux, Version Control, etc and currently work as a Cybersecurity Analyst. I plan to follow your path even if I feel confident in certain areas - but programming has always been a weak spot. I've relied far to heavily on ChatGPT and I'm just starting now to really learn the fundamentals of C and Python.
Can you do a video of how to look for DevOps jobs because I finished DevOps boot camp with all the basics and gained other skills but still struggling to find a job and I have applied for thousands of jobs but I still haven't got even one interview yet.
Please do a video about optimizing dockerfile. Thank you for your contents, enjoying them so far! And what do you think of NixOS or Nix in general? Do (or will) they have a role in devops workspace?
I've started as a Network Engineer too, only 3 years ago. Got the title with NE role twice from 2 different company, but barely get to do actual network engineer job. My day to day job is mostly vmware, SAN product and such. then I realize that : If you doing NE in the company that wasn't ISP or any kind of service provider. your day to day NE task is just troubleshoot some basic network like static routing, some dumbass switch that never have stp work properly etc etc. barely get any deep technical in NE side. from my 3 years I wasn't even get to touch ospf in real field, not even troubleshoot them. kinda sad. I've found my niche that I really like do work on the entire Infrastructure, been through abit of vm, private cloud. now heading for public cloud and will go to devops then devsecops after. since these are still infra role, got to learn alot of new stuff. really entertain me.
The biggest question for me is: can u straight away start devops career as ur first tech role? Because companies might ask in interviews what kind of problems you have solved before to improve the workflow in the company
I'm a QA Automation Engineer, do you think it's worth transitioning into DevOps in 2024 and beyond ? Or is it wise to go down the path of an application developer.
Hey there, both are rewarding paths. If you like coding more then go for developer, if you like infrastructure or automating things more with tools and scripts then go with DevOps.
Super informative video! You mentioned early in the video that you went into DevOps because you said the industry was moving away from on-prem infrastructure and there wasn't much opportunity for the traditional network engineering role. Do you still feel that is the case today? If so, who looks after all the datacenters of the major cloud players or ISPs?
Someone definitely keeps the lights on in those data centers! I just think those jobs are more niche nowadays than it was 10 years ago when most organizations had their own data center.
Just exactly what am trying to do now, am a jrn network engineer and my goal is to become a Devops engineer. Am currently pursuing a certificate in Cisco. I plan on moving towards Devops after the Cisco certification. This video, I feel like it made for me. thank you
Playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLnFWJCugpwfwQgjlSg_-csiJbpBIze2qa
Thank you. Please do not stop making these videos.
That's a great list. The only thing you really missed is monitoring. Dynatrace, splunk, pagerduty, dashboards etc. It was great start overall through.
You are awesome. I also transitioned to DevOps after being a Network engineer for 5 years. Network automation is a great practise to move towards DevOps fiield.
Im in year 5 in networking and want to move to DevOps, how did you start ?
Great video!
I would also add Kubernetrs (EKS), HELM and ArgoCD.
For sure!
This. Kubernetes is currently the #1 skill.
Thank you, this is immensely helpful for my learning path.
Thank you. You have a very clear and structured way to teach. This was very informative. A lot of videos on youtube are too messy and all over the place, just scaring away good people. Thanks for helping newcomers.
Thanks mate. Your way of explaining thing is marvellous. Please do not stop making videos.
Amazing .. Thanks for this Roadmap that include your feedback and experience.
As a recovering network engineer myself it's great to hear your perspective. I'd love to see some ETL and AI and ML devops coverage. I have a feeling these topics are going to be increasingly in high demand and it'd be interesting to get your take.
Incredible video. I started a devops job 2 months ago and i come to your channel first always
Awesome. Seems like a road map to follow.
I'been into SoftDev + AWS for a while and this sequence of learning steps seem to make a lot of sense.
Thanks much. Appreciate your content 👍
Good Video! Thanks for the roadmap, I would love to watch a video about optimizing Docker images!
You don't how much you have made my life easier with this video😀... I battle with the temptation of going too deep in learning those applications/services. Thank you so much!
