Post Mortem Culture: Learning from Failure | Yury Niño Roa | Conf42 Chaos Engineering 2020

Conference: Conf42 Chaos Engineering 2020

Year: 2020

Yury Nino Roa DevOps Engineer @ Aval Digital Labs Practicing Chaos Engineering and reproducing outages have taught us that the culture of postmortems must be open and blameless. That is difficult, in part, due to the social stigma associated with publicly acknowledging the contributions of persons to outages. And although the scenarios simulated in a gameday are entirely realistic, it's hard to write-up postmortems that resume all events, hint human factors, recognize there is not a root cause and provide action items. In Aval Digital Labs, we are implementing a toolbox that automates the steps involved in chaos game days and generates postmortems using available in the market. — 0:00 About me 1:17 Have you written a Postmortem? 1:53 Agenda 2:29 What is a Postmortem? 3:53 If Postmortem are good, why don't we do it? 5:28 How to change a blameful culture? 5:43 Chaos Engineering 6:01 Chaos GameDays 7:12 What does it mean in practice? 9:00 Gaveta 11:50 Gaveta uses a hexagonal architecture 19:00 Promoting postmortem culture 19:35 Thank you! — 🥇 Gold Sponsors: ChaosIQ PagerDuty — Website 🚀🪐 https://www.conf42.com Reach out 📧📭 mark@conf42.com Conf42 Discord 🧑‍🤝‍🧑💬 https://discord.com/invite/dT6ZsFJ5ZM LinkedIn 👨‍💼💼 https://www.linkedin.com/company/49110720/ Twitter 🎵🐦https://twitter.com/conf42com Conf42Cast @ Spotify 🎧 https://tinyurl.com/bnyj6a8y