Book Image

Serverless Architectures with Kubernetes

By : Onur Yılmaz, Sathsara Sarathchandra
Book Image

Serverless Architectures with Kubernetes

By: Onur Yılmaz, Sathsara Sarathchandra

Overview of this book

Kubernetes has established itself as the standard platform for container management, orchestration, and deployment. By learning Kubernetes, you’ll be able to design your own serverless architecture by implementing the function-as-a-service (FaaS) model. After an accelerated, hands-on overview of the serverless architecture and various Kubernetes concepts, you’ll cover a wide range of real-world development challenges faced by real-world developers, and explore various techniques to overcome them. You’ll learn how to create production-ready Kubernetes clusters and run serverless applications on them. You'll see how Kubernetes platforms and serverless frameworks such as Kubeless, Apache OpenWhisk and OpenFaaS provide the tooling to help you develop serverless applications on Kubernetes. You'll also learn ways to select the appropriate framework for your upcoming project. By the end of this book, you’ll have the skills and confidence to design your own serverless applications using the power and flexibility of Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
2
2. Introduction to Serverless in the Cloud

Summary

In this chapter, we first described the journey from traditional to serverless software development. We discussed how software development has changed over the years to create a more developer-friendly environment. Following that, we presented the origin of serverless technology and its official manifesto. Since serverless is a popular term in the industry, defining some rules helps to design better serverless applications that integrate easily into various platforms. We then listed use cases for serverless technology to illustrate how serverless architectures can be used to create any modern application.

Following an introduction to serverless, FaaS was explored as an implementation of serverless architectures. We showed how applications are designed in traditional, microservices, and serverless designs. In addition, the benefits of the transition to serverless architectures were discussed in detail.

Finally, Kubernetes and serverless technologies were discussed to show how they support each other. As the mainstream container management system, Kubernetes was presented, which involved looking at the advantages of running serverless platforms with it. Containerization and microservices are highly adopted in the industry, and therefore running serverless workloads as containers was covered, with exercises. Finally, a real-life example of functions as a backend for a Twitter bot was explored. In this activity, functions were packaged as containers to show the relationship between microservices-based, containerized, and FaaS-backed designs.

In the next chapter, we will be introducing serverless architecture in the cloud and working with cloud services.