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Index
Preface
Who Should Read This Book Why We Wrote This Book Navigating This Book A Note on Kubernetes Releases Technology You Need to Understand Online Resources Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples O’Reilly Safari How to Contact Us Acknowledgments
1. Getting Started with Kubernetes
1.1. Using Kubernetes Without Installation 1.2. Installing the Kubernetes CLI, kubectl 1.3. Installing Minikube to Run a Local Kubernetes Instance 1.4. Using Minikube Locally for Development 1.5. Starting Your First Application on Minikube 1.6. Accessing the Dashboard in Minikube
2. Creating a Kubernetes Cluster
2.1. Installing kubeadm to Create a Kubernetes Cluster 2.2. Bootstrapping a Kubernetes Cluster Using kubeadm 2.3. Downloading a Kubernetes Release from GitHub 2.4. Downloading Client and Server Binaries 2.5. Using a hyperkube Image to Run a Kubernetes Master Node with Docker 2.6. Writing a systemd Unit File to Run Kubernetes Components 2.7. Creating a Kubernetes Cluster on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) 2.8. Creating a Kubernetes Cluster on Azure Container Service (ACS)
3. Learning to Use the Kubernetes Client
3.1. Listing Resources 3.2. Deleting Resources 3.3. Watching Resource Changes with kubectl 3.4. Editing Resources with kubectl 3.5. Asking kubectl to Explain Resources and Fields
4. Creating and Modifying Fundamental Workloads
4.1. Creating a Deployment Using kubectl run 4.2. Creating Objects from File Manifests 4.3. Writing a Pod Manifest from Scratch 4.4. Launching a Deployment Using a Manifest 4.5. Updating a Deployment
5. Working with Services
5.1. Creating a Service to Expose Your Application 5.2. Verifying the DNS Entry of a Service 5.3. Changing the Type of a Service 5.4. Deploying an Ingress Controller on Minikube 5.5. Making Services Accessible from Outside the Cluster
6. Exploring the Kubernetes API and Key Metadata
6.1. Discovering API Endpoints of the Kubernetes API Server 6.2. Understanding the Structure of a Kubernetes Manifest 6.3. Creating Namespaces to Avoid Name Collisions 6.4. Setting Quotas Within a Namespace 6.5. Labeling an Object 6.6. Using Labels for Queries 6.7. Annotating a Resource with One Command
7. Managing Specialized Workloads
7.1. Running a Batch Job 7.2. Running a Task on a Schedule Within a Pod 7.3. Running Infrastructure Daemons per Node 7.4. Managing Stateful and Leader/Follower Apps 7.5. Influencing Pods’ Startup Behavior
8. Volumes and Configuration Data
8.1. Exchanging Data Between Containers via a Local Volume 8.2. Passing an API Access Key to a Pod Using a Secret 8.3. Providing Configuration Data to an Application 8.4. Using a Persistent Volume with Minikube 8.5. Understanding Data Persistency on Minikube 8.6. Dynamically Provisioning Persistent Storage on GKE
9. Scaling
9.1. Scaling a Deployment 9.2. Automatically Resizing a Cluster in GKE 9.3. Automatically Resizing a Cluster in AWS 9.4. Using Horizontal Pod Autoscaling on GKE
10. Security
10.1. Providing a Unique Identity for an Application 10.2. Listing and Viewing Access Control Information 10.3. Controlling Access to Resources 10.4. Securing Pods
11. Monitoring and Logging
11.1. Accessing the Logs of a Container 11.2. Recover from a Broken State with a Liveness Probe 11.3. Controlling Traffic Flow to a Pod Using a Readiness Probe 11.4. Adding Liveness and Readiness Probes to Your Deployments 11.5. Enabling Heapster on Minikube to Monitor Resources 11.6. Using Prometheus on Minikube 11.7. Using Elasticsearch–Fluentd–Kibana (EFK) on Minikube
12. Maintenance and Troubleshooting
12.1. Enabling Autocomplete for kubectl 12.2. Removing a Pod from a Service 12.3. Accessing a ClusterIP Service Outside the Cluster 12.4. Understanding and Parsing Resource Statuses 12.5. Debugging Pods 12.6. Getting a Detailed Snapshot of the Cluster State 12.7. Adding Kubernetes Worker Nodes 12.8. Draining Kubernetes Nodes for Maintenance 12.9. Managing etcd
13. Developing Kubernetes
13.1. Compiling from Source 13.2. Compiling a Specific Component 13.3. Using a Python Client to Interact with the Kubernetes API 13.4. Extending the API Using Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs)
14. The Ecosystem
14.1. Installing Helm, the Kubernetes Package Manager 14.2. Using Helm to Install Applications 14.3. Creating Your Own Chart to Package Your Application with Helm 14.4. Converting Your Docker Compose Files to Kubernetes Manifests 14.5. Creating a Kubernetes Cluster with kubicorn 14.6. Storing Encrypted Secrets in Version Control 14.7. Deploying Functions with kubeless
A. Resources
General Tutorials and Examples
Index
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