What Did China’s DevOps International Summit Reveal About the Future of Operations?
The DOIS DevOps International Summit in Beijing gathered over a hundred experts from finance, internet and telecom sectors to share DevOps, AIOps, SRE and automation practices, launch a new DevOps maturity model, and showcase how banks like Minsheng are applying these methods to modernize their operations.
On June 29‑30, the only international DevOps summit in China, DOIS (DevOps International Summit), was held at the Holiday Inn Crown Plaza in Beijing’s Chaoyang district.
The summit was guided by the OSCAR Alliance and jointly organized by the DevOps Era Community and the Efficient Operations Community, inviting more than 100 top experts from leading internet, finance and communications companies.
Minsheng Bank participated as a media partner and sent a 20‑person team from its data‑center, covering application operations, system management, network management, cloud‑technology platform and production scheduling, demonstrating the bank’s strong commitment to new technologies and DevOps.
Exchange
The first morning of the conference launched China’s first DevOps standard – the DevOps Capability Maturity Model, covering the end‑to‑end software delivery lifecycle.
Keynotes included global DevOps leader John Willis sharing a decade of DevOps evolution, and Google senior SRE Cameron Tuckerman‑Lee presenting “Google SRE: Reliability for a Planet‑Scale Infrastructure”.
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In the finance track, Minsheng Bank’s senior operations expert Feng Quanxian delivered “When Distributed Core Meets DevOps”, describing the bank’s distributed core system construction and the strategic importance of DevOps for financial‑industry IT transformation.
Other financial institutions—including Bank of China, Yixin, China Merchants Bank, BBVA, ING and HSBC—also shared their DevOps case studies, drawing packed audiences and enthusiastic applause.
Thoughts
Participants reflected that the open era of the internet brings continuous new technologies, and that sharing knowledge is essential for collective progress. They emphasized self‑learning, continuous improvement, and the need to combine DevOps culture with bank‑specific practices.
Several speakers highlighted the transition from traditional ITIL to DevOps, stressing automation, continuous delivery, and the emerging AIOps trend driven by big data and machine learning.
Network management discussed the need for intelligent monitoring, automation, and SDN cloud platforms to achieve agile, automated network services, noting current gaps in visualization, correlation analysis, and predictive analytics.
Overall, the summit demonstrated rapid development of DevOps in China, the growing role of AIOps, and the necessity for cultural and organizational change to achieve efficient, automated operations.
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