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The DevOps 2.3 Toolkit

You're reading from   The DevOps 2.3 Toolkit Kubernetes: Deploying and managing highly-available and fault-tolerant applications at scale

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789135503
Length 418 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Viktor Farcic Viktor Farcic
Author Profile Icon Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. How Did We Get Here? FREE CHAPTER 2. Running Kubernetes Cluster Locally 3. Creating Pods 4. Scaling Pods With ReplicaSets 5. Using Services to Enable Communication between Pods 6. Deploying Releases with Zero-Downtime 7. Using Ingress to Forward Traffic 8. Using Volumes to Access Host's File System 9. Using ConfigMaps to Inject Configuration Files 10. Using Secrets to Hide Confidential Information 11. Dividing a Cluster into Namespaces 12. Securing Kubernetes Clusters 13. Managing Resources 14. Creating a Production-Ready Kubernetes Cluster 15. Persisting State 16. The End 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

What now?

Wasn't that a ride?

Kubernetes relies heavily on available resources spread throughout the cluster. Still, it cannot do magic. We need to help it out by defining resources we expect our containers will consume.

Even though Heapster is not the best solution for collecting metrics, it is already available in our Minikube cluster, and we used it to learn how much resources our applications use and, through that information, we refined our resource definitions. Without metrics, our definitions are pure guesses. When we guess, Kubernetes needs to guess as well. A stable system is a predictable system based on facts, not someone's imagination. Heapster helped us transform our assumptions into measurable facts which we fed into Kubernetes which, in turn, used them in its scheduling algorithms.

Exploration of resource definitions led us to Quality Of Service (QoS)...

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