| name | senior-devops |
| description | Comprehensive DevOps skill for CI/CD, infrastructure automation, containerization, and cloud platforms (AWS, GCP, Azure). Includes pipeline setup, infrastructure as code, deployment automation, and monitoring. Use when setting up pipelines, deploying applications, managing infrastructure, implementing monitoring, or optimizing deployment processes. |
| disable-model-invocation | false |
Senior Devops
Complete toolkit for senior devops with modern tools and best practices.
Quick Start
Main Capabilities
This skill provides three core capabilities through automated scripts:
python scripts/pipeline_generator.py ./app --platform=github --stages=build,test,deploy
python scripts/terraform_scaffolder.py ./infra --provider=aws --module=ecs-service --verbose
python3 scripts/deployment_manager.py deploy --env=staging --image=app:1.2.3 --strategy=blue-green --verbose --json
Core Capabilities
1. Pipeline Generator
Scaffolds CI/CD pipeline configurations for GitHub Actions or CircleCI, with stages for build, test, security scan, and deploy.
Example — GitHub Actions workflow:
name: CI/CD Pipeline
on:
push:
branches: [main, develop]
pull_request:
branches: [main]
jobs:
build-and-test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Set up Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: "20"
cache: "npm"
- run: npm ci
- run: npm run lint
- run: npm test -- --coverage
- name: Upload coverage
uses: codecov/codecov-action@v4
build-docker:
needs: build-and-test
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Build and push image
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
with:
push: ${{ github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
tags: ghcr.io/${{ github.repository }}:${{ github.sha }}
deploy:
needs: build-docker
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Deploy to ECS
run: |
aws ecs update-service \
--cluster production \
--service app-service \
--force-new-deployment
Usage:
python scripts/pipeline_generator.py <project-path> --platform=github|circleci --stages=build,test,deploy
2. Terraform Scaffolder
Generates, validates, and plans Terraform modules. Enforces consistent module structure and runs terraform validate + terraform plan before any apply.
Example — AWS ECS service module:
# modules/ecs-service/main.tf
resource "aws_ecs_task_definition" "app" {
family = var.service_name
requires_compatibilities = ["FARGATE"]
network_mode = "awsvpc"
cpu = var.cpu
memory = var.memory
container_definitions = jsonencode([{
name = var.service_name
image = var.container_image
essential = true
portMappings = [{
containerPort = var.container_port
protocol = "tcp"
}]
environment = [for k, v in var.env_vars : { name = k, value = v }]
logConfiguration = {
logDriver = "awslogs"
options = {
awslogs-group = "/ecs/${var.service_name}"
awslogs-region = var.aws_region
awslogs-stream-prefix = "ecs"
}
}
}])
}
resource "aws_ecs_service" "app" {
name = var.service_name
cluster = var.cluster_id
task_definition = aws_ecs_task_definition.app.arn
desired_count = var.desired_count
launch_type = "FARGATE"
network_configuration {
subnets = var.private_subnet_ids
security_groups = [aws_security_group.app.id]
assign_public_ip = false
}
load_balancer {
target_group_arn = aws_lb_target_group.app.arn
container_name = var.service_name
container_port = var.container_port
}
}
Usage:
python scripts/terraform_scaffolder.py <target-path> --provider=aws|gcp|azure --module=ecs-service|gke-deployment|aks-service [--verbose]
3. Deployment Manager
Generates Kubernetes deployment manifests and ordered kubectl runbooks for blue/green or rolling strategies, with health-check gates before traffic switches and rollback runbooks. The tool writes manifests and prints the commands — it never applies them to a cluster itself, so every change gets a human review.
