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DevOps Interview Questions
Table of Contents
Jenkins
beginner
- Explain what is Jenkins and what is it used for
- Explain each of the following in the context of nodes:
- Master
- Slave
- Executor
- Agent
- Label
- Explain each of the following in context of jobs:
- Job
- Build
- Test
- Artifacts
- Explain the architecture of Jenkins
- What are the different ways to trigger a build?
- How do you start a build automatically upon a change in a certain repository?
- 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?
Intermediate
- 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?
Advanced
- Write a script to remove all the jobs which include the string "REMOVE_ME"
AWS
Global Infrastructure
- Explain the following
- Availability zone
- Region
- Edge location
S3 - beginner
- Explain what is S3 and what is it used for
- What is a bucket?
- True or False? a bucket name must be globally unique
- 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?
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? object are cached for the life of TTL
EC2 - beginner
- What type of instances have you created?
- How to increase RAM for a given EC2 instance?
Network
Network questions can be found here
Linux
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 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 a Linux kernel module and how do you load a new module?
-
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`
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.
- Write a task to create the directory ‘/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 “this 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 ‘zlib’ and ‘vim’ on all hosts if the file ‘/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 ‘/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 }
Containers
- How containers different from VMs?
- In which scenarios would you use containers and in which you would prefer to use VMs?
Docker
- 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? -
Explain what is Dockerfile used for and the content of the following Dockerfile
FROM registry.access.redhat.com/rhel7/rhel
RUN yum -y install httpd && yum -y update; yum clean all
EXPOSE 80
ENTRYPOINT [ "/usr/sbin/httpd" ]
CMD [ "-D", "FOREGROUND" ]
Answer:
Use the image 'rhel7/rhel' from the registry 'registry.access.redhat.com` to run httpd.
Befor running it, install the httpd package, update all packages and expose port 80.
-
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.
Python
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
Intermediate
- 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 lists: [{'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
beginner
- What is the difference between
git pull
andgit pull
? - How do you resolve git conflicts?