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Microservices Deployment Cookbook

You're reading from   Microservices Deployment Cookbook Deploy and manage scalable microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786469434
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Vikram Murugesan Vikram Murugesan
Author Profile Icon Vikram Murugesan
Vikram Murugesan
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building Microservices with Java FREE CHAPTER 2. Containerizing Microservices with Docker 3. Deploying Microservices on Mesos 4. Deploying Microservices on Kubernetes 5. Service Discovery and Load Balancing Microservices 6. Monitoring Microservices 7. Building Asynchronous Streaming Systems with Kafka and Spark 8. More Clustering Frameworks - DC/OS, Docker Swarm, and YARN

Understanding the Kubernetes dashboard


In the previous recipe, we learned how to start and stop our local single-node Kubernetes cluster. We call it a single-node cluster because it will just have one Kubernetes node configured. So all the containers that you deploy are going to be deployed on this single Kubernetes node. Kubernetes comes with a sophisticated web UI. The web UI acts as an administration console for your cluster. You can perform almost all operations that you can with kubectl, on the web UI. In fact, you could also monitor the resource utilization of your cluster from the web UI. In this recipe, we are going to get familiar with the Kubernetes dashboard so that we can easily manage our microservice on any Kubernetes cluster.

Getting ready

  1. The first thing you need to know is the URL to the Kubernetes UI dashboard. One way to do that is identifying the IP of your minikube VM and use the default Kubernetes dashboard port, 30000.

  2. To find the IP of your minikube VM, run the following...

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