Book Image

Hands-on Kubernetes on Azure, Third Edition - Third Edition

By : Nills Franssens, Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan, Gunther Lenz
Book Image

Hands-on Kubernetes on Azure, Third Edition - Third Edition

By: Nills Franssens, Shivakumar Gopalakrishnan, Gunther Lenz

Overview of this book

Containers and Kubernetes containers facilitate cloud deployments and application development by enabling efficient versioning with improved security and portability. With updated chapters on role-based access control, pod identity, storing secrets, and network security in AKS, this third edition begins by introducing you to containers, Kubernetes, and Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS), and guides you through deploying an AKS cluster in different ways. You will then delve into the specifics of Kubernetes by deploying a sample guestbook application on AKS and installing complex Kubernetes apps using Helm. With the help of real-world examples, you'll also get to grips with scaling your applications and clusters. As you advance, you'll learn how to overcome common challenges in AKS and secure your applications with HTTPS. You will also learn how to secure your clusters and applications in a dedicated section on security. In the final section, you’ll learn about advanced integrations, which give you the ability to create Azure databases and run serverless functions on AKS as well as the ability to integrate AKS with a continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipeline using GitHub Actions. By the end of this Kubernetes book, you will be proficient in deploying containerized workloads on Microsoft Azure with minimal management overhead.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Foreword
Free Chapter
2
Section 1: The Basics
5
Section 2: Deploying on AKS
11
Section 3: Securing your AKS cluster and workloads
16
Section 4: Integrating with Azure managed services
21
Index

Summary

In this chapter, you learned about RBAC on AKS. You enabled Azure AD–integrated RBAC in your cluster. After that, you created a new user and group and set up different RBAC roles on your cluster. Finally, you signed in using that user and were able to verify that the RBAC roles that were configured gave you limited access to the cluster you were expecting.

This deals with how users can get access to your Kubernetes cluster. The pods running on your cluster might also need an identity in Azure AD that they can use to access resources in Azure services such as Blob Storage or Key Vault. You will learn more about this use case and how to set this up using an Azure AD pod identity in AKS in the next chapter.