際際滷shows by User: Kublr / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: Kublr / Fri, 20 May 2022 15:36:42 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: Kublr Container Runtimes and Tooling, v2 /slideshow/container-runtimes-and-tooling-v2/251823410 2022-03containerruntimesandtooling-220520153642-2f1120b5
Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.]]>

Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.]]>
Fri, 20 May 2022 15:36:42 GMT /slideshow/container-runtimes-and-tooling-v2/251823410 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Container Runtimes and Tooling, v2 Kublr Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2022-03containerruntimesandtooling-220520153642-2f1120b5-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.
Container Runtimes and Tooling, v2 from Kublr
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Container Runtimes and Tooling /slideshow/container-runtimes-and-tooling/251317218 2022-03containerruntimesandtooling-220309191043
Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.]]>

Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.]]>
Wed, 09 Mar 2022 19:10:42 GMT /slideshow/container-runtimes-and-tooling/251317218 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Container Runtimes and Tooling Kublr Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2022-03containerruntimesandtooling-220309191043-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Container runtime and tooling has matured since Docker brought it to the mainstream a decade ago. There are multiple options for building and running containers available to the developers and system administrators. Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, will provide a review and analysis of the popular options.
Container Runtimes and Tooling from Kublr
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Kubernetes in Hybrid Environments with Submariner /slideshow/kubernetes-in-hybrid-environments-with-submariner/251135343 2022-02kubernetesinhybridenvironmentswithsubmariner-220209000325
Submariner enables direct networking between Pods and Services in different Kubernetes clusters, either on-premises or in the cloud. As Kubernetes gains adoption, teams are finding they must deploy and manage multiple clusters to facilitate features like geo-redundancy, scale, and fault isolation for their applications. With Submariner, your applications and services can span multiple cloud providers, data centers, and regions. Submariner is completely open source, and designed to be network plugin (CNI) agnostic. Submariner Provides: cross-cluster L3 connectivity using encrypted VPN tunnels; service Discovery across clusters; subctl, a friendly deployment tool; support for interconnecting clusters with overlapping CIDRs ]]>

Submariner enables direct networking between Pods and Services in different Kubernetes clusters, either on-premises or in the cloud. As Kubernetes gains adoption, teams are finding they must deploy and manage multiple clusters to facilitate features like geo-redundancy, scale, and fault isolation for their applications. With Submariner, your applications and services can span multiple cloud providers, data centers, and regions. Submariner is completely open source, and designed to be network plugin (CNI) agnostic. Submariner Provides: cross-cluster L3 connectivity using encrypted VPN tunnels; service Discovery across clusters; subctl, a friendly deployment tool; support for interconnecting clusters with overlapping CIDRs ]]>
Wed, 09 Feb 2022 00:03:25 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-in-hybrid-environments-with-submariner/251135343 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes in Hybrid Environments with Submariner Kublr Submariner enables direct networking between Pods and Services in different Kubernetes clusters, either on-premises or in the cloud. As Kubernetes gains adoption, teams are finding they must deploy and manage multiple clusters to facilitate features like geo-redundancy, scale, and fault isolation for their applications. With Submariner, your applications and services can span multiple cloud providers, data centers, and regions. Submariner is completely open source, and designed to be network plugin (CNI) agnostic. Submariner Provides: cross-cluster L3 connectivity using encrypted VPN tunnels; service Discovery across clusters; subctl, a friendly deployment tool; support for interconnecting clusters with overlapping CIDRs <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2022-02kubernetesinhybridenvironmentswithsubmariner-220209000325-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Submariner enables direct networking between Pods and Services in different Kubernetes clusters, either on-premises or in the cloud. As Kubernetes gains adoption, teams are finding they must deploy and manage multiple clusters to facilitate features like geo-redundancy, scale, and fault isolation for their applications. With Submariner, your applications and services can span multiple cloud providers, data centers, and regions. Submariner is completely open source, and designed to be network plugin (CNI) agnostic. Submariner Provides: cross-cluster L3 connectivity using encrypted VPN tunnels; service Discovery across clusters; subctl, a friendly deployment tool; support for interconnecting clusters with overlapping CIDRs
Kubernetes in Hybrid Environments with Submariner from Kublr
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Intro into Rook and Ceph on Kubernetes /slideshow/intro-into-rook-and-ceph-on-kubernetes/250984351 introintorookandcephonkubernetes-220112162323
Rook turns distributed storage systems into self-managing, self-scaling, self-healing storage services. It automates the tasks of a storage administrator: deployment, bootstrapping, configuration, provisioning, scaling, upgrading, migration, disaster recovery, monitoring, and resource management. Rook uses the power of the Kubernetes platform to deliver its services via a Kubernetes Operator for each storage provider. Oleg Chunikhin, Co-Founder and CTO @ Kublr.com, will present an introduction to storage management on k8s using Rook and Ceph.]]>

