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Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

You're reading from   Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide Effectively containerize applications, integrate enterprise systems, and scale applications in your enterprise

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803230030
Length 578 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Marc Boorshtein Marc Boorshtein
Author Profile Icon Marc Boorshtein
Marc Boorshtein
Scott Surovich Scott Surovich
Author Profile Icon Scott Surovich
Scott Surovich
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Docker and Container Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying Kubernetes Using KinD 3. Kubernetes Bootcamp 4. Services, Load Balancing, ExternalDNS, and Global Balancing 5. Integrating Authentication into Your Cluster 6. RBAC Policies and Auditing 7. Deploying a Secured Kubernetes Dashboard 8. Extending Security Using Open Policy Agent 9. Node Security with GateKeeper 10. Auditing Using Falco, DevOps AI, and ECK 11. Backing Up Workloads 12. An Introduction to Istio 13. Building and Deploying Applications on Istio 14. Provisioning a Platform 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Deploying Tekton

Tekton is the pipeline system we're using for our platform. Originally part of the Knative project for building function-as-a-service on Kubernetes, Tekton has broken out into its own project. The biggest difference between Tekton and other pipeline technologies you may have run is that Tekton is Kubernetes-native. Everything from its execution system, definition, and webhooks for automation are able to run on just about any Kubernetes distribution you can find. For example, we'll be running it in KinD and Red Hat has moved to Tekton as the main pipeline technology used for OpenShift, starting with 4.1.

The process of deploying Tekton is pretty straightforward. Tekton is a series of operators that look for the creation of custom resources that define a build pipeline. The deployment itself only takes a couple of kubectl commands:

$ kubectl create ns tekton-pipelines
$ kubectl create -f chapter14/yaml/tekton-pipelines-policy.yaml
$ kubectl apply ...
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