Table Of Contents
What Are DevOps Metrics? Software Delivery Metrics — DevOps Velocity DevOps Metrics To Measure Stability Operational Performance Metrics — DevOps Reliability DevOps Security Metrics — DevSecOps Metrics Cost KPIs for DevOps Teams — DevOps Cost Effectiveness and Efficiency What Next: Drive A Cost-Conscious DevOps Initiative With CloudZero

The DevOps philosophy strives to deliver high-quality software, faster. Achieving this requires developers and operations teams to practice five key DevOps principles; Culture, Automation, Leanness, Measurement, and Sharing/Collaboration (the CALMS model).

Measurement is a crucial part of the DevOps approach for several reasons.

To begin with, measurements quantify situations, events, goals, etc. DevOps metrics are a powerful tool for tracking progress, collecting data-based feedback, and identifying inefficiencies.

Ultimately, if you don’t measure it, you can’t improve it.

Yet not all metrics matter in DevOps — nor are the ones that matter equally important. Here are some DevOps KPIs and metrics you might already be using or could benefit from measuring.

Table Of Contents

What Are DevOps Metrics?

A DevOps metric is a data-based indicator or small data set you use to quantify, track, assess, and compare a process, performance, production, etc. A DevOps metric provides insight into the efficiency, effectiveness, and reliability of your software development pipeline. That way, you can quickly spot, isolate, and fix bottlenecks.

DevOps metrics provide insight into technical capability, team processes, and culture, among other things. You can also use DevOps key metrics to measure incremental changes, including software quality improvements, faster release cycles, and application performance gains.

Here are some of the most crucial DevOps metrics and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) you’ll want to be tracking. Every organization is unique, of course. The key metrics you choose to measure and act upon will vary based on the challenges you want to overcome.

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Software Delivery Metrics — DevOps Velocity

These metrics are part of a set of DevOps KPIs that measure IT performance. According to Google’s DevOps Research and Assessment (DORA) team, the first three are particularly critical because they directly impact IT performance.

1. Deployment Frequency

Deployment frequency refers to how often you successfully release code to production or end users. Exceptional DevOps teams release code multiple times a day or week.

Typically, DevOps teams use the term “delivery” to mean code changes they release into pre-production and the term “deployment” for code changes they release into a live production environment.

The frequency of your deployments will, of course, vary depending on the project you’re working on. The point is to update, upgrade, or patch your product as frequently as possible to satisfy users’ needs.

Ideally, this metric should indicate consistency — small but regular improvements support sustainable growth and development.

2. Lead Time

This metric helps you measure the amount of time you take to get a code commit to code deploy (successfully running in production).

Measuring lead time requires you to record all the changes in a deployment, when the commit happened, and when the deployment occurred. If you map triggers with SHAs back to commits, you can achieve this. Using that information, you can calculate your mean change lead time.

Ideally, you want your mean lead time to be in hours, not days or weeks. Otherwise, you’ll want to assess what bottlenecks are causing delays when your code is already in a deployed state.

3. Change Failure Rate

The Change Failure Rate (CFR) refers to the number of attempted deployments that lead to a failure in production. Those failures can be in the form of service interruptions or full-blown outages.

The CFR excludes defects you caught prior to deployment, so teams can use it to gauge how well their testing works.

To calculate CFR in DevOps, divide the number of deployments that led to failure by the total number of deployment attempts you made, and multiply by 100.

Most of these fails require remediation or hotfixes to correct, so your engineers have to take time away from developing new solutions to fix and stabilize them. DORA considers CFR rates of 15% or lower as elite-level performance, while 30% is the lowest acceptable rate.

4. Deployment Speed

While deployment frequency is about how often you release code to production or users, deployment speed is about the time it takes to actually deploy code changes after they are approved to go.

You can measure deployment speed to see if faster deployments lead to more errors, for example. In such a case, teams can often switch from automatically releasing code to production (deployment) to ensuring a human engineer approves changes before they go live (delivery).

