Book Image

The Kubernetes Bible

By : Nassim Kebbani, Piotr Tylenda, Russ McKendrick
4 (3)
Book Image

The Kubernetes Bible

4 (3)
By: Nassim Kebbani, Piotr Tylenda, Russ McKendrick

Overview of this book

With its broad adoption across various industries, Kubernetes is helping engineers with the orchestration and automation of container deployments on a large scale, making it the leading container orchestration system and the most popular choice for running containerized applications. This Kubernetes book starts with an introduction to Kubernetes and containerization, covering the setup of your local development environment and the roles of the most important Kubernetes components. Along with covering the core concepts necessary to make the most of your infrastructure, this book will also help you get acquainted with the fundamentals of Kubernetes. As you advance, you'll learn how to manage Kubernetes clusters on cloud platforms, such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform (GCP), and develop and deploy real-world applications in Kubernetes using practical examples. Additionally, you'll get to grips with managing microservices along with best practices. By the end of this book, you'll be equipped with battle-tested knowledge of advanced Kubernetes topics, such as scheduling of Pods and managing incoming traffic to the cluster, and be ready to work with Kubernetes on cloud platforms.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introducing Kubernetes
5
Section 2: Diving into Kubernetes Core Concepts
12
Section 3: Using Managed Pods with Controllers
17
Section 4: Deploying Kubernetes on the Cloud
21
Section 5: Advanced Kubernetes

Chapter 11: Deployment – Deploying Stateless Applications

The previous chapter introduced two important Kubernetes objects: ReplicationController and ReplicaSet. At this point, you already know that they serve similar purposes in terms of maintaining identical, healthy replicas (copies) of Pods. In fact, ReplicaSet is a successor of ReplicationController and, in the most recent versions of Kubernetes, ReplicaSet should be used in favor of ReplicationController.

Now, it is time to introduce the Deployment object, which provides easy scalability, rolling updates, and versioned rollbacks for your stateless Kubernetes applications and services. Deployment objects are built on top of ReplicaSets and they provide a declarative way of managing them – just describe the desired state in the Deployment manifest and Kubernetes will take care of orchestrating the underlying ReplicaSets in a controlled, predictable manner. Alongside StatefulSet, which will be covered in the next...