Rook turns distributed storage systems into self-managing, self-scaling, self-healing storage services. It automates the tasks of a storage administrator: deployment, bootstrapping, configuration, provisioning, scaling, upgrading, migration, disaster recovery, monitoring, and resource management. Rook uses the power of the Kubernetes platform to deliver its services via a Kubernetes Operator for each storage provider. Oleg Chunikhin, Co-Founder and CTO @ Kublr.com, will present an introduction to storage management on k8s using Rook and Ceph.]]>
Wed, 12 Jan 2022 16:23:22 GMT /slideshow/intro-into-rook-and-ceph-on-kubernetes/250984351 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Intro into Rook and Ceph on Kubernetes Kublr Rook turns distributed storage systems into self-managing, self-scaling, self-healing storage services. It automates the tasks of a storage administrator: deployment, bootstrapping, configuration, provisioning, scaling, upgrading, migration, disaster recovery, monitoring, and resource management. Rook uses the power of the Kubernetes platform to deliver its services via a Kubernetes Operator for each storage provider. Oleg Chunikhin, Co-Founder and CTO @ Kublr.com, will present an introduction to storage management on k8s using Rook and Ceph. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/introintorookandcephonkubernetes-220112162323-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Rook turns distributed storage systems into self-managing, self-scaling, self-healing storage services. It automates the tasks of a storage administrator: deployment, bootstrapping, configuration, provisioning, scaling, upgrading, migration, disaster recovery, monitoring, and resource management. Rook uses the power of the Kubernetes platform to deliver its services via a Kubernetes Operator for each storage provider. Oleg Chunikhin, Co-Founder and CTO @ Kublr.com, will present an introduction to storage management on k8s using Rook and Ceph.
Intro into Rook and Ceph on Kubernetes from Kublr
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Hybrid architecture solutions with kubernetes and the cloud native stack /slideshow/hybrid-architecture-solutions-with-kubernetes-and-the-cloud-native-stack/250612604 hybridarchitecturesolutionswithkubernetesandthecloudnativestack-211108200622
This presentation provides an overview of how Kubernetes capabilities can be used to simplify use of hybrid infrastructure rather than complicate it. It covers the general challenges posed by hybrid multi-site architectures, including provisioning and operations, ingress traffic management, network connectivity, and distributed data management. The presentation reviews using AWS and Azure as examples how each of these challenges can be addressed with Kubernetes and various Kubernetes controllers used as an infrastructure abstraction layer.]]>

This presentation provides an overview of how Kubernetes capabilities can be used to simplify use of hybrid infrastructure rather than complicate it. It covers the general challenges posed by hybrid multi-site architectures, including provisioning and operations, ingress traffic management, network connectivity, and distributed data management. The presentation reviews using AWS and Azure as examples how each of these challenges can be addressed with Kubernetes and various Kubernetes controllers used as an infrastructure abstraction layer.]]>
Mon, 08 Nov 2021 20:06:22 GMT /slideshow/hybrid-architecture-solutions-with-kubernetes-and-the-cloud-native-stack/250612604 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Hybrid architecture solutions with kubernetes and the cloud native stack Kublr This presentation provides an overview of how Kubernetes capabilities can be used to simplify use of hybrid infrastructure rather than complicate it. It covers the general challenges posed by hybrid multi-site architectures, including provisioning and operations, ingress traffic management, network connectivity, and distributed data management. The presentation reviews using AWS and Azure as examples how each of these challenges can be addressed with Kubernetes and various Kubernetes controllers used as an infrastructure abstraction layer. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/hybridarchitecturesolutionswithkubernetesandthecloudnativestack-211108200622-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This presentation provides an overview of how Kubernetes capabilities can be used to simplify use of hybrid infrastructure rather than complicate it. It covers the general challenges posed by hybrid multi-site architectures, including provisioning and operations, ingress traffic management, network connectivity, and distributed data management. The presentation reviews using AWS and Azure as examples how each of these challenges can be addressed with Kubernetes and various Kubernetes controllers used as an infrastructure abstraction layer.
Hybrid architecture solutions with kubernetes and the cloud native stack from Kublr
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Multi-cloud Kubernetes BCDR with Velero /slideshow/multicloud-kubernetes-bcdr-with-velero/250331902 multi-cloudkubernetesbcdrwithvelero-210929135434
An application path to production does not end with a deployment, even if you are using Kubernetes (K8s) as your application deployment platform. Reliable BCDR (backup and disaster recovery) plan and framework is a must for any production-ready system. This presentation accompanies meetups and webinars in which Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Velero BCDR framework works and demonstrates how it can be used to backup and recover realistic applications running on Kubernetes in different clouds and environments. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes applications BCDR - Velero BCDR framework - demo Velero BCDR for stateful applications running on AWS and Azure clouds - demo Velero BCDR using Strimzi / Kafka cluster and ArgoCD CI/CD manager as example application]]>

