Book Image

Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide - Second Edition

By : Marc Boorshtein, Scott Surovich
Book Image

Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide - Second Edition

By: Marc Boorshtein, Scott Surovich

Overview of this book

Kubernetes has taken the world by storm, becoming the standard infrastructure for DevOps teams to develop, test, and run applications. With significant updates in each chapter, this revised edition will help you acquire the knowledge and tools required to integrate Kubernetes clusters in an enterprise environment. The book introduces you to Docker and Kubernetes fundamentals, including a review of basic Kubernetes objects. You’ll get to grips with containerization and understand its core functionalities such as creating ephemeral multinode clusters using KinD. The book has replaced PodSecurityPolicies (PSP) with OPA/Gatekeeper for PSP-like enforcement. You’ll integrate your container into a cloud platform and tools including MetalLB, externalDNS, OpenID connect (OIDC), Open Policy Agent (OPA), Falco, and Velero. After learning to deploy your core cluster, you’ll learn how to deploy Istio and how to deploy both monolithic applications and microservices into your service mesh. Finally, you will discover how to deploy an entire GitOps platform to Kubernetes using continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD).
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
15
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16
Index

Services, Load Balancing, ExternalDNS, and Global Balancing

Before systems like Kubernetes were available, scaling an application often required a manual process that could involve multiple teams, and multiple processes, in many larger organizations. To scale out a common web application, you would have to add additional servers, and update the frontend load balancer to include the additional servers. We will discuss load balancers in this chapter, but for a quick introduction to anyone that may be new to the term, a load balancer provides a single point of entry to an application. The incoming request is handled by the load balancer, which routes traffic to any backend server that hosts the application. This is a very high-level explanation of a load balancer, and most offer very powerful features well beyond simply routing traffic, but for the purpose of this chapter, we are only concerned with the routing features.

When you deploy an application to a Kubernetes cluster, your...