Book Image

Cloud Native with Kubernetes

By : Alexander Raul
Book Image

Cloud Native with Kubernetes

By: Alexander Raul

Overview of this book

Kubernetes is a modern cloud native container orchestration tool and one of the most popular open source projects worldwide. In addition to the technology being powerful and highly flexible, Kubernetes engineers are in high demand across the industry. This book is a comprehensive guide to deploying, securing, and operating modern cloud native applications on Kubernetes. From the fundamentals to Kubernetes best practices, the book covers essential aspects of configuring applications. You’ll even explore real-world techniques for running clusters in production, tips for setting up observability for cluster resources, and valuable troubleshooting techniques. Finally, you’ll learn how to extend and customize Kubernetes, as well as gaining tips for deploying service meshes, serverless tooling, and more on your cluster. By the end of this Kubernetes book, you’ll be equipped with the tools you need to confidently run and extend modern applications on Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Setting Up Kubernetes
5
Section 2: Configuring and Deploying Applications on Kubernetes
11
Section 3: Running Kubernetes in Production
16
Section 4: Extending Kubernetes

Understanding CI/CD paradigms on Kubernetes – in-cluster and out-of-cluster

Continuous integration and deployment to Kubernetes can take many forms.

Most DevOps engineers will be familiar with tools such as Jenkins, TravisCI, and others. These tools are fairly similar in that they provide an execution environment to build applications, perform tests, and call arbitrary Bash scripts in a controlled environment. Some of these tools run commands inside containers, while others don't.

When it comes to Kubernetes, there are multiple schools of thought in how and where to use these tools. There is also a newer breed of CI/CD platforms that are much more tightly coupled to Kubernetes primitives, and many that are architected to run on the cluster itself.

To thoroughly discuss how tooling can pertain to Kubernetes, we will split our pipelines into two logical steps:

  1. Build: Compiling, testing applications, building container images, and sending to image repositories...