Book Image

The Kubernetes Book

By : Nigel Poulton, Pushkar Joglekar
Book Image

The Kubernetes Book

By: Nigel Poulton, Pushkar Joglekar

Overview of this book

Kubernetes is the leading orchestrator of cloud-native apps. With knowledge of how to work with Kubernetes, you can easily deploy and manage applications on the cloud or in your on-premises data center. The book begins by introducing you to Kubernetes and showing you how to install it. You’ll learn how to use Kubernetes Services and bring stable and reliable networking to apps that are deployed on Kubernetes. You'll delve deep into the powerful storage subsystem of Kubernetes and learn how to leverage the variety of external storage backends in your applications. As the book progresses, it shows you how to use features such as DaemonSets, Helm, and RBAC to enhance your Kubernetes applications. You'll explore the six categories of identifying vulnerabilities and look at a few ways to prevent and mitigate them. You'll also look at ways to secure the software delivery pipeline by discussing some image-related best practices. The book ends by sharing with you some resources that’ll help take your Kubernetes knowledge to the next level. By the end of the book, you’ll have the confidence and skills to leverage all the features of Kubernetes to develop scalable applications.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Chapter 1
3
Chapter 2
5
Chapter 3
7
Chapter 4
9
Chapter 5
11
Chapter 6
13
Chapter 7
15
Chapter 8
17
Chapter 9
19
Chapter 10
21
Chapter 11

The Container Storage Interface (CSI)

The CSI is an important piece of the Kubernetes storage jigsaw. However, unless you're writing storage plugins, you're unlikely to interact with it very often.

It's an open source project that defines a standards-based interface so that storage can be leveraged in a uniform way across multiple container orchestrators. In other words, a storage vendor should be able to write a single CSI plugin that works across multiple orchestrators such as Kubernetes and Docker Swarm.

In the Kubernetes world, the CSI is the preferred way to write drivers and means that plugin code no longer needs to exist in the main Kubernetes code tree. It also provides a clean and simple interface that abstracts all the complex internal Kubernetes storage machinery.

From a day-to-day management perspective, your only real interaction with the CSI will be referencing the appropriate plugin in your YAML manifest files. Also, it may take a while for existing...