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The Complete Kubernetes Guide

You're reading from   The Complete Kubernetes Guide Become an expert in container management with the power of Kubernetes

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Product type Course
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838647346
Length 628 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Jesse White Jesse White
Author Profile Icon Jesse White
Jesse White
Gigi Sayfan Gigi Sayfan
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Gigi Sayfan
Jonathan Baier Jonathan Baier
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Jonathan Baier
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Introduction to Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding Kubernetes Architecture 3. Building a Foundation with Core Kubernetes Constructs 4. Working with Networking, Load Balancers, and Ingress 5. Using Critical Kubernetes Resources 6. Exploring Kubernetes Storage Concepts 7. Monitoring and Logging 8. Monitoring, Logging, and Troubleshooting 9. Operating Systems, Platforms, and Cloud and Local Providers 10. Creating Kubernetes Clusters 11. Cluster Federation and Multi-Tenancy 12. Cluster Authentication, Authorization, and Container Security 13. Running Stateful Applications with Kubernetes 14. Rolling Updates, Scalability, and Quotas 15. Advanced Kubernetes Networking 16. Kubernetes Infrastructure Management 17. Customizing Kubernetes - API and Plugins 18. Handling the Kubernetes Package Manager 19. The Future of Kubernetes 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Securing sensitive application data (secrets)


Sometimes, our application needs to hold sensitive information. This can be credentials or tokens to log in to a database or service. Storing this sensitive information in the image itself is something to be avoided. Here, Kubernetes provides us with a solution in the construct of secrets.

Secrets give us a way to store sensitive information without including plaintext versions in our resource definition files. Secrets can be mounted to the pods that need them and then accessed within the pod as files with the secret values as content. Alternatively, you can also expose the secrets via environment variables.

Note

Given that Kubernetes still relies on plaintext etcd storage, you may want to explore integration with more mature secrets vaults, such as Vault from Hashicorp. There is even a GitHub project for integration: https://github.com/Boostport/kubernetes-vault.

We can easily create a secret either with YAML or on the command line. Secrets do need...

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