Posts in 2016
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				How to deploy secure, auditable, and reproducible Kubernetes clusters on AWSBy Colin Hom (CoreOS) | Friday, April 15, 2016 in Blog At CoreOS, we're all about deploying Kubernetes in production at scale. Today we are excited to share a tool that makes deploying Kubernetes on Amazon Web Services (AWS) a breeze. Kube-aws is a tool for deploying auditable and reproducible Kubernetes … 
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				Container survey results - March 2016By Brendan Burns (Google) | Friday, April 08, 2016 in Blog Last month, we had our third installment of our container survey and today we look at the results. (raw data is available here) Looking at the headline number, “how many people are using containers” we see a decrease in the number of people currently … 
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				Adding Support for Kubernetes in RancherBy Darren Shepherd (Rancher Labs) | Friday, April 08, 2016 in Blog Over the last year, we’ve seen a tremendous increase in the number of companies looking to leverage containers in their software development and IT organizations. To achieve this, organizations have been looking at how to build a centralized … 
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				Configuration management with ContainersBy Paul Morie (Red Hat) | Monday, April 04, 2016 in Blog Editor's note: this is our seventh post in a series of in-depth posts on what's new in Kubernetes 1.2 A good practice when writing applications is to separate application code from configuration. We want to enable application authors to easily employ … 
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				Using Deployment objects with Kubernetes 1.2By Janet Kuo (Google) | Friday, April 01, 2016 in Blog Editor's note: this is the seventh post in a series of in-depth posts on what's new in Kubernetes 1.2 Kubernetes has made deploying and managing applications very straightforward, with most actions a single API or command line away, including rolling … 
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				Kubernetes 1.2 and simplifying advanced networking with IngressBy Prashanth Balasubramanian (independent) | Thursday, March 31, 2016 in Blog Editor's note: This is the sixth post in a series of in-depth posts on what's new in Kubernetes 1.2 Ingress is currently in beta and under active development. In Kubernetes, Services and Pods have IPs only routable by the cluster network, by default. … 
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				Using Spark and Zeppelin to process big data on Kubernetes 1.2By Zach Loafman (Google) | Wednesday, March 30, 2016 in Blog Editor's note: this is the fifth post in a series of in-depth posts on what's new in Kubernetes 1.2 With big data usage growing exponentially, many Kubernetes customers have expressed interest in running Apache Spark on their Kubernetes clusters to … 
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				Building highly available applications using Kubernetes new multi-zone clusters (a.k.a. 'Ubernetes Lite')By Quinton Hoole (Google), Justin Santa Barbara (Google) | Tuesday, March 29, 2016 in Blog Editor's note: this is the third post in a series of in-depth posts on what's new in Kubernetes 1.2 Introduction One of the most frequently-requested features for Kubernetes is the ability to run applications across multiple zones. And with good … 
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				AppFormix: Helping Enterprises Operationalize KubernetesBy Sumeet Singh (AppFormix) | Tuesday, March 29, 2016 in Blog If you run clouds for a living, you’re well aware that the tools we've used since the client/server era for monitoring, analytics and optimization just don’t cut it when applied to the agile, dynamic and rapidly changing world of modern cloud … 
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				How container metadata changes your point of viewBy Apurva Davé (Sysdig) | Monday, March 28, 2016 in Blog Sure, metadata is a fancy word. It actually means “data that describes other data.” While that definition isn’t all that helpful, it turns out metadata itself is especially helpful in container environments. When you have any complex system, the …