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DevOps Interview Questions

"DevOps is not a goal, but a never-ending process of continual improvement." - Jez Humble


ℹ️ Β This repository contains interview questions on various DevOps related topics

πŸ“Š Β There are currently 109 interview questions

⚠️  Some answers might be only partial and shouldn't be used as they are in interviews

πŸ“ Β You can add more questions & answers by submitting pull requests :)


DevOps
DevOps

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Advanced ⭐
Jenkins
Jenkins

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Advanced ⭐
AWS
AWS

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Network
Network

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Linux
Linux

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Ansible
Ansible

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Terraform
Terraform

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Docker
Docker

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
kubernetes
Kubernetes

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Python
Python

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Prometheus
Prometheus

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Git
Git

Beginner πŸ‘Ά
Advanced ⭐

DevOps

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

What is Continuous Integration?
What is Continuous Deployment?
What is Continuous Delivery?
What DevOps helps us to achieve?
What do you consider as best practices for CI/CD?
What are the anti-patterns of DevOps?
Which DevOps tools you consider as top tools? Which tools have you worked with?
What systems and/or tools are you using for the following?:
  • CI/CD
  • Provisioning infrastructure
  • Configuration Management
  • Monitoring & alerting
  • Logging
  • Code review
  • Code coverage
  • Tests

What are you taking into consideration when choosing a tool/technology?

You may use one or all of the following:

  • mature vs. cutting edge
  • community size
  • architecture aspects - agent vs. agentless, master vs. masterless, etc.
What is the difference between SQL and NoSQL?
What the difference between VPN and VPS?
What is the difference between SSH and SSL?
What scripting language are you familiar with? why specifically this one?
Describe some of the scripts you have written. What are they used for? how long did it take you to write them?
How long do you think it would take you to learn another language?
Explain mutable vs. immutable infrastructure

In mutable infrastructure paradigm, changes applied on top of the existing infrastructure and over time the infrastructure builds up a history of changes. Ansible, Puppet and Chef are examples to tools which follow mutable infrastructure paradigm.

In immutable infrastructure paradigm, every change is actually new infrastructure. So a change to a server will result in a new server instead of updating it. Terraform is an example of technology which follows the mutable infrastructure paradigm.

⭐ Advanced

Tell me how you perform plan capacity for your CI/CD resources (e.g. servers, storage, etc.)
How would you structure/implement CD for an application which depends on several other applications?
How do you manage dependencies?
Explain what are design patterns. Which design patterns are you familiar with?
How do you measure your CI/CD quality? Are there any metrics you are using?
What is a configuration drift? What problems is it causing?

Configuration drift happens when in an environment of servers with the exact same configuration and software, a certain server or servers are being applied with updates or configuration which other servers don't get and over time these servers become slightly different than all others.

This situation might lead to bugs which hard to identify and reproduce.

How to deal with configuration drift?
In what scenarios would you prefer to use SQL?
In what scenarios would you prefer to use NoSQL?

Jenkins

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

What is a plugin?
What plugins are you using in Jenkins? Which do you consider to most useful?
Installation questions
* How to install Jenkins? * How to install a plugin? * How to install an agent?
Explain CI/CD and how you implemented in Jenkins
What type of jobs there are? what is the advantage of each type?
What ways are you familiar with to notify users on build results?
How to secure Jenkins?

⭐ Advanced

Write a script to remove all the jobs which include the string "REMOVE_ME"

AWS

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

Global Infrastructure
Explain the following
  • Availability zone
  • Region
  • Edge location

S3
Explain what is S3 and what is it used for
What is a bucket?
True or False? a bucket name must be globally unique
True
What objects in S3 consists of? * Another way to ask it: explain key, value, version id and metadata in context of objects
Explain data consistency
Can you host dynamic websites on s3? what about static websites?
What security measures have you taken in context of S3?
CloudFront
Explain what is CloudFront and what is it used for
Explain the following * Origin * Edge location * Distribution
What delivery methods available for the user with CDN?
True or False? objects are cached for the life of TTL
EC2
What type of instances have you created?
How to increase RAM for a given EC2 instance?

Network

Network questions can be found here

Linux

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

Explain what each of the following commands does and given an example on how to use it * ls * rm * rmdir (can you achieve the same result by using `rm`?) * grep * wc * df
How to make sure a service will start on a OS of your choice?
How do you schedule tasks periodically?
How to change the permissions of a file?
What does the following permissions mean?: * 777 * 644 * 750
How to add a new user to the system without providing him the ability to log-in into the system?
What commands are you using for troubleshooting issues? specifically: * Disk issues * Memory, CPU issues * Networking issues
What is the difference between Linux and Unix?
What is a Linux kernel module and how do you load a new module?
What is KVM?
Explain what would be the result of each command:

echo $0 echo $? echo $$ echo $@ echo $#


How to grep two strings?
What is the different between a soft link and hard link?

hard link is the same file, using the same inode. soft link is a shortcut to another file, using a different inode.

soft links can be created between different file systems while hard link can be created only within the same file system.