I’m working as a network engineer at the moment and looking at making the same move but I never considered myself as a “developer”, seems like too far of a jump
Thank you. Without Kubernetes, I don't think it is easy to find a job.
Man you are a life saver. I'm going to subscribe to your channel and save this video. I'm currently studying AWS, I'm going to sit for the solutions architect professional exam. I did a bit on Linux but now I know to go back and refocus on it. I'm going to follow this roadmap
Please keep uploading videos. They're really useful. Thanks a lot
Thank you so much for creating this video, I Iearned so much from this video. I was overwhelmed with all these tools that i need to know to become a devops Engineer but, this road map got me highly motivated to keep learning and this is what i needed now. Because, i was almost giving up. I find Kubernetes quite complex and a little hard to setup but if all the tools you mentioned can land me a job i am still willing to learn Kubernetes and the monitoring tools which works hand in hand. I look forward for more devops content thank you
Great video , I just started my intership it is really helpful
very informative, thanks for sharing your experience
Thank you so much for making this much needed tutorial. I have a question though. On your older video, you mentioned that programming skill like Python is essential to be a DevOps engineer. But you did not mention it here .If programming is required. How deep one should learn?
I'd like to see a part two of this for things to learn after you learn all this. Thanks for this video, it helped me clear out a reliable path. I look forward to watching more of your content
After you learn all of that, you will know what you need to learn on your own. If you have been applying things as you go.
has anyone went to devops without becoming a developer?
no. you need to be a dev before, otherwise you.ll struggle and hate your life :)
Yeah, my friend after studying 2 years as a normal programmer.
Trust me, he barely made it, he got lucky and got hired by a company that needed desperately DevOps engineers.
Now I’m on the lookout for a job, my friend said that in a month there is an opening for a DevOps engineer. (I’m a Java backend developer).
He said that the job is mine if I want it, with good pay. I have absolutely 0 clue about DevOps.
When I asked why, my friend told me the company would rather teach a guy devops instead of paying 55k for a senior. (I live in Spain, you live VERY comfortably with this pay).
My point is, you can, it will just be a steeper learning curve
I live in Latam and the only open positions for Junior DevOps seem to be learning programs at EPAM. But Spain offers a lot of opportunities in this field, not sure why. I’m currently a backend developer with Node.js and PHP. Been learning RoR for the past month for a freelance project, but not sure if follow that path (RoR) or get into DevOps via those learning courses. I have already 3 yoe as a developer, and use Python at work for some automation and been using Ubuntu for the last few years before switching to Mac.
@@gs8plus405 makes sense, but this is more catered like you will work with a corporate all the time? I dont see dev ops in small businesses
Yes i was Cloud engineer then transition to Devops
What programing language is most important to learn?
So I've just discovered your channel, thank you for putting out this content! Im going to explore your channel further as I'm interested in self teaching devops with no prior background in tech. For further video idea(s) I wondered if you could break down these steps into videos for further details about each -- I know you mentioned you've already done Ansible which I will be watching. Maybe from the prespective of someone completely new to tech, like what elements of Networking are most important to know, further filtering topics down. Self teaching is really confusing and as we know theres a lot of information to sift through and if you've never been in tech before you don't really know which networking topics/videos/books are useful use of your time, to gwt you the job, especially if you'd like to move your career as soon as possible (within reason).
Also, Id really like to know how a day in the life actually is and what problems are devops engineers faced with during the day? Id like to get a deeper understanding of day to day work, so maybe videos about that?
-- thank you once again!
Wow, thats crazy, I have some experience wth almost all of the components you went over today, including networking knowledge. DevOps is one of the 3 categories of job I'm actually looking for today.
What are the other 2 categories of if I may ask?
@@_Mohanned Cyber security, software development
Where would programming fall in this path? I have a foundation in Networking, System Adminstration, AD, Azure, Linux, Version Control, etc and currently work as a Cybersecurity Analyst. I plan to follow your path even if I feel confident in certain areas - but programming has always been a weak spot. I've relied far to heavily on ChatGPT and I'm just starting now to really learn the fundamentals of C and Python.
Best Roadmap ever, Thank you.