An application path to production does not end with a deployment, even if you are using Kubernetes (K8s) as your application deployment platform. Reliable BCDR (backup and disaster recovery) plan and framework is a must for any production-ready system. This presentation accompanies meetups and webinars in which Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Velero BCDR framework works and demonstrates how it can be used to backup and recover realistic applications running on Kubernetes in different clouds and environments. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes applications BCDR - Velero BCDR framework - demo Velero BCDR for stateful applications running on AWS and Azure clouds - demo Velero BCDR using Strimzi / Kafka cluster and ArgoCD CI/CD manager as example application]]>
Wed, 29 Sep 2021 13:54:33 GMT /slideshow/multicloud-kubernetes-bcdr-with-velero/250331902 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Multi-cloud Kubernetes BCDR with Velero Kublr An application path to production does not end with a deployment, even if you are using Kubernetes (K8s) as your application deployment platform. Reliable BCDR (backup and disaster recovery) plan and framework is a must for any production-ready system. This presentation accompanies meetups and webinars in which Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Velero BCDR framework works and demonstrates how it can be used to backup and recover realistic applications running on Kubernetes in different clouds and environments. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes applications BCDR - Velero BCDR framework - demo Velero BCDR for stateful applications running on AWS and Azure clouds - demo Velero BCDR using Strimzi / Kafka cluster and ArgoCD CI/CD manager as example application <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/multi-cloudkubernetesbcdrwithvelero-210929135434-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> An application path to production does not end with a deployment, even if you are using Kubernetes (K8s) as your application deployment platform. Reliable BCDR (backup and disaster recovery) plan and framework is a must for any production-ready system. This presentation accompanies meetups and webinars in which Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Velero BCDR framework works and demonstrates how it can be used to backup and recover realistic applications running on Kubernetes in different clouds and environments. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes applications BCDR - Velero BCDR framework - demo Velero BCDR for stateful applications running on AWS and Azure clouds - demo Velero BCDR using Strimzi / Kafka cluster and ArgoCD CI/CD manager as example application
Multi-cloud Kubernetes BCDR with Velero from Kublr
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Kubernetes Networking 101 /slideshow/kubernetes-networking-101/250331875 kubernetesnetworking101-210929134734
Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful, flexible and portable open source framework for distributed containerized applications delivery and management. An important part of the services provided by most Kubernetes clusters is the containers networking stack. In most cases and for many applications it just works, but this seeming simplicity is backed by a complex stack of technologies that provide many capabilities beyond the basics. This presentation accompanies the meetup and webinar where Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Kubernetes networking stack works, describes main components, interfaces and extensibility options. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes networking - Pods and Network Policies - implementation of Kubernetes networking - CNI, CNI plugins, and Linux network namespaces - some Kubernetes CNI providers: Calico, Weave, Flanel, and Canal - K8S networking extensibility for advanced and exotic use-cases with Multus CNI plugin as an example]]>

Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful, flexible and portable open source framework for distributed containerized applications delivery and management. An important part of the services provided by most Kubernetes clusters is the containers networking stack. In most cases and for many applications it just works, but this seeming simplicity is backed by a complex stack of technologies that provide many capabilities beyond the basics. This presentation accompanies the meetup and webinar where Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Kubernetes networking stack works, describes main components, interfaces and extensibility options. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes networking - Pods and Network Policies - implementation of Kubernetes networking - CNI, CNI plugins, and Linux network namespaces - some Kubernetes CNI providers: Calico, Weave, Flanel, and Canal - K8S networking extensibility for advanced and exotic use-cases with Multus CNI plugin as an example]]>
Wed, 29 Sep 2021 13:47:34 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-networking-101/250331875 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes Networking 101 Kublr Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful, flexible and portable open source framework for distributed containerized applications delivery and management. An important part of the services provided by most Kubernetes clusters is the containers networking stack. In most cases and for many applications it just works, but this seeming simplicity is backed by a complex stack of technologies that provide many capabilities beyond the basics. This presentation accompanies the meetup and webinar where Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Kubernetes networking stack works, describes main components, interfaces and extensibility options. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes networking - Pods and Network Policies - implementation of Kubernetes networking - CNI, CNI plugins, and Linux network namespaces - some Kubernetes CNI providers: Calico, Weave, Flanel, and Canal - K8S networking extensibility for advanced and exotic use-cases with Multus CNI plugin as an example <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/kubernetesnetworking101-210929134734-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful, flexible and portable open source framework for distributed containerized applications delivery and management. An important part of the services provided by most Kubernetes clusters is the containers networking stack. In most cases and for many applications it just works, but this seeming simplicity is backed by a complex stack of technologies that provide many capabilities beyond the basics. This presentation accompanies the meetup and webinar where Oleg Chunikhin, CTO at Kublr, shows how Kubernetes networking stack works, describes main components, interfaces and extensibility options. What is covered: - general notions of Kubernetes networking - Pods and Network Policies - implementation of Kubernetes networking - CNI, CNI plugins, and Linux network namespaces - some Kubernetes CNI providers: Calico, Weave, Flanel, and Canal - K8S networking extensibility for advanced and exotic use-cases with Multus CNI plugin as an example
Kubernetes Networking 101 from Kublr
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Kubernetes Ingress 101 /slideshow/kubernetes-ingress-101/248636404 2021-04kubernetesingress101-210527203641
This presentation explains the basics of Kubernetes ingress traffic management functionality, and how it can be used to simplify managing applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise.]]>

This presentation explains the basics of Kubernetes ingress traffic management functionality, and how it can be used to simplify managing applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise.]]>
Thu, 27 May 2021 20:36:41 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-ingress-101/248636404 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes Ingress 101 Kublr This presentation explains the basics of Kubernetes ingress traffic management functionality, and how it can be used to simplify managing applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2021-04kubernetesingress101-210527203641-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This presentation explains the basics of Kubernetes ingress traffic management functionality, and how it can be used to simplify managing applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise.
Kubernetes Ingress 101 from Kublr
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Kubernetes persistence 101 /slideshow/kubernetes-persistence-101/244181052 kubernetespersistence101-210311041241
In this meetup, Oleg, CTO at Kublr, walks you through the basics of K8s persistence management functionality and how it can be used to simplify managing persistent applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise. Oleg will use a demo environment with clusters in different clouds to show K8s persistence in practice. We will cover: Persistent data abstractions in K8s: persistent volumes (PV) and their attributes PV specifics in different clouds Using PV in K8s: persistent volume claims (PVC) and storage classes (SC) Automatic volume provisioning Persistence and scheduling interrelationships Practical examples Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful and flexible open source container orchestration system. The power of K8s comes from its modularity and simplicity of basic concepts. Each of these basic concepts build on the other and, from the most basic elements to more advanced ones, each is responsible for its own well-defined logic and behavior.]]>

