Book Image

Hands-On Kubernetes on Windows

By : Piotr Tylenda
Book Image

Hands-On Kubernetes on Windows

By: Piotr Tylenda

Overview of this book

With the adoption of Windows containers in Kubernetes, you can now fully leverage the flexibility and robustness of the Kubernetes container orchestration system in the Windows ecosystem. This support will enable you to create new Windows applications and migrate existing ones to the cloud-native stack with the same ease as for Linux-oriented cloud applications. This practical guide takes you through the key concepts involved in packaging Windows-distributed applications into containers and orchestrating these using Kubernetes. You'll also understand the current limitations of Windows support in Kubernetes. As you advance, you'll gain hands-on experience deploying a fully functional hybrid Linux/Windows Kubernetes cluster for development, and explore production scenarios in on-premises and cloud environments, such as Microsoft Azure Kubernetes Service. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed with containerization, microservices architecture, and the critical considerations for running Kubernetes in production environments successfully.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Section 1: Creating and Working with Containers
5
Section 2: Understanding Kubernetes Fundamentals
9
Section 3: Creating Windows Kubernetes Clusters
12
Section 4: Orchestrating Windows Containers Using Kubernetes

Scaling the application

In production scenarios, you will definitely need to scale your applicationthis is where Kubernetes is powerful; you can either manually scale your application or use autoscaling. Let's first take a look at how to perform the manual scaling of your Deployment. You can do it either imperatively or declaratively. To perform scaling by using an imperative command in PowerShell, perform these steps:

  1. Execute the kubectl scale command, which will scale the windows-example Deployment to three replicas:
PS C:\src\declarative-demo> kubectl scale deployment/windows-example --replicas=3
deployment.extensions/windows-example scaled
  1. Now watch how the Pods are being added to your Deployment:
PS C:\src\declarative-demo> kubectl get pods -w
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
windows-example-5cb7456474-5ndrm 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 8s
windows-example-5cb7456474...