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Getting Started with Kubernetes, Second Edition

You're reading from   Getting Started with Kubernetes, Second Edition Orchestrate and manage large-scale Docker deployments

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787283367
Length 286 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Jonathan Baier Jonathan Baier
Author Profile Icon Jonathan Baier
Jonathan Baier
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 2. Pods, Services, Replication Controllers, and Labels 3. Networking, Load Balancers, and Ingress 4. Updates, Gradual Rollouts, and Autoscaling 5. Deployments, Jobs, and DaemonSets 6. Storage and Running Stateful Applications 7. Continuous Delivery 8. Monitoring and Logging 9. Cluster Federation 10. Container Security 11. Extending Kubernetes with OCP, CoreOS, and Tectonic 12. Towards Production Ready

The architecture


Although, Docker brings a helpful layer of abstraction and tooling around container management, Kubernetes brings similar assistance to orchestrating containers at scale and managing full application stacks.

K8s moves up the stack giving us constructs to deal with management at the application or service level. This gives us automation and tooling to ensure high availability, application stack, and service-wide portability. K8s also allows finer control of resource usage, such as CPU, memory, and disk space across our infrastructure.

Kubernetes provides this higher level of orchestration management by giving us key constructs to combine multiple containers, endpoints, and data into full application stacks and services. K8s also provides the tooling to manage the when, where, and how many of the stack and its components:

Kubernetes core architecture

In the preceding figure, we see the core architecture of Kubernetes. Most administrative interactions are done via the kubectl script...

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