Book Image

DevOps with Kubernetes - Second Edition

By : Hideto Saito, Hui-Chuan Chloe Lee, Cheng-Yang Wu
Book Image

DevOps with Kubernetes - Second Edition

By: Hideto Saito, Hui-Chuan Chloe Lee, Cheng-Yang Wu

Overview of this book

Kubernetes has been widely adopted across public clouds and on-premise data centers. As we're living in an era of microservices, knowing how to use and manage Kubernetes is an essential skill for everyone in the IT industry. This book is a guide to everything you need to know about Kubernetes—from simply deploying a container to administrating Kubernetes clusters wisely. You'll learn about DevOps fundamentals, as well as deploying a monolithic application as microservices and using Kubernetes to orchestrate them. You will then gain an insight into the Kubernetes network, extensions, authentication and authorization. With the DevOps spirit in mind, you'll learn how to allocate resources to your application and prepare to scale them efficiently. Knowing the status and activity of the application and clusters is crucial, so we’ll learn about monitoring and logging in Kubernetes. Having an improved ability to observe your services means that you will be able to build a continuous delivery pipeline with confidence. At the end of the book, you'll learn how to run managed Kubernetes services on three top cloud providers: Google Cloud Platform, Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft Azure.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we've discussed topics related to building a continuous delivery pipeline and how to strengthen our deployment tasks. The rolling update of a pod is a powerful tool that allows us to perform updates in a controlled fashion. To trigger a rolling update, what we need to do is change the pod's specification in a controller that supports that rolling update. Additionally, although the update is managed by Kubernetes, we can still control it with kubectl rollout to a certain extent.

Later on, we fabricated an extensible continuous delivery pipeline using GitHub/DockerHub/Travis-CI. We then moved on to learn more about the life cycle of pods to prevent any possible failures, including using the readiness and liveness probes to protect a pod; initializing a pod with init containers; handling SIGTERM properly by picking the right composition of invocation...