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Mastering Ubuntu Server

You're reading from   Mastering Ubuntu Server Explore the versatile, powerful Linux Server distribution Ubuntu 22.04 with this comprehensive guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234243
Length 584 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Jay LaCroix Jay LaCroix
Author Profile Icon Jay LaCroix
Jay LaCroix
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Deploying Ubuntu Server 2. Managing Users and Permissions FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Software Packages 4. Navigating and Essential Commands 5. Managing Files and Directories 6. Boosting Your Command-line Efficiency 7. Controlling and Managing Processes 8. Monitoring System Resources 9. Managing Storage Volumes 10. Connecting to Networks 11. Setting Up Network Services 12. Sharing and Transferring Files 13. Managing Databases 14. Serving Web Content 15. Automating Server Configuration with Ansible 16. Virtualization 17. Running Containers 18. Container Orchestration 19. Deploying Ubuntu in the Cloud 20. Automating Cloud Deployments with Terraform 21. Securing Your Server 22. Troubleshooting Ubuntu Servers 23. Preventing Disasters 24. Other Books You May Enjoy
25. Index

Deploying containers via Kubernetes

Now it’s time to see our work pay off, and we can successfully use the cluster we’ve created. At this point, you should have either set up MicroK8s, or manually created a cluster as we’ve done in the previous section. In either case, the result is the same: we have a cluster available that we can use to deploy containers.

Keep in mind that if you’re using MicroK8s, you might need to prepend microk8s in front of kubectl commands, depending on how you set up MicroK8s. I’ll leave it up to you to add microk8s to the front of such commands as you go along, if you’re using MicroK8s and you don’t have it set up to simplify microk8s kubectl to kubectl.

Kubernetes utilizes files created in the YAML format to receive instructions. Does that sound familiar? In Chapter 15, Automating Server Configuration with Ansible, we worked with YAML files as that’s the format that Ansible playbooks are written...

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