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Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

By : Marc Boorshtein, Scott Surovich
4.8 (13)
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Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide

4.8 (13)
By: Marc Boorshtein, Scott Surovich

Overview of this book

Stay at the forefront of cloud-native technologies with the eagerly awaited Kubernetes – An Enterprise Guide, Third Edition. Delve deep into Kubernetes and emerge with the latest insights to conquer today's dynamic enterprise challenges. This meticulously crafted edition equips you with the latest insights to skillfully navigate the twists and turns of ever-evolving cloud technology. Experience a more profound exploration of advanced Kubernetes deployments, revolutionary techniques, and expert strategies that redefine your cloud-native skill set. Discover cutting-edge topics reshaping the technological frontier like virtual clusters, container security, and secrets management. Gain an edge by mastering these critical aspects of Kubernetes and propelling your enterprise to new heights. Expertly harness Kubernetes' power for business-critical applications with insider techniques. Smoothly transition to microservices with Istio, excel at modern deployments with GitOps/CI/CD, and bolster security with OPA/Gatekeeper and KubeArmor. Integrate Kubernetes with leading tools for maximum impact in a competitive landscape. Stay ahead of the technology curve with cutting-edge strategies for innovation and growth. Redefine cloud-native excellence with this definitive guide to leveraging Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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20
Other Books You May Enjoy
21
Index

Deploying an Application

We’ve built out quite a bit of infrastructure to support our multitenant platform and now have a tenant to run our application in place. Let’s go ahead and deploy our application!

If we log in to GitLab as jjackson, we’ll see there are three projects:

  • myapp-prod/myapp-application: This repository will store the code for our application and the build to generate our container.
  • myapp-dev/myapp-ops: The repository for the manifests for our development cluster.
  • myapp-prod/myapp-ops: Where the production cluster’s manifests are stored.

There’s no direct fork from the development project to the production project. That was our original intent, but that stringent path from development to production doesn’t work well. Development environments and production environments are rarely the same and often have different owners of infrastructure. For example, I maintain a public safety identity...

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