Book Image

The DevOps 2.4 Toolkit

By : Viktor Farcic
Book Image

The DevOps 2.4 Toolkit

By: Viktor Farcic

Overview of this book

Building on The DevOps 2.3 Toolkit: Kubernetes, Viktor Farcic brings his latest exploration of the Docker technology as he records his journey to continuously deploying applications with Jenkins into a Kubernetes cluster. The DevOps 2.4 Toolkit: Continuously Deploying Applications with Jenkins to a Kubernetes Cluster is the latest book in Viktor Farcic’s series that helps you build a full DevOps Toolkit. This book guides readers through the process of building, testing, and deploying applications through fully automated pipelines. Within this book, Viktor will cover a wide-range of emerging topics, including an exploration of continuous delivery and deployment in Kubernetes using Jenkins. It also shows readers how to perform continuous integration inside these clusters, and discusses the distribution of Kubernetes applications, as well as installing and setting up Jenkins. Work with Viktor and dive into the creation of self-adaptive and self-healing systems within Docker.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
9
Now It Is Your Turn

Using ChartMuseum

Just as Docker Registry (https://docs.docker.com/registry/) is a place where we can publish our container images and make them accessible to others, we can use Chart repository to accomplish similar goals with our Charts.

A Chart repository is a location where packaged Charts can be stored and retrieved. We'll use ChartMuseum for that. There aren't many other solutions to choose. We can say that we picked it because there were no alternatives. That will change soon. I'm sure that Helm Charts will become integrated into general purpose repositories. At the time of this writing (June 2018), Charts are already supported by JFrog's Artifactory (https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF/Helm+Chart+Repositories). You could easily build one yourself if you're adventurous.

All you'd need is a way to store index.yaml file that contains...