Book Image

IoT Edge Computing with MicroK8s

By : Karthikeyan Shanmugam
Book Image

IoT Edge Computing with MicroK8s

By: Karthikeyan Shanmugam

Overview of this book

Are you facing challenges with developing, deploying, monitoring, clustering, storing, securing, and managing Kubernetes in production environments as you're not familiar with infrastructure technologies? MicroK8s - a zero-ops, lightweight, and CNCF-compliant Kubernetes with a small footprint is the apt solution for you. This book gets you up and running with production-grade, highly available (HA) Kubernetes clusters on MicroK8s using best practices and examples based on IoT and edge computing. Beginning with an introduction to Kubernetes, MicroK8s, and IoT and edge computing architectures, this book shows you how to install, deploy sample apps, and enable add-ons (like DNS and dashboard) on the MicroK8s platform. You’ll work with multi-node Kubernetes clusters on Raspberry Pi and networking plugins (such as Calico and Cilium) and implement service mesh, load balancing with MetalLB and Ingress, and AI/ML workloads on MicroK8s. You’ll also understand how to secure containers, monitor infrastructure and apps with Prometheus, Grafana, and the ELK stack, manage storage replication with OpenEBS, resist component failure using a HA cluster, and more, as well as take a sneak peek into future trends. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to use MicroK8 to build and implement scenarios for IoT and edge computing workloads in a production environment.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: Foundations of Kubernetes and MicroK8s
4
Part 2: Kubernetes as the Preferred Platform for IOT and Edge Computing
7
Part 3: Running Applications on MicroK8s
14
Part 4: Deploying and Managing Applications on MicroK8s
21
Frequently Asked Questions About MicroK8s

Troubleshooting application and cluster issues

It's critical to know that things can go wrong; there might be issues with the Kubernetes components themselves, or a problem with the MicroK8s component. In this section, we will cover some of the common issues and tools to assist you in determining what went wrong.

The application level

This section assists users in debugging Kubernetes-deployed applications that aren't functioning as intended.

Examining a Pod is the first step in troubleshooting it. With the following command, you can check the current state of the Pod and a historical list of the events:

kubectl describe pods ${POD_NAME}

In the following command execution output, you can see that the kubectl describe pod command fetches the details of the container(s) and the Pod's configuration information (labels, resource needs, and so on), as well as the container(s) and Pod's status information (state, readiness, restart count, events, and...