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Argo CD in Practice

You're reading from   Argo CD in Practice The GitOps way of managing cloud-native applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803233321
Length 236 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Liviu Costea Liviu Costea
Author Profile Icon Liviu Costea
Liviu Costea
Spiros Economakis Spiros Economakis
Author Profile Icon Spiros Economakis
Spiros Economakis
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Fundamentals of GitOps and Argo CD
2. Chapter 1: GitOps and Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started with Argo CD 4. Part 2: Argo CD as a Site Reliability Engineer
5. Chapter 3: Operating Argo CD 6. Chapter 4: Access Control 7. Part 3: Argo CD in Production
8. Chapter 5: Argo CD Bootstrap K8s Cluster 9. Chapter 6: Designing Argo CD Delivery Pipelines 10. Chapter 7: Troubleshooting Argo CD 11. Chapter 8: YAML and Kubernetes Manifests 12. Chapter 9: Future and Conclusion 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Wrap up

When Argo CD started back in 2018, nobody could have predicted its success. It had a good foundation (the Application CRD with its source, the Git repository where the manifests are located, and the destination, which is the cluster and namespace where deployments are performed), was well received, understood, and a good fit for the whole GitOps concept.

It also had the right context. Back then, as now, Helm was the most used application deployment tool for Kubernetes, and it was in the V2 version. This meant it came with a component called Tiller installed on the cluster (https://helm.sh/docs/faq/changes_since_helm2/#removal-of-tiller), which was used to apply the manifests, and that component was seen as a big security hole. With Argo CD, you could have still used Helm charts, but you didn’t need Tiller to perform the installation as manifests were generated and applied to the destination cluster by a central Argo CD installation. I remember back then we saw this...

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