You’d then measure how long it takes your engineers to assess and approve code changes. On the flip side, experienced DevOps teams tend to use CI/CD tools like Jenkins and Circle CI to automate releases and speed up deployments as long as the code passes all necessary tests.

5. Deployment Success Rate

This DevOps key metric is the opposite of the Change Failure Rate.

It is a measure of how many deployments your organization has made to production or to end users that are successful, not just because they didn’t fail, but also because they satisfied the software customer and other stakeholders.

The goal should be to achieve a deployment success rate of at least 80% (as opposed to a change failure rate of 0-30%).

Rather than measuring productivity by work hours, deployment frequency, or the volume of code changes your team makes, you can use this metric to determine how much of your work actually generates usable results.

6. Cycle Time

Your cycle time measures how long it takes from when you start the work to when you deliver it – from your first commit to release to when it runs in production.

A more granular method for measuring cycle time is to calculate how long each of the four phases takes separately; coding, pickup, review, and deployment.

Deployment frequency and speed have a close relationship with cycle time. When cycle times are shorter, you are more likely to deliver quality code more often. It may also mean you are able to deliver more features quickly.

7. Change Volume

Rather than simply changing random bits of code, you want most deployments to improve the product and the lives of your customers.

Change volume is thus a measure of progress or continuous improvement to your entire software product.

It’s about balance here.

On one hand, you want each deployment to make the most improvements possible. On the other hand, too much disruption may require you to retrain your users on how to use the product. Others may run into compatibility issues that lead them to switch products.

DevOps Metrics To Measure Stability

This section contains key DevOps metrics that influence your software product’s stability. Among other things, you can use them to gauge the quality of your code changes and how fast you resolve issues after outages.

8. Mean Time To Detection (MTTD)

Your mean time to detection indicates the amount of time it takes you to detect an anomaly from the time it started. MTTD can help you gauge how quickly your DevOps team pinpoints the root cause of an issue so they can begin fixing it.

From the time you learn about the issue to the time you begin applying a fix reflects your mean time to respond.

The lower your mean time to detection, the better. Elite DevOps teams use real-time monitoring and alerting tools to reduce their MTTD.

CloudZero, for example, uses real-time anomaly detection to flag cost data that deviates from historical trends or predefined parameters (such as your budget or spending limit).

Then, depending on the severity of the cost data, CloudZero sends a high-priority alert to individual engineers or an entire team via Slack, email, text, or your favorite incident management tool so you can review the issue before it becomes a costly problem.

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9. Mean Time To Recovery (MTTR)

An all-out outage may occur when it takes a long time to analyze an issue’s root cause, develop a possible solution, test the patch, and deploy it. In some cases, you may not detect a problem until after a service outage occurs.

In either case, the mean time to recover metric measures how long it takes to restore normal operations following a partial or total failure in production.

The difference between the mean time to restore and the mean time to repair is that the former calculates the average total time of the outage through to operating normally again while the mean time to repair accounts for the average repair and testing time only.

Moreover, the mean time to resolve includes the time it takes you to ensure the failure won’t happen again (long-term fix).

MTTR is a DevOps KPI because it indicates how long customers have gone without service, which can affect customer retention.

10. Mean Time To Failure (MTTF)

Mean time to failure is a DevOps metric that indicates how long it takes for irreparable hardware or software failures to occur. The MTTF tells you how long your system’s components tend to last on average before they break down and need to be replaced.

You can use this metric to estimate how long a feature may last, when to prepare a new stable version to replace it, and when to recommend system updates to customers.

Operational Performance Metrics — DevOps Reliability

Reliability is a system’s ability to operate at optimal performance while maintaining high availability. Yet reliability is a complex KPI, so here are some of the key performance indicators to help you measure it.

11. Mean Time Between Failure (MTBF)

Unlike mean time to failure (MTTF), the mean time between failure (MTBF) measures the amount of time between repairable failures that occur within your system.

