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Hands-On Kubernetes on Azure

You're reading from   Hands-On Kubernetes on Azure Automate management, scaling, and deployment of containerized applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800209671
Length 368 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Nills Franssens Nills Franssens
Author Profile Icon Nills Franssens
Nills Franssens
Gunther Lenz Gunther Lenz
Author Profile Icon Gunther Lenz
Gunther Lenz
Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
Author Profile Icon Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface Section 1: The Basics
1. Introduction to Docker and Kubernetes FREE CHAPTER 2. Kubernetes on Azure (AKS) Section 2: Deploying on AKS
3. Application deployment on AKS 4. Building scalable applications 5. Handling common failures in AKS 6. Securing your application with HTTPS and Azure AD 7. Monitoring the AKS cluster and the application Section 3: Leveraging advanced Azure PaaS services
8. Connecting an app to an Azure database 9. Connecting to Azure Event Hubs 10. Securing your AKS cluster 11. Serverless functions Index

Summary

In this chapter, we deployed serverless functions on top of our Kubernetes cluster. To achieve this, we first created a development machine and an Azure Container Registry.

We started our functions Deployments by deploying a function that used an HTTP trigger. The Azure Functions core tools were used to create that function and to deploy it to Kubernetes.

Afterward, we installed an additional component on our Kubernetes cluster called KEDA. KEDA allows serverless scaling in Kubernetes: it allows Deployments to and from 0 Pods, and it also provides additional metrics to the Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA). We used a function that was triggered on messages in an Azure storage queue.

This chapter also concludes the book. Throughout this book, we've introduced AKS through multiple hands-on examples. The first part of the book focused on getting applications up and running. We created an AKS cluster, deployed multiple applications and learned how to scale those applications...

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