Book Image

Blockchain for Enterprise

By : Narayan Prusty
Book Image

Blockchain for Enterprise

By: Narayan Prusty

Overview of this book

The increasing growth in blockchain use is enormous, and it is changing the way business is done. Many leading organizations are already exploring the potential of blockchain. With this book, you will learn to build end-to-end enterprise-level decentralized applications and scale them across your organization to meet your company's needs. This book will help you understand what DApps are and how the blockchain ecosystem works, via real-world examples. This extensive end-to-end book covers every blockchain aspect for business and for developers. You will master process flows and incorporate them into your own enterprise. You will learn how to use J.P. Morgan’s Quorum to build blockchain-based applications. You will also learn how to write applications that can help communicate enterprise blockchain solutions. You will learn how to write smart contracts that run without censorship and third-party interference. Once you've grasped what a blockchain is and have learned about Quorum, you will jump into building real-world practical blockchain applications for sectors such as payment and money transfer, healthcare, cloud computing, supply chain management, and much more.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Diving into K8s


Once you have created a few Docker containers, you'll realize that something is missing. If you want to run multiple containers across multiple machines – which you'll need to do if you're using microservices—there is still a lot of work to do.

You need to start the right containers at the right time, figure out how they can talk to each other, handle storage considerations, and deal with failed containers or hardware. Doing all of this manually would be a nightmare. Luckily, that's where K8s comes in.

K8sis an open source container-orchestration platform, allowing large numbers of containers to work together in harmony, reducing the operational burden. It helps with things such as:

  • Running containers across many different machines.
  • Scaling up or down by adding or removing containers when demand changes.
  • Keeping storage consistent with multiple instances of an application.
  • Distributing load between the containers.
  • Launching new containers on different machines if something fails...