Book Image

Introduction to DevOps with Kubernetes

By : Onur Yılmaz, Süleyman Akba≈ü
Book Image

Introduction to DevOps with Kubernetes

By: Onur Yılmaz, Süleyman Akba≈ü

Overview of this book

Kubernetes and DevOps are the two pillars that can keep your business at the top by ensuring high performance of your IT infrastructure. Introduction to DevOps with Kubernetes will help you develop the skills you need to improve your DevOps with the power of Kubernetes. The book begins with an overview of Kubernetes primitives and DevOps concepts. You'll understand how Kubernetes can assist you with overcoming a wide range of real-world operation challenges. You will get to grips with creating and upgrading a cluster, and then learn how to deploy, update, and scale an application on Kubernetes. As you advance through the chapters, you’ll be able to monitor an application by setting up a pod failure alert on Prometheus. The book will also guide you in configuring Alertmanager to send alerts to the Slack channel and trace down a problem on the application using kubectl commands. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to manage the lifecycle of simple to complex applications on Kubernetes with confidence.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Summary


In this chapter, we first described the microservice architecture and compared it to monolith applications. We discussed how traditional methods for the development, building, testing, and runtime environments could fail for running microservices in a cloud-native environment. Then, we explored containers in detail and explained why they have become the de facto solution for microservices. Following this, we presented different container runtime environments and introduced Docker. The fundamental concepts of Docker containers were covered, including Docker Engine, client, image, and container terminology. Following the theoretical background, we built Docker images and stored them in registries. Finally, we ran Docker containers by sharing volumes and ports from host systems. At the end of the chapter, we used Docker containers to create a stateful popular MySQL database and a WordPress blog in order to show how multiple containers can work in harmony.

Docker concepts and operational...