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Cloud Native with Kubernetes

You're reading from   Cloud Native with Kubernetes Deploy, configure, and run modern cloud native applications on Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838823078
Length 446 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alexander Raul Alexander Raul
Author Profile Icon Alexander Raul
Alexander Raul
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Setting Up Kubernetes
2. Chapter 1: Communicating with Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up Your Kubernetes Cluster 4. Chapter 3: Running Application Containers on Kubernetes 5. Section 2: Configuring and Deploying Applications on Kubernetes
6. Chapter 4: Scaling and Deploying Your Application 7. Chapter 5: Services and Ingress – Communicating with the Outside World 8. Chapter 6: Kubernetes Application Configuration 9. Chapter 7: Storage on Kubernetes 10. Chapter 8: Pod Placement Controls 11. Section 3: Running Kubernetes in Production
12. Chapter 9: Observability on Kubernetes 13. Chapter 10: Troubleshooting Kubernetes 14. Chapter 11: Template Code Generation and CI/CD on Kubernetes 15. Chapter 12: Kubernetes Security and Compliance 16. Section 4: Extending Kubernetes
17. Chapter 13: Extending Kubernetes with CRDs 18. Chapter 14: Service Meshes and Serverless 19. Chapter 15: Stateful Workloads on Kubernetes 20. Assessments 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating an ExternalName Service

Services of type ExternalName can be used to proxify applications that are not actually running on your cluster, while still keeping the Service as a layer of abstraction that can be updated at any time.

Let's set the scene: you have a legacy production application running on Azure that you want to access from within your cluster. You can access this legacy application at myoldapp.mydomain.com. However, your team is currently working on containerizing this application and running it on Kubernetes, and that new version is currently working in your dev namespace environment on your cluster.

Instead of asking your other applications to talk to different places depending on the environment, you can always point to a Service called my-svc in both your production (prod) and development (dev) namespaces.

In dev, this Service could be a ClusterIP Service that leads to your newly containerized application on Pods. The following YAML shows how the...

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