Also, while MTTF is ideal for measuring the average lifetime of a feature or product, the MTBF metric provides information regarding the reliability of a system (including availability or uptime).

A system that experiences fewer failures is more reliable. The farther apart those failures occur, the better. Furthermore, a long MTBF suggests your product is high-quality because it has fewer bugs and minimizes disruptions to customer service.

12. Service Level Agreements (SLAs)

The service-level agreement (SLA) specifies the type and standard of services that a service provider will supply to a specific customer. An SLA can be a legally-binding contract that guarantees a particular level of service delivery to the customer at any given time.

In contrast, a service-level commitment (SLC) is often a service provider’s general assurance to one or more customers about the level of service to expect — rather than a bi-directional contract.

SLAs help service providers manage their clients’ expectations and define when they are not responsible for service interruptions or performance issues.

And since an SLA details the performance characteristics of a service, and what happens when a disruption occurs, customers can use it to compare vendors’ offerings.

13. Service Level Objectives (SLOs)

A service level objective refers to the specifics you promise your customer within an SLA. Those details can include your guaranteed uptime, response time, and liability. These SLOs also specify to your DevOps teams what targets they must meet to satisfy that customer.

SLOs are different from service-level indicators (SLIs), in that SLOs describe the service level you promise a customer, while SLIs reflect the actual service level you are hitting.

For example, you may promise a customer 99.95% uptime, but maintain a 99.98% uptime over the course of their subscription.

Meeting your SLOs is crucial to customer retention. Still, you’ll want to account for customer-side delays or issues to avoid making up for problems you didn’t cause.

14. Defect Escape Rate

The defect escape ratio quantifies the rate at which faulty code “escapes” past code review and quality assurance (QA) to make it into production. Although these issues may not cause service outages, they may reduce customer satisfaction.

The metric that measures the actual number of issues that occur (not the frequency), is the defect volume. Also, while the defect escape rate measures how many releases have bugs or bad code, the change failure rate measures how many of these need to be remedied immediately.

However, all three DevOps metrics offer deeper analysis into areas where QA can improve to catch bugs earlier in the DevOps pipeline and reduce the impact on end-user experiences.

Some DevOps teams have an error budget for these sorts of issues.

15. DevOps Error Budget

An error budget specifies the maximum length of time a technical system can be out of service without the service provider needing to compensate customers.

For example, if you promise 99.95% uptime for a year, you’ll have a wiggle room of four hours, 22 minutes, and 48 seconds.

This allowance enables DevOps teams to develop, test, and deploy new features without worrying too much about the risk of not meeting SLAs.

When a DevOps team reaches or exceeds the error budget, and is performing at or below an SLA’s terms, this is often an indicator that it needs to freeze all new releases until it can reduce the number of errors to a sustainable level — operating above the error budget again.

16. Application Performance Index (Apdex)

You can use this metric to assess how satisfied your customers are with your service, website, or application response times. The Apdex compares the proportion of satisfactory response times versus unsatisfactory ones.

The response time is calculated from when the customer makes a request and terminates after the request has been processed. The average response time refers to the mean time it takes your system to process a transaction or request.

To measure Apdex for a service, you must first define a response-time target you want to maintain as your application’s baseline.

You can then track apdex at three levels; satisfactory (short response time, like 1-2 seconds), tolerating (medium response time, like 3-5 seconds), and frustrated (taking too long to process requests, like more than 5 seconds).

It is also possible to assess your apdex by looking at the volume of customer tickets you receive about an issue.

DevOps Security Metrics — DevSecOps Metrics

Vulnerabilities in the cloud and on-premises continue to be a big threat to DevOps success — not to mention adoption.

In addition to being costly, breaches can lead to a loss of credibility, customer churn, and legal issues, hindering a company’s future growth. Tracking these and more DevSecOps metrics can help you prevent costly surprises.

