Kubernetes: Difference between revisions

From David's Wiki
Line 30: Line 30:
# For one-off deployments of an image.
# For one-off deployments of an image.
kubectl create deployment <name> --image=<image>
kubectl create deployment <name> --image=<image>
# Generate deployments
kubectl apply -f <deployment_yaml_file>
</pre>
</pre>



Revision as of 02:54, 16 July 2021

Kubernetes, also known as K8s, is a container orchestration service by Google.
It supposedly has a harder learning curve than docker-swarm but is heavily inspired by Google's internal borg system.

Getting Started

Background

Kubernetes runs applications across nodes which are physical or virtual machines.
Each node contains a kubelet process, a container runtime (e.g. Docker), and possibly one or more pods.
Pods contain resources needed to host your application including volumes and one or more containers.

Installation

For local development, you can install minikube.
Otherwise, install kubeadm.

kubectl

nodes

kubectl get nodes

pods

kubectl get pods
kubectl describe pods

deployment

kubectl get deployments

# For one-off deployments of an image.
kubectl create deployment <name> --image=<image>

proxy

kubectl proxy

containers

kubectl logs $POD_NAME
kubectl exec -it $POD_NAME -- bash

service

Services handle routing to your pods.

kubectl get services

kubectl expose deployment/<name> --type=<type> --port <port>
kubectl describe services/<name>

Resources