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    Kubernetes Management Design Patterns: With Docker, CoreOS Linux, and Other Platforms

    Posted By: naag
    Kubernetes Management Design Patterns: With Docker, CoreOS Linux, and Other Platforms

    Kubernetes Management Design Patterns: With Docker, CoreOS Linux, and Other Platforms by Deepak Vohra
    English | 23 Feb. 2017 | ISBN: 148422597X | 399 Pages | Epub | 13.79 MB

    Take container cluster management to the next level; learn how to administer and configure Kubernetes on CoreOS; and apply suitable management design patterns such as Configmaps, Autoscaling, elastic resource usage, and high availability. Some of the other features discussed are logging, scheduling, rolling updates, volumes, service types, and multiple cloud provider zones.
    The atomic unit of modular container service in Kubernetes is a Pod, which is a group of containers with a common filesystem and networking. The Kubernetes Pod abstraction enables design patterns for containerized applications similar to object-oriented design patterns. Containers provide some of the same benefits as software objects such as modularity or packaging, abstraction, and reuse.
    CoreOS Linux is used in the majority of the chapters and other platforms discussed are CentOS with OpenShift, Debian 8 (jessie) on AWS, and Debian 7 for Google Container Engine.
    CoreOS is the main focus becayse Docker is pre-installed on CoreOS out-of-the-box. CoreOS:
    Supports most cloud providers (including Amazon AWS EC2 and Google Cloud Platform) and virtualization platforms (such as VMWare and VirtualBox)
    Provides Cloud-Config for declaratively configuring for OS items such as network configuration (flannel), storage (etcd), and user accounts
    Provides a production-level infrastructure for containerized applications including automation, security, and scalability
    Leads the drive for container industry standards and founded appc
    Provides the most advanced container registry, Quay
    Docker was made available as open source in March 2013 and has become the most commonly used containerization platform. Kubernetes was open-sourced in June 2014 and has become the most widely used container cluster manager. The first stable version of CoreOS Linux was made available in July 2014 and since has become one of the most commonly used operating system for containers.
    What You'll Learn
    Use Kubernetes with Docker
    Create a Kubernetes cluster on CoreOS on AWS
    Apply cluster management design patterns
    Use multiple cloud provider zones
    Work with Kubernetes and tools like Ansible
    Discover the Kubernetes-based PaaS platform OpenShift
    Create a high availability website
    Build a high availability Kubernetes master cluster
    Use volumes, configmaps, services, autoscaling, and rolling updates
    Manage compute resources
    Configure logging and scheduling