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Hands-on Kubernetes on Azure, Third Edition

You're reading from   Hands-on Kubernetes on Azure, Third Edition Use Azure Kubernetes Service to automate management, scaling, and deployment of containerized applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801079945
Length 528 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Gunther Lenz Gunther Lenz
Author Profile Icon Gunther Lenz
Gunther Lenz
Nills Franssens Nills Franssens
Author Profile Icon Nills Franssens
Nills Franssens
Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
Author Profile Icon Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface Foreword
Section 1: The Basics FREE CHAPTER
1. Introduction to containers and Kubernetes 2. Getting started with Azure Kubernetes Service Section 2: Deploying on AKS
3. Application deployment on AKS 4. Building scalable applications 5. Handling common failures in AKS 6. Securing your application with HTTPS 7. Monitoring the AKS cluster and the application Section 3: Securing your AKS cluster and workloads
8. Role-based access control in AKS 9. Azure Active Directory pod‑managed identities in AKS 10. Storing secrets in AKS 11. Network security in AKS Section 4: Integrating with Azure managed services
12. Connecting an application to an Azure database 13. Azure Security Center for Kubernetes 14. Serverless functions 15. Continuous integration and continuous deployment for AKS Index

Setting up a CI pipeline

You are now ready to build a CI pipeline. As part of the demonstration in this section, you will build an nginx container with a small custom webpage loaded in it. After the container is built, you will push the nginx container to the container registry you created in the previous section. You will build the CI pipeline gradually over the next 13 steps:

  1. To start, open the forked GitHub repo and open the folder for Chapter 15. In that folder, you will find a couple of files, including Dockerfile and index.html. These files are used to build the custom container. Throughout the example, you will make changes to index.html to trigger changes in the GitHub action. Let's have a look at the contents of index.html:
    1   <html>
    2   <head>
    3       <title>Version 1</title>
    4   </head>
    5   <body>
    6     ...
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