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Becoming KCNA Certified

You're reading from   Becoming KCNA Certified Build a strong foundation in cloud native and Kubernetes and pass the KCNA exam with ease

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804613399
Length 306 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dmitry Galkin Dmitry Galkin
Author Profile Icon Dmitry Galkin
Dmitry Galkin
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Cloud Era
2. Chapter 1: From Cloud to Cloud Native and Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Overview of CNCF and Kubernetes Certifications 4. Part 2: Performing Container Orchestration
5. Chapter 3: Getting Started with Containers 6. Chapter 4: Exploring Container Runtimes, Interfaces, and Service Meshes 7. Part 3: Learning Kubernetes Fundamentals
8. Chapter 5: Orchestrating Containers with Kubernetes 9. Chapter 6: Deploying and Scaling Applications with Kubernetes 10. Chapter 7: Application Placement and Debugging with Kubernetes 11. Chapter 8: Following Kubernetes Best Practices 12. Part 4: Exploring Cloud Native
13. Chapter 9: Understanding Cloud Native Architectures 14. Chapter 10: Implementing Telemetry and Observability in the Cloud 15. Chapter 11: Automating Cloud Native Application Delivery 16. Part 5: KCNA Exam and Next Steps
17. Chapter 12: Practicing for the KCNA Exam with Mock Papers 18. Chapter 13: The Road Ahead 19. Assessments 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

All in all, in this chapter, we’ve learned a few important aspects of running and operating workloads with K8s. We’ve seen how pod scheduling works with Kubernetes, its stages (filtering and scoring), and how we can control placement decisions with nodeSelector, nodeName, and affinity and anti-affinity settings, as well as topology spread constraints. Extensive features of the Kubernetes scheduler allow us to cover all imaginable scenarios of controlling how a certain workload will be placed within the nodes of a cluster. With those controls, we can spread Pods of one application between nodes in multiple AZs for HA; schedule Pods that require specialized hardware (for example, a GPU) only to nodes that have it available; magnet multiple applications together to run on the same nodes with affinity; and much more.

Next, we’ve seen that resource requests help Kubernetes make better scheduling decisions, and resource limits are there to protect the cluster...

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