How to run a process in the background and why to do that in the first place?

You can achieve that by specifying & at end of the command. As to Why? since some commands/processes can take a lot of time to finish execution or run forever

What signal is used when you run 'kill '?

The default signal is SIGTERM (15). This signal kills process gracefully which means it allows it to save current state configuration.

What signals are you familiar with?

SIGTERM - default signal for terminating a process SIGHUP - common usage is for reloading configuration SIGKILL - a signal which cannot caught or ignored

To view all available signals run kill -l

In what state a process in Linux can be?

Ready Running Blocked Terminated Zombie

Ansible

Describe each of the following components in Ansible, including the relationship between them:
  • Task
  • Module
  • Play
  • Playbook
  • Role

Task – a call to a specific Ansible module Module – the actual unit of code executed by Ansible on your own host or a remote host. Modules are indexed by category (database, file, network, …) and also referred as task plugins.

Play – One or more tasks executed on a given host(s)

Playbook – One or more plays. Each play can be executed on the same or different hosts

Role – Ansible roles allows you to group resources based on certain functionality/service such that they can be easily reused. In a role, you have directories for variables, defaults, files, templates, handlers, tasks, and metadata. You can then use the role by simply specifying it in your playbook.

You want to run Ansible playbook only on specific minor version of your OS, how would you achieve that?
Write a task to create the directory β€˜/tmp/new_directory’
- name: Create a new directory
  file:
      path: "/tmp/new_directory"
      state: directory

What would be the result of the following play?
---
- name: Print information about my host
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: 'no'                                                                                                                                                                           
  tasks:
      - name: Print hostname
        debug:
            msg: "It's me, {{ ansible_hostname }}"

When given a written code, always inspect it thoroughly. If your answer is β€œthis will fail” then you are right. We are using a fact (ansible_hostname), which is a gathered piece of information from the host we are running on. But in this case, we disabled facts gathering (gather_facts: no) so the variable would be undefined which will result in failure.

Write a playbook to install β€˜zlib’ and β€˜vim’ on all hosts if the file β€˜/tmp/mario’ exists on the system.
---
- hosts: all
  vars:
      mario_file: /tmp/mario
      package_list:
          - 'zlib' 
          - 'vim'
  tasks:
      - name: Check for mario file
        stat:
            path: "{{ mario_file }}"
        register: mario_f

      - name: Install zlib and vim if mario file exists
        become: "yes"
        package:
            name: "{{ item }}"
            state: present
        with_items: "{{ package_list }}"
        when: mario_f.stat.exists

Write a playbook to deploy the file β€˜/tmp/system_info’ on all hosts except for controllers group, with the following content
I'm <HOSTNAME> and my operating system is <OS>

replace and with the actual data for the specific host you are running on

The playbook to deploy the system_info file

--- 
- name: Deploy /tmp/system_info file
  hosts: all:!controllers
  tasks: 
      - name: Deploy /tmp/system_info
        template:
            src: system_info.j2 
            dest: /tmp/system_info

The content of the system_info.j2 template

# {{ ansible_managed }}
I'm {{ ansible_hostname }} and my operating system is {{ ansible_distribution }

Terraform

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

Can you explain what is Terraform? How it works?

Read here

What benefits infrastructure-as-code has?
  • fully automated process of provisioning, modifying and deleting your infrastructure
  • version control for your infrastructure which allows you to quickly rollback to previous versions
  • validate infrastructure quality and stability with automated tests and code reviews
  • makes infrastructure tasks less repetitive
Why Terraform and not other technologies? (e.g. Ansible, Puppet, CloufFormation)

A common wrong answer is to say that Ansible and Puppet are configuration management tools and Terraform is a provisioning tool. While technically true, it doesn't mean Ansible and Puppet can't be used for provisioning infrastructure. Also, it doesn't explains why Terraform should be used over CloudFormation if at all.

The benefits of Terraform over the other tools:

  • it follows the immutable infrastructure approach which has benefits like avoiding a configuration drift over time
  • Ansible and Puppet are more procedural (you mention what to execute in each step) and Terraform is declartive since you describe the overall desired state and not per resource or task. You can give the example of going from 1 to 2 servers in each tool. In terrform you specify 2, in Ansible and puppet you have to only provision 1 additional server
Explain what the following commands do:
  • terraform init
  • terraform plan
  • terraform apply

terraform init scans your code to figure which providers are you using and download them. terraform plan will let you see what terraform is about to do before actually doing it. terraform apply will provision the resources specified in the .tf files.

Docker

πŸ‘Ά beginner

How containers are different from VMs?

The primary difference between containers and VMs is that containers allow you to virtualize multiple workloads on the operating system while in the case of VMs the hardware is being virtualized to run multiple machines each with its own OS.

