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Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

You're reading from   Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide Master containerized application deployments, integrate enterprise systems, and achieve scalability

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835086957
Length 682 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Marc Boorshtein Marc Boorshtein
Author Profile Icon Marc Boorshtein
Marc Boorshtein
Scott Surovich Scott Surovich
Author Profile Icon Scott Surovich
Scott Surovich
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Docker and Container Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying Kubernetes Using KinD 3. Kubernetes Bootcamp 4. Services, Load Balancing, and Network Policies 5. External DNS and Global Load Balancing 6. Integrating Authentication into Your Cluster 7. RBAC Policies and Auditing 8. Managing Secrets 9. Building Multitenant Clusters with vClusters 10. Deploying a Secured Kubernetes Dashboard 11. Extending Security Using Open Policy Agent 12. Node Security with Gatekeeper 13. KubeArmor Securing Your Runtime 14. Backing Up Workloads 15. Monitoring Clusters and Workloads 16. An Introduction to Istio 17. Building and Deploying Applications on Istio 18. Provisioning a Multitenant Platform 19. Building a Developer Portal 20. Other Books You May Enjoy 21. Index

Managing Metrics in Kubernetes

Once upon a time, monitoring and metrics were a complex and very proprietary corner of the industry. While there were some open-source projects that did monitoring, the majority of “enterprise” systems were large, cumbersome, and proprietary. There were a few standards, such as SNMP, but for the most part, every vendor had their own agents, their own configurations, their own…everything. If you wanted to write an application that generated metrics or alerts, then you needed to write to their SDK. This led to monitoring being one of the centralized services, like databases, but required much deeper understanding of what’s being monitored. Changes were difficult and ultimately, many systems followed either you only live once (YOLO) monitoring or very basic high-level monitoring that “checked the compliance box,” but didn’t provide much value.

Then came the Prometheus project, which made two critical...

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