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The Kubernetes Workshop

You're reading from   The Kubernetes Workshop Learn how to build and run highly scalable workloads on Kubernetes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838820756
Length 780 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (6):
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Zachary Arnold Zachary Arnold
Author Profile Icon Zachary Arnold
Zachary Arnold
Mohammed Abu Taleb Mohammed Abu Taleb
Author Profile Icon Mohammed Abu Taleb
Mohammed Abu Taleb
Wei Huang Wei Huang
Author Profile Icon Wei Huang
Wei Huang
Sahil Dua Sahil Dua
Author Profile Icon Sahil Dua
Sahil Dua
Mélony Qin Mélony Qin
Author Profile Icon Mélony Qin
Mélony Qin
Faisal Masood Faisal Masood
Author Profile Icon Faisal Masood
Faisal Masood
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Introduction to Kubernetes and Containers 2. An Overview of Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 3. kubectl – Kubernetes Command Center 4. How to Communicate with Kubernetes (API Server) 5. Pods 6. Labels and Annotations 7. Kubernetes Controllers 8. Service Discovery 9. Storing and Reading Data on Disk 10. ConfigMaps and Secrets 11. Build Your Own HA Cluster 12. Your Application and HA 13. Runtime and Network Security in Kubernetes 14. Running Stateful Components in Kubernetes 15. Monitoring and Autoscaling in Kubernetes 16. Kubernetes Admission Controllers 17. Advanced Scheduling in Kubernetes 18. Upgrading Your Cluster without Downtime 19. Custom Resource Definitions in Kubernetes

Delivering Kubernetes-Native Applications

In the previous sections, we migrated a Docker-based application to Kubernetes and successfully accessed it from inside the Minikube VM, as well as externally. Now, let's see what other benefits Kubernetes can provide if we design our application from the ground up so that it can be deployed using Kubernetes.

Along with the increasing usage of your application, it may be common to run several replicas of certain pods to serve a business functionality. In this case, grouping different containers in a pod alone is not sufficient. We need to go ahead and create groups of pods that are working together. Kubernetes provides several abstractions for groups of pods, such as Deployments, DaemonSets, Jobs, CronJobs, and so on. Just like the Service object, these objects can also be created by using a spec that's been defined in a YAML file.

To start understanding the benefits of Kubernetes, let's use a Deployment to demonstrate how to replicate (scale up/down) an application in multiple pods.

Abstracting groups of pods using Kubernetes gives us the following advantages:

  • Creating replicas of pods for redundancy: This is the main advantage of abstractions of groups of pods such as Deployments. A Deployment can create several pods with the given spec. A Deployment will automatically ensure that the pods that it creates are online, and it will automatically replace any pods that fail.
  • Easy upgrades and rollbacks: Kubernetes provides different strategies that you can use to upgrade your applications, as well as rolling versions back. This is important because in modern software development, the software is often developed iteratively, and updates are released frequently. An upgrade can change anything in the Deployment specification. It can be an update of labels or any other field(s), an image version upgrade, an update on its embedded containers, and so on.

Let's take a look at some notable aspects of the spec of a sample Deployment:

k8s-for-beginners-deploy.yaml

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: k8s-for-beginners
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      tier: frontend
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        tier: frontend
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: k8s-for-beginners
        image: packtworkshops/the-kubernetes-workshop:k8s-for-          beginners

In addition to wrapping the pod spec as a "template", a Deployment must also specify its kind (Deployment), as well as the API version (apps/v1).

Note

For some historical reason, the spec name apiVersion is still being used. But technically speaking, it literally means apiGroupVersion. In the preceding Deployment example, it belongs to the apps group and is version v1.

In the Deployment spec, the replicas field instructs Kubernetes to start three pods using the pod spec defined in the template field. The selector field plays the same role as we saw in the case of the Service – it aims to associate the Deployment object with specific pods in a loosely coupled manner. This is particularly useful if you want to bring any preexisting pods under the management of your new Deployment.

The replica number defined in a Deployment or other similar API object represents the desired state of how many pods are supposed to be running continuously. If some of these pods fail for some unexpected reason, Kubernetes will automatically detect that and create a corresponding number of pods to take their place. We will explore that in the following exercise.

We'll see a Deployment in action in the following exercise.

Exercise 2.04: Scaling a Kubernetes Application

In Kubernetes, it's easy to increase the number of replicas running the application by updating the replicas field of a Deployment spec. In this exercise, we'll experiment with how to scale a Kubernetes application up and down. Follow these steps to complete this exercise:

  1. Create a file named k8s-for-beginners-deploy.yaml using the content shown here:
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: Deployment
    metadata:
      name: k8s-for-beginners
    spec:
      replicas: 3
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          tier: frontend
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            tier: frontend
        spec:
          containers:
          - name: k8s-for-beginners
            image: packtworkshops/the-kubernetes-workshop:k8s-for-          beginners

    If you take a closer look, you'll see that this Deployment spec is largely based on the pod spec from earlier exercises (k8s-for-beginners-pod1.yaml), which you can see under the template field.

