This was basically me, chugging water, four in the morning, texting my girlfriends back in Florida, and I'm like, "So something's going on. Well, that really made my confidence be hella strong. So when I opened up that runbook as I get paged, well, that runbook was last updated about 180 days before I got paged. You'll figure it out," and was given a list of runbooks. I was thrown a pager duty account and it was said, "Hey, you're on call. That secondary person on call was also not around. I learned a lot of boss systems, SRE ops really, really quickly, and I had a great team to help me uncover that.īut that first page that I got, it was 3:50 in the morning on a Thursday. I was also placed on the Chaos Engineering team, which basically later meant that I was on call for the first time ever, my third week at Uber, and that also meant production on call. Then, I actually randomly ended up as Uber's first cyber reliability engineering intern, but that wasn't just that enough chaos. I'm a self-taught coder that did a lot of web development and mobile applications. So Ana, how did you get started with Chaos Engineering?Īna: Well, in general, I have a pretty untraditional route to tech. This is tools and techniques and personal stories about introducing Chaos Engineering into your organization. Paul: Today we're going to be talking to you about embracing chaos. I currently work as a chaos engineer at Gremlin. I work for Under Armor, where I lead our SRE team.Īna: My name is Ana Medina. Twitter: and Like Jacob said, my name is Paul Osman. The following is a transcript from Under Armour's Senior Manager of SRE, Paul Osman's and Gremlin’s Chaos Engineer, Ana Medina's, talk at Chaos Conf 2019, which you can enjoy in the embedded video above.
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