Book Image

Mastering Service Mesh

By : Anjali Khatri, Vikram Khatri
Book Image

Mastering Service Mesh

By: Anjali Khatri, Vikram Khatri

Overview of this book

Although microservices-based applications support DevOps and continuous delivery, they can also add to the complexity of testing and observability. The implementation of a service mesh architecture, however, allows you to secure, manage, and scale your microservices more efficiently. With the help of practical examples, this book demonstrates how to install, configure, and deploy an efficient service mesh for microservices in a Kubernetes environment. You'll get started with a hands-on introduction to the concepts of cloud-native application management and service mesh architecture, before learning how to build your own Kubernetes environment. While exploring later chapters, you'll get to grips with the three major service mesh providers: Istio, Linkerd, and Consul. You'll be able to identify their specific functionalities, from traffic management, security, and certificate authority through to sidecar injections and observability. By the end of this book, you will have developed the skills you need to effectively manage modern microservices-based applications.
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
1
Section 1: Cloud-Native Application Management
4
Section 2: Architecture
8
Section 3: Building a Kubernetes Environment
10
Section 4: Learning about Istio through Examples
18
Section 5: Learning about Linkerd through Examples
24
Section 6: Learning about Consul through Examples

Summary

As we have seen in this chapter, the Linkerd control plane ships with a Certificate Authority (CA) called identity and sidecar proxies. Sidecars run alongside each microservice and receive certificates from the identity CA—which ties to a Kubernetes service account. The sidecar proxies automatically upgrade all communication between edges of the mesh to encrypted TLS connections.

Linkerd leaves it up to you to configure your ingress gateway to secure communications to the edge services of the applications in the Kubernetes cluster. There are choices of ingress controllers that you can use. In the examples of this chapter, we used the nginx ingress gateway to secure the communication and steps to rotate the certificates.

In the next chapter, we will explore the observability features in Linkerd. We will explain the process of metrics collection through sidecar...