Book Image

End-to-End Automation with Kubernetes and Crossplane

By : Arun Ramakani
Book Image

End-to-End Automation with Kubernetes and Crossplane

By: Arun Ramakani

Overview of this book

In the last few years, countless organizations have taken advantage of the disruptive application deployment operating model provided by Kubernetes. With Crossplane, the same benefits are coming to the world of infrastructure provisioning and management. The limitations of Infrastructure as Code with respect to drift management, role-based access control, team collaboration, and weak contract make people move towards a control-plane-based infrastructure automation, but setting it up requires a lot of know-how and effort. This book will cover a detailed journey to building a control-plane-based infrastructure automation platform with Kubernetes and Crossplane. The cloud-native landscape has an overwhelming list of configuration management tools that can make it difficult to analyze and choose. This book will guide cloud-native practitioners to select the right tools for Kubernetes configuration management that best suit the use case. You'll learn about configuration management with hands-on modules built on popular configuration management tools such as Helm, Kustomize, Argo, and KubeVela. The hands-on examples will be patterns that one can directly use in their work. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed with building a modern infrastructure automation platform to unify application and infrastructure automation.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1: The Kubernetes Disruption
4
Part 2: Building a Modern Infrastructure Platform
10
Part 3:Configuration Management Tools and Recipes

Other similar projects

A few other Kubernetes-based infrastructure automation projects share common interests and support similar use cases such as Crossplane. These projects extend Kubernetes with APIs and custom controllers identical to Crossplane architecture. This section will look at those tools to have a comprehensive comparison with Crossplane. The following is a list of a few such projects:

  • Kubernetes’ Service Catalog by the open service broker enables life cycle management of cloud resources from Kubernetes. Like Crossplane, it works as a Kubernetes controller extension. But it does not have a solid framework to compose infrastructure recipes with policy guardrails. Also, we can’t model the API for different team boundaries. The open service broker Kubernetes Service Catalog is not designed for platform teams to build reusable recipes with encoded policies. Typically, this means that we have to struggle with policy enforcement and a high cognitive load...