Example — Kubernetes blue/green deployment (blue-slot specific elements):
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: app-blue
labels:
app: myapp
slot: blue
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: myapp
slot: blue
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: myapp
slot: blue
spec:
containers:
- name: app
image: ghcr.io/org/app:1.2.3
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /healthz
port: 8080
initialDelaySeconds: 10
periodSeconds: 5
resources:
requests:
cpu: "250m"
memory: "256Mi"
limits:
cpu: "500m"
memory: "512Mi"
Usage:
python scripts/deployment_manager.py deploy \
--env=staging|production \
--image=app:1.2.3 \
--strategy=blue-green|rolling \
--health-check-url=https://app.example.com/healthz
python scripts/deployment_manager.py rollback --env=production --to-version=1.2.2
python scripts/deployment_manager.py --analyze --env=production
Resources
- Pattern Reference:
references/cicd_pipeline_guide.md — detailed CI/CD patterns, best practices, anti-patterns
- Workflow Guide:
references/infrastructure_as_code.md — IaC step-by-step processes, optimization, troubleshooting
- Technical Guide:
references/deployment_strategies.md — deployment strategy configs, security considerations, scalability
- Tool Scripts:
scripts/ directory
Development Workflow
1. Infrastructure Changes (Terraform)
python scripts/terraform_scaffolder.py ./infra --provider=aws --module=ecs-service --verbose
terraform -chdir=infra init
terraform -chdir=infra validate
terraform -chdir=infra plan -out=tfplan
terraform -chdir=infra apply tfplan
aws ecs describe-services --cluster production --services app-service \
--query 'services[0].{Status:status,Running:runningCount,Desired:desiredCount}'
2. Application Deployment
python scripts/pipeline_generator.py . --platform=github --stages=build,test,security,deploy
docker build -t ghcr.io/org/app:$(git rev-parse --short HEAD) .
docker push ghcr.io/org/app:$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)
python scripts/deployment_manager.py deploy \
--env=production \
--image=app:$(git rev-parse --short HEAD) \
--strategy=blue-green \
--health-check-url=https://app.example.com/healthz
kubectl get pods -n production -l app=myapp
kubectl rollout status deployment/app-blue -n production
kubectl patch service app-svc -n production \
-p '{"spec":{"selector":{"slot":"blue"}}}'
3. Rollback Procedure
python scripts/deployment_manager.py rollback --env=production --to-version=1.2.2
kubectl rollout undo deployment/app -n production
kubectl rollout status deployment/app -n production
kubectl get pods -n production -l app=myapp
curl -sf https://app.example.com/healthz || echo "ROLLBACK FAILED — escalate"
Multi-Cloud Cross-References
Use these companion skills for cloud-specific deep dives:
| Skill | Cloud | Use When |
|---|
| aws-solution-architect | AWS | ECS/EKS, Lambda, VPC design, cost optimization |
| azure-cloud-architect | Azure | AKS, App Service, Virtual Networks, Azure DevOps |
| gcp-cloud-architect | GCP | GKE, Cloud Run, VPC, Cloud Build (coming soon) |
Multi-cloud vs single-cloud decision:
- Single-cloud (default) — lower operational complexity, deeper managed-service integration, better cost leverage with committed-use discounts
- Multi-cloud — required when mandated by compliance/data residency, acquiring companies on different clouds, or needing best-of-breed services across providers (e.g., AWS for compute + GCP for ML)
- Hybrid — on-prem + cloud; use when regulated workloads must stay on-prem while burst/non-sensitive workloads run in the cloud
Start single-cloud. Add a second cloud only when there is a concrete business or compliance driver — not for theoretical redundancy.
Cloud-Agnostic IaC
Terraform / OpenTofu (Default Choice)
Terraform (or its open-source fork OpenTofu) is the recommended IaC tool for most teams:
- Single language (HCL) across AWS, Azure, GCP, and 3,000+ providers
- State management with remote backends (S3, GCS, Azure Blob)
- Plan-before-apply workflow prevents drift surprises
- Cross-reference terraform-patterns for module structure, state isolation, and CI/CD integration
Pulumi (Programming Language IaC)
Choose Pulumi when the team strongly prefers TypeScript, Python, Go, or C# over HCL:
- Full programming language — loops, conditionals, unit tests native
- Same cloud provider coverage as Terraform
- Easier onboarding for dev teams that resist learning HCL
When to Use Cloud-Native IaC
| Tool | Use When |
|---|
| CloudFormation | AWS-only shop; need native AWS support (StackSets, Service Catalog) |
| Bicep | Azure-only shop; simpler syntax than ARM templates |
| Cloud Deployment Manager | GCP-only; rare — most GCP teams prefer Terraform |
Rule of thumb: Use Terraform/OpenTofu unless you are 100% committed to a single cloud AND the cloud-native tool offers a feature Terraform cannot replicate (e.g., AWS Service Catalog integration).
Troubleshooting
Check the comprehensive troubleshooting section in references/deployment_strategies.md.