  2. Next, we can use kubectl to create the Deployment:
    kubectl apply -f k8s-for-beginners-deploy.yaml

    You should see the following output:

    deployment.apps/k8s-for-beginners created
  3. Given that the Deployment has been created successfully, we can use the following command to show all the Deployment's statuses, such as their names, running pods, and so on:
    kubectl get deploy

    You should get the following response:

    NAME                   READY   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE    AGE
    k8s-for-beginners      3/3     3            3            41s

    Note

    As shown in the previous command, we are using deploy instead of deployment. Both of these will work and deploy is an allowed short name for deployment. You can find a quick list of some commonly used short names at this link: https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubectl/overview/#resource-types.

    You can also view the short names by running kubectl api-resources, without specifying the resource type.

  4. A pod called k8s-for-beginners exists that we created in the previous exercise. To ensure that we see only the pods being managed by the Deployment, let's delete the older pod:
    kubectl delete pod k8s-for-beginners

    You should see the following response:

    pod "k8s-for-beginners" deleted
  5. Now, get a list of all the pods:
    kubectl get pod

    You should see the following response:

    Figure 2.14: Getting the list of pods

    Figure 2.14: Getting the list of pods

    The Deployment has created three pods, and their labels (specified in the labels field in step 1) happen to match the Service we created in the previous section. So, what will happen if we try to access the Service? Will the network traffic going to the Service be smartly routed to the new three pods? Let's test this out.

  6. To see how the traffic is distributed to the three pods, we can simulate a number of consecutive requests to the Service endpoint by running the curl command inside a Bash for loop, as follows:
    for i in $(seq 1 30); do curl <minikube vm ip>:<service node port>; done

    Note

    In this command, use the same IP and port that you used in the previous exercise if you are running the same instance of Minikube. If you have restarted Minikube or have made any other changes, please get the proper IP of your Minikube cluster by following step 9 of the previous exercise.

    Once you've run the command with the proper IP and port, you should see the following output:

    Figure 2.15: Repeatedly accessing our application

    Figure 2.15: Repeatedly accessing our application

    From the output, we can tell that all 30 requests get the expected response.

  7. You can run kubectl logs <pod name> to check the log of each pod. Let's go one step further and figure out the exact number of requests each pod has responded to, which might help us find out whether the traffic was evenly distributed. To do that, we can pipe the logs of each pod into the wc command to get the number of lines:
    kubectl logs <pod name> | wc -l

    Run the preceding command three times, copying the pod name you obtained, as shown in Figure 2.16:

    Figure 2.16: Getting the logs of each of the three pod replicas running our application

    Figure 2.16: Getting the logs of each of the three pod replicas running our application

    The result shows that the three pods handled 9, 10, and 11 requests, respectively. Due to the small sample size, the distribution is not absolutely even (that is, 10 for each), but it is sufficient to indicate the default round-robin distribution strategy used by a Service.

    Note

    You can read more about how kube-proxy leverages iptables to perform the internal load balancing by looking at the official documentation: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#proxy-mode-iptables.

  8. Next, let's learn how to scale up a Deployment. There are two ways of accomplishing this: one way is to modify the Deployment's YAML config, where we can set the value of replicas to another number (such as 5), while the other way is to use the kubectl scale command, as follows:
    kubectl scale deploy k8s-for-beginners --replicas=5

    You should see the following response:

    deployment.apps/k8s-for-beginners scaled
  9. Let's verify whether there are five pods running:
    kubectl get pod

    You should see a response similar to the following:

    Figure 2.17: Getting the list of pods

    Figure 2.17: Getting the list of pods

    The output shows that the existing three pods are kept and that two new pods are created.

  10. Similarly, you can specify replicas that are smaller than the current number. In our example, let's say that we want to shrink the replica's number to 2. The command for this would look as follows:
    kubectl scale deploy k8s-for-beginners --replicas=2

    You should see the following response:

    deployment.apps/k8s-for-beginners scaled
  11. Now, let's verify the number of pods:
    kubectl get pod

    You should see a response similar to the following:

    Figure 2.18: Getting the list of pods

    Figure 2.18: Getting the list of pods

    As shown in the preceding screenshot, there are two pods, and they are both running as expected. Thus, in Kubernetes' terms, we can say, "the Deployment is in its desired state".

  12. We can run the following command to verify this:
    kubectl get deploy

    You should see the following response:

    NAME                   READY    UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE    AGE
    k8s-for-beginners      2/2      2            2           19m
  13. Now, let's see what happens if we delete one of the two pods:
    kubectl delete pod <pod name>

    You should get the following response:

    pod "k8s-for-beginners-66644bb776-7j9mw" deleted
  14. Check the status of the pods to see what has happened:
    kubectl get pod

    You should see the following response:

    Figure 2.19: Getting the list of pods

Figure 2.19: Getting the list of pods

We can see that there are still two pods. From the output, it's worth noting that the first pod name is the same as the second pod in Figure 2.18 (this is the one that was not deleted), but that the highlighted pod name is different from any of the pods in Figure 2.18. This indicates that the highlighted one is the pod that was newly created to replace the deleted one. The Deployment created a new pod so that the number of running pods satisfies the desired state of the Deployment.

In this exercise, we have learned how to scale a deployment up and down. You can scale other similar Kubernetes objects, such as DaemonSets and StatefulSets, in the same way. Also, for such objects, Kubernetes will try to auto-recover the failed pods.

You have been reading a chapter from
The Kubernetes Workshop
Published in: Sep 2020
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781838820756
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