This video is so complete and helpful. Thank you. Subscribed to the channel. 🚀
Can you do a video of how to look for DevOps jobs because I finished DevOps boot camp with all the basics and gained other skills but still struggling to find a job and I have applied for thousands of jobs but I still haven't got even one interview yet.
@DevOpsJourney : It would be great if you could do a vedio on how to optimize a docker file
Please do a video about optimizing dockerfile. Thank you for your contents, enjoying them so far!
And what do you think of NixOS or Nix in general? Do (or will) they have a role in devops workspace?
this is gold bro, Thanks !!!
Great content for aspiring devops engineers. Keep making more tutorials pls.
Thanks, very helpful
I've started as a Network Engineer too, only 3 years ago.
Got the title with NE role twice from 2 different company, but barely get to do actual network engineer job.
My day to day job is mostly vmware, SAN product and such. then I realize that : If you doing NE in the company that wasn't ISP or any kind of service provider.
your day to day NE task is just troubleshoot some basic network like static routing, some dumbass switch that never have stp work properly etc etc. barely get any deep technical in NE side. from my 3 years I wasn't even get to touch ospf in real field, not even troubleshoot them. kinda sad.
I've found my niche that I really like do work on the entire Infrastructure, been through abit of vm, private cloud. now heading for public cloud and will go to devops then devsecops after.
since these are still infra role, got to learn alot of new stuff. really entertain me.
thank you! great video
The biggest question for me is: can u straight away start devops career as ur first tech role? Because companies might ask in interviews what kind of problems you have solved before to improve the workflow in the company
Is it possible just to show off home projects and get recognition in your troubleshooting skills? Or it needs real time projects/work
Probably not your first job. You start out at a lower level admin or in ops then use your soft skills to get transfer into a devops or platform team.
no !
no!
Your videos are really nice. Can you make a video on how we can optimize a docker file? @DevopsJourney
Awesome video Sensai!!
Great roadmap. But I'd also add k8s.
I'm a QA Automation Engineer, do you think it's worth transitioning into DevOps in 2024 and beyond ? Or is it wise to go down the path of an application developer.
Hey there, both are rewarding paths. If you like coding more then go for developer, if you like infrastructure or automating things more with tools and scripts then go with DevOps.
to be short : forget devops, concentrate on a single skill and make a career on it
Great video, thank you man🌹❤️.
Super informative video! You mentioned early in the video that you went into DevOps because you said the industry was moving away from on-prem infrastructure and there wasn't much opportunity for the traditional network engineering role. Do you still feel that is the case today? If so, who looks after all the datacenters of the major cloud players or ISPs?
Someone definitely keeps the lights on in those data centers! I just think those jobs are more niche nowadays than it was 10 years ago when most organizations had their own data center.
Optimize a Docker file video. Please
I am at the ISP NOC,Cisco background.How do I do the transition?
Good content .
May be you missed kubernetes, considering current market and industry 😊
Nice explanation 🎉
curious why you did not took the cyber security path which i think is in line with your path.
We should add programming go or python somewhere from your list 😊
Can you please list some of the websites/resources to practice projects?
Do Docker please
Im a freshly cs graduate and im kinda lost, to be a dev ops i have to pass through software enginering or i can go directly to dev ops path?
It's a hybrid role, like a developer + sysadmin. You should know a little bit about both sides to be a jr devops
@@DevOpsJourney which path do you recommend me take to get there? BackEnd and then DevOps or Web development? Thanks for you answer.
@@joaohenriques3872
Back end IS game developer :)
@@joaohenriques3872 Get into back-end development so you can learn scripting and some Linux. Ensure you do app deployments as well.
Thanks a lot.
thank you very much
great video
Thank you
Great video ! Thanks 😊
nice vid
succinct
Just exactly what am trying to do now, am a jrn network engineer and my goal is to become a Devops engineer. Am currently pursuing a certificate in Cisco. I plan on moving towards Devops after the Cisco certification. This video, I feel like it made for me. thank you
Good video, try to keep it short
CentOS is dead btw
Thanks, I should of said something like RHEL.
really? How? I see many companies are still on Centos.
Use arch btw
Great content for aspiring devops engineers.Make more devops tutorials pls.
On June 2024