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Modern DevOps Practices

You're reading from   Modern DevOps Practices Implement and secure DevOps in the public cloud with cutting-edge tools, tips, tricks, and techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562387
Length 530 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Gaurav Agarwal Gaurav Agarwal
Author Profile Icon Gaurav Agarwal
Gaurav Agarwal
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Container Fundamentals and Best Practices
2. Chapter 1: The Move to Containers FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Containerization with Docker 4. Chapter 3: Creating and Managing Container Images 5. Chapter 4: Container Orchestration with Kubernetes – Part I 6. Chapter 5: Container Orchestration with Kubernetes – Part II 7. Section 2: Delivering Containers
8. Chapter 6: Infrastructure as Code (IaC) with Terraform 9. Chapter 7: Configuration Management with Ansible 10. Chapter 8: IaC and Config Management in Action 11. Chapter 9: Containers as a Service (CaaS) and Serverless Computing for Containers 12. Chapter 10: Continuous Integration 13. Chapter 11: Continuous Deployment/Delivery with Spinnaker 14. Chapter 12: Securing the Deployment Pipeline 15. Section 3: Modern DevOps with GitOps
16. Chapter 13: Understanding DevOps with GitOps 17. Chapter 14: CI/CD Pipelines with GitOps 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Open source CaaS with Knative

As we've seen, there are several vendor-specific CaaS services available on the market. Still, the problem with most of them is that they are tied up to a single cloud provider. Our container deployment specification then becomes vendor-specific and results in vendor lock-in. As modern DevOps engineers, we also have to ensure that the solution we propose best fits the architecture's needs, and avoiding vendor lock-in is one of the most important ones.

However, Kubernetes in itself is not serverless. You have to have infrastructure defined, and daemon services should have at least a single instance running at a particular time. This makes managing microservices applications a pain and resource-intensive.

But wait! We said that microservices help optimize infrastructure consumption. Yes, that's correct, they do, but they do so within the container space. Imagine that you have a shared cluster of VMs where parts of the application scale...

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