Today, the culture of DevOps is making substantial advancements in the application development methodology. The core objective of DevOps has always been to unify development and operation throughout the software development lifecycle. It strongly advocates automation in the development and operation tasks, and in the process, it improves monitoring of all required steps from coding, integration, testing, deployment, to management. Post Covid-19, the adoption of DevOps has taken an upward trajectory due to the growing demand for agility and continuous and reliable delivery. According to Simon Haighton-Williams, CEO of Adaptavist, “while the pandemic has undoubtedly heightened the importance of DevOps in the workplace, its widespread use predates the last few years. HGS Digital research from as far back as 2018 found that only 3% of software development businesses had never heard of DevOps. The 2021: Future of the Atlassian Ecosystem report revealed that 54% of organizations have implemented a DevOps strategy—up from 48% in 2020. A further 27% of respondents are hoping to adopt a DevOps strategy in the next three years.” We are witnessing a growing acceleration in the DevOps culture, and it is transforming the way we used to deliver applications. Our effort here is whatever we have learned so far; we want to pass on that knowledge to you.