Book Image

The Kubernetes Workshop

By : Zachary Arnold, Sahil Dua, Wei Huang, Faisal Masood, Mélony Qin, Mohammed Abu Taleb
Book Image

The Kubernetes Workshop

By: Zachary Arnold, Sahil Dua, Wei Huang, Faisal Masood, Mélony Qin, Mohammed Abu Taleb

Overview of this book

Thanks to its extensive support for managing hundreds of containers that run cloud-native applications, Kubernetes is the most popular open source container orchestration platform that makes cluster management easy. This workshop adopts a practical approach to get you acquainted with the Kubernetes environment and its applications. Starting with an introduction to the fundamentals of Kubernetes, you’ll install and set up your Kubernetes environment. You’ll understand how to write YAML files and deploy your first simple web application container using Pod. You’ll then assign human-friendly names to Pods, explore various Kubernetes entities and functions, and discover when to use them. As you work through the chapters, this Kubernetes book will show you how you can make full-scale use of Kubernetes by applying a variety of techniques for designing components and deploying clusters. You’ll also get to grips with security policies for limiting access to certain functions inside the cluster. Toward the end of the book, you’ll get a rundown of Kubernetes advanced features for building your own controller and upgrading to a Kubernetes cluster without downtime. By the end of this workshop, you’ll be able to manage containers and run cloud-based applications efficiently using Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Preface

Introduction

In previous chapters, we created Deployments to create multiple replicas of our application and exposed our application using Services. However, we have not yet properly explored how Kubernetes facilitates applications to store and read data, which is the subject of this chapter.

In practice, most applications interact with data in some way. It's possible that we may have an application that needs to read data from a file. Similarly, our application may need to write some data locally in order for other parts of the application, or different applications, to read it. For example, if we have a container running our main application that produces some logs locally, we would want to have a sidecar container (which is a second container running inside the pod along with the main application container) that can run inside the same pod to read and process the local logs produced by the main application. However, to enable this, we need to find a way to share the storage...