In which scenarios would you use containers and in which you would prefer to use VMs?

You should choose VMs when:

  • you need run an application which requires all the resources and functionalilies of an OS
  • you need full isolation and security

You should choose containers when:

  • you need a lightweight solution that quickly starts
  • Running multiple versions or instances of a single application
What happens when you run `docker run hello-world`?

Docker CLI passes your request to Docker daemon. Docker daemon downloads the image from Docker Hub Docker daemon creates a new container by using the image it downloaded Docker daemon redirects output from container to Docker CLI which redirects it to the standard output

How do you run a container?
What do you see when you run `docker ps`?
What `docker commit` does? when will you use it?
How would you transfer data from one container into another?
What is the difference between ADD and COPY in Dockerfile?
What is the difference between CMD and RUN in Dockerfile?
Explain what is Docker compose and what is it used for
What are the differences between Docker compose, Docker swarm and Kuberenets?
Explain Docker interlock
What is the difference between Docker Hub and Docker cloud?

Docker Hub is a native Docker registry service which allows you to run pull and push commands to install and deploy Docker images from the Docker Hub.

Docker Cloud is built on top of the Docker Hub so Docker Cloud provides you with more options/features compared to Docker Hub. One example is Swarm management which means you can create new swarms in Docker Cloud.

Kubernetes

What is Kubernetes?
Why Docker isn't enough? Why do we need Kubernetes?
Describe the architecture of Kuberenets
How do you monitor your Kuberenets?
What is kubectl? How do you use it?
What is kubconfig? What do you use it for?
How do you create users?

Python

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

What data type supported in Python and which of them are mutable? What function can you use to show that a certain data type is mutable?

The mutable data types are:

List
Dictionary
Set

The immutable data types are:

Numbers (int, float, ...)
String
Bool
Tuple

The id function can be used to check if a given variable is mutable or not.

What is PEP8? Give an example of 5 style guidelines

PEP8 is a list of coding conventions and style guidelines for Python

5 style guidelines:

1. Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters.
2. Surround top-level function and class definitions with two blank lines.
3. Use commas when making a tuple of one element
4. Use spaces (and not tabs) for indentation
5. Use 4 spaces per indentation level

Write a program which will revert a string (e.g. pizza -> azzip)
Shortest way is str[::-1]

"Classic" way:

What _ is used for in Python?
  1. Translation lookup in i18n
  2. Hold the result of the last executed expression or statement
  3. As a general purpose "throwaway" variable name. For example: x, y, _ = get_data() (x and y are used but since we don't care about third variable, we "threw it away").
Sort a list of lists by the second item of each nested list
li = [[1, 4], [2, 1], [3, 9], [4, 2], [4, 5]]

sorted(x, key=lambda l: l[1])

You have the following list: [{'name': 'Mario', 'food': ['mushrooms', 'goombas']}, {'name': 'Luigi', 'food': ['mushrooms', 'turtles']}] Extract all type of foods. Final output should be: {'mushrooms', 'goombas', 'turtles'}
set([food for bro in x for food in bro['food']])

Prometheus

Describe the following Prometheus components: - Prometheus server - Push Gateway - Alert Manager

Prometheus server responsible for scraping the storing the data
Push gateway is used for short-lived jobs
Alert manager is responsible for alerts ;)

What is an exporter? What is it used for?

Git

πŸ‘Ά Beginner

What is the difference between git pull and git fetch?

Shortly, git pull = git fetch + git merge

When you run git pull, it gets all the changes from the remote or central repository and attaches it to your corresponding branch in your local reposistory.

git fetch gets all the changes from the remote repository, stores the changes in a separate branch in your local repository

Explain the following: git directory, working directory and staging area

The Git directory is where Git stores the metadata and object database for your project. This is the most important part of Git, and it is what is copied when you clone a repository from another computer.

The working directory is a single checkout of one version of the project. These files are pulled out of the compressed database in the Git directory and placed on disk for you to use or modify.

The staging area is a simple file, generally contained in your Git directory, that stores information about what will go into your next commit. It’s sometimes referred to as the index, but it’s becoming standard to refer to it as the staging area.

This answer taken from git-scm.com

How to resolve git merge conflicts?

First, you open the files which are in conflict and identify what are the conflicts. Next, based on what is accepted in your company or team, you either discuss with your colleagues on the conflicts or resolve them by yourself After resolving the conflicts, you add the files with `git add ` Finally, you run `git rebase --continue`

What is the difference between git reset and git revert?

git revert creates a new commit which undoes the changes from last commit.

git reset depends on the usage, can modify the index or change the commit which the branch head is currently pointing at.

In what situations are you using git rebase?
What branching strategies are you familiar with?

⭐ Advanced

Explain Git octopus merge

Scenarios

Scenarios are questions which combine several subjects together. Some scenarios will require from you to design, plan and implement environments with different constraints and considerations.