- Course
- ILX Course
Practical Use Cases for Azure Chaos Studio
You probably already know that chaos engineering can help you better expect the unexpected. This course will teach you how to identify more specific use cases for chaos engineering through the use of Azure Chaos Studio.
What you'll learn
It’s time to roll up your sleeves and begin putting chaos engineering principles into practice. In this course, Practical Uses for Azure Chaos Studio, you’ll learn to identify appropriate use cases for chaos engineering and begin learning how to leverage Azure Chaos Studio features to cover both left-shift and right-shift use cases. First, you’ll explore building and maintaining resilience with both ad-hoc experiments and CI/CD lifecycle events. Next, you’ll discover the basic terminology and experiment layouts employed in Azure Chaos Studio. Finally, you’ll become familiar with the Azure Chaos Studio Fault and Action library. When you’re finished with this course, you’ll have the skills and knowledge of Azure Chaos Studio needed to begin selecting scenarios and planning your own chaos experiments.
Table of contents
About the author
Howdy fellow student of life! Thanks for your interest in learning more about what makes me tick. Throughout my tech career, I found that I had the most fun and the greatest satisfaction when I was helping others learn about and embrace software and related technologies. So, when I was honored to be offered a staff position as a training architect -- I realized a dream to combine my passion for technology and my passion for teaching others. I hope that the material I provide plays some small part in helping you pursue your passions, too. A leader of people, a shepherd of data -- and a follower of both -- I have more than 30 years in the tech industry, much of it focused on Microsoft stack services and databases, for both on-prem and cloud implementations. I cut my cloud teeth while reducing a patent to practice; we implemented a card game paradigm in a WCF service on Azure. It was late in 2012, when interacting with Azure involved a lot of co-mentoring with erstwhile Microsoft folks. I've had my head in the cloud(s) ever since!
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