17. Software Security Coverage (SSC)

The SSC refers to the total number of system components you have covered under your DevSecOps program. These components can be applications, services, microservices, containers, etc. You’ll want to have covered your mission-critical components 100%.

18. Vulnerability Open Rate (VOR)

You can use the VOR to keep track of how many vulnerabilities you identify when releasing code into production. You can then organize the issues according to their severity; critical, high, medium, or low-risk.

The goal is for this metric to register a smaller and smaller figure over time, indicating your team is getting better at creating bug-free code and your security team is catching issues before live deployment.

19. Security Technical Debt (STD)

This DevOps security KPI is an indication of the total number of unresolved issues in production. You can think of it as the defect volume or defect escape rate but for security risks. The faster you patch the issues, the more secure your system will be.

Something else. The mean vulnerability age (MVA) measures how long a vulnerability has existed since being discovered but is still unresolved. Together, the STD and MVA metrics reveal your security risk exposure (SRE).

Cost KPIs for DevOps Teams — DevOps Cost Effectiveness and Efficiency

With more companies looking for ways to reduce cloud waste, exceptional DevOps teams will be the ones that treat cost as a first-class metric. But rather than cut costs indiscriminately, the goal is to optimize costs without hindering engineering velocity or innovation.

Yet, unlike traditional Capex approaches, cloud spending is based on consumption, which can quickly accumulate if you are overzealous. With that in mind, the following cost metrics can help you optimize your cloud spend.

20. Cost Per Customer

You can determine how much you can profitably charge a specific customer once you know how much you spend supporting them. Picture this:

Dashboard

Total and average costs per customer are misleading because they equate costs across all customers regardless of their individual resource usage. But with cost per customer, you can accurately answer questions like:

  • How much will our costs change if we onboard 10 more customers tomorrow?
  • What is our least expensive customer segment, so we can market our services to them more?
  • How much discount can we afford to give this customer?
  • Considering this customer’s usage, what contractual changes should we make at renewal to protect our margins?

21. Cost Per Product Feature

This metric helps you to analyze how much you are spending to support a particular software feature. With this insight, you can answer questions such as:

  • How sustainable is this feature in the free forever tier? Should we move it to a limited free trial?
  • Or, do we need to move it to a higher-paid tier to remain profitable?
  • Is the demand for this feature sustainable if we move it to a premium tier?
  • Should we charge for this product feature based on usage or per user?
  • Does it make more sense to repurpose this feature or to decommission it for cost savings?

22. Unit Cost

Measuring costs per unit empowers you to understand exactly who, what, and why your DevOps implementation costs are changing. A few examples of unit costs you can track, include:

  • Cost per project
  • Cost per development team
  • Cost per deployment
  • Cost per environment
  • Cost per product, and more.

With this level of precision, you’re able to identify the people, processes, and products that drive your DevOps costs. You can then identify where to cut costs without compromising innovation and velocity. In addition, you can determine where you could invest more to maximize your returns.

What Next: Drive A Cost-Conscious DevOps Initiative With CloudZero

CloudZero’s cloud cost intelligence approach collects, analyzes, and shares cloud costs in your engineers’ language. Also:

  • Expect actionable and granular insights, such as cost per deployment, per software feature, per customer, per environment, per dev team, per DevOps project, and more.
  • Shift cost decisions left. Empower your engineers to see, understand, and interpret cost insights in their language so they can develop cost-effective and efficient solutions because they understand how their technical choices impact finances.
  • Detect abnormal costs in real-time. CloudZero also sends noise-free alerts straight to your Slack or email to help you prevent cost overruns.
  • Manual tagging is not required. With CloudZero’s code-driven approach, you can view the costs of tagged, untagged, and untaggable resources, as well as the costs of individual tenants in multi-tenant architectures without endless cost allocation tags in AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud.

CloudZero already saves Drift $2.4 million annually, Validity spends 90% less time managing costs, Malwarebytes can now measure cost per product, and Remitly allocates 50% more costs without tagging. You can, too.

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