Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Kubernetes

By : Gigi Sayfan
Book Image

Hands-On Microservices with Kubernetes

By: Gigi Sayfan

Overview of this book

Kubernetes is among the most popular open source platforms for automating the deployment, scaling, and operations of application containers across clusters of hosts, providing a container-centric infrastructure. Hands-On Microservices with Kubernetes starts by providing you with in-depth insights into the synergy between Kubernetes and microservices. You will learn how to use Delinkcious, which will serve as a live lab throughout the book to help you understand microservices and Kubernetes concepts in the context of a real-world application. Next, you will get up to speed with setting up a CI/CD pipeline and configuring microservices using Kubernetes ConfigMaps. As you cover later chapters, you will gain hands-on experience in securing microservices and implementing REST, gRPC APIs, and a Delinkcious data store. In addition to this, you’ll explore the Nuclio project, run a serverless task on Kubernetes, and manage and implement data-intensive tests. Toward the concluding chapters, you’ll deploy microservices on Kubernetes and learn to maintain a well-monitored system. Finally, you’ll discover the importance of service meshes and how to incorporate Istio into the Delinkcious cluster. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained the skills you need to implement microservices on Kubernetes with the help of effective tools and best practices.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we covered a large number of topics, including self-healing, autoscaling, logging, metrics, and distributed tracing. Monitoring a distributed system is tough. Just installing and configuring the various monitoring services like Fluentd, Prometheus, and Jaeger is a non-trivial project. Managing the interactions between them and how your services support logging, instrumentation, and tracing adds another level of complexity. We've seen how Go-kit, with its middleware concept, makes it somewhat easier to add those operational concerns in a decoupled way from the core business logic. Once you have all the monitoring for those systems in place, there's a new set of challenges to take into account how do you gain insights from all the data? How can you integrate it into your alerting and incident response process? How can you continuously...