In this meetup, Oleg, CTO at Kublr, walks you through the basics of K8s persistence management functionality and how it can be used to simplify managing persistent applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise. Oleg will use a demo environment with clusters in different clouds to show K8s persistence in practice. We will cover: Persistent data abstractions in K8s: persistent volumes (PV) and their attributes PV specifics in different clouds Using PV in K8s: persistent volume claims (PVC) and storage classes (SC) Automatic volume provisioning Persistence and scheduling interrelationships Practical examples Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful and flexible open source container orchestration system. The power of K8s comes from its modularity and simplicity of basic concepts. Each of these basic concepts build on the other and, from the most basic elements to more advanced ones, each is responsible for its own well-defined logic and behavior.]]>
Thu, 11 Mar 2021 04:12:41 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-persistence-101/244181052 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes persistence 101 Kublr In this meetup, Oleg, CTO at Kublr, walks you through the basics of K8s persistence management functionality and how it can be used to simplify managing persistent applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise. Oleg will use a demo environment with clusters in different clouds to show K8s persistence in practice. We will cover: Persistent data abstractions in K8s: persistent volumes (PV) and their attributes PV specifics in different clouds Using PV in K8s: persistent volume claims (PVC) and storage classes (SC) Automatic volume provisioning Persistence and scheduling interrelationships Practical examples Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful and flexible open source container orchestration system. The power of K8s comes from its modularity and simplicity of basic concepts. Each of these basic concepts build on the other and, from the most basic elements to more advanced ones, each is responsible for its own well-defined logic and behavior. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/kubernetespersistence101-210311041241-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In this meetup, Oleg, CTO at Kublr, walks you through the basics of K8s persistence management functionality and how it can be used to simplify managing persistent applications across different environments - in the cloud or on premise. Oleg will use a demo environment with clusters in different clouds to show K8s persistence in practice. We will cover: Persistent data abstractions in K8s: persistent volumes (PV) and their attributes PV specifics in different clouds Using PV in K8s: persistent volume claims (PVC) and storage classes (SC) Automatic volume provisioning Persistence and scheduling interrelationships Practical examples Kubernetes (K8s) is a powerful and flexible open source container orchestration system. The power of K8s comes from its modularity and simplicity of basic concepts. Each of these basic concepts build on the other and, from the most basic elements to more advanced ones, each is responsible for its own well-defined logic and behavior.
Kubernetes persistence 101 from Kublr
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Portable CI/CD Environment as Code with Kubernetes, Kublr and Jenkins /Kublr/portable-cicd-environment-as-code-with-kubernetes-kublr-and-jenkins 2021-02portablecicdenvironmentascodewithkuberneteskublrandjenkins-210219194553
How to establish Kubernetes as your infrastructure for a truly cloud native environment for optimal productivity and cost. Using Kublr for infrastructure as code approach for fast, reliable and inexpensive production-ready DevOps environment setup bringing together a combination of technologies - Kubernetes; AWS Mixed Instance Policies, Spot Instances and availability zones; AWS EFS; Nexus and Jenkins. Best practices based on open source tools such as Nexus and Jenkins. How to tackle build process dilemmas and difficulties including managing dependencies, hermetic builds and build scripts.]]>

How to establish Kubernetes as your infrastructure for a truly cloud native environment for optimal productivity and cost. Using Kublr for infrastructure as code approach for fast, reliable and inexpensive production-ready DevOps environment setup bringing together a combination of technologies - Kubernetes; AWS Mixed Instance Policies, Spot Instances and availability zones; AWS EFS; Nexus and Jenkins. Best practices based on open source tools such as Nexus and Jenkins. How to tackle build process dilemmas and difficulties including managing dependencies, hermetic builds and build scripts.]]>
Fri, 19 Feb 2021 19:45:53 GMT /Kublr/portable-cicd-environment-as-code-with-kubernetes-kublr-and-jenkins Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Portable CI/CD Environment as Code with Kubernetes, Kublr and Jenkins Kublr How to establish Kubernetes as your infrastructure for a truly cloud native environment for optimal productivity and cost. Using Kublr for infrastructure as code approach for fast, reliable and inexpensive production-ready DevOps environment setup bringing together a combination of technologies - Kubernetes; AWS Mixed Instance Policies, Spot Instances and availability zones; AWS EFS; Nexus and Jenkins. Best practices based on open source tools such as Nexus and Jenkins. How to tackle build process dilemmas and difficulties including managing dependencies, hermetic builds and build scripts. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2021-02portablecicdenvironmentascodewithkuberneteskublrandjenkins-210219194553-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> How to establish Kubernetes as your infrastructure for a truly cloud native environment for optimal productivity and cost. Using Kublr for infrastructure as code approach for fast, reliable and inexpensive production-ready DevOps environment setup bringing together a combination of technologies - Kubernetes; AWS Mixed Instance Policies, Spot Instances and availability zones; AWS EFS; Nexus and Jenkins. Best practices based on open source tools such as Nexus and Jenkins. How to tackle build process dilemmas and difficulties including managing dependencies, hermetic builds and build scripts.
Portable CI/CD Environment as Code with Kubernetes, Kublr and Jenkins from Kublr
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Kubernetes 101 /slideshow/kubernetes-101-241298487/241298487 kubernetes101-210114002313
Kubernetes 101: Intro to Kubernetes namespaces, workloads, and architecture In this webinar Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will explain the basics of Kubernetes, a powerful and flexible open-source container orchestration system: what it is, how it works, and the main entities Kubernetes users work with. Containers are taking over the IT world, and while building and running them locally is simple, running them in production on a distributed infrastructure is much more involved. Oleg will show how Kubernetes can help orchestrating containers across multiple compute nodes and clouds. We will cover: - distributed container orchestration - architecture of Kubernetes clusters - important Kubernetes objects: namespaces, pods, services - overview controllers: deployment, daemonset, stateful set]]>

Kubernetes 101: Intro to Kubernetes namespaces, workloads, and architecture In this webinar Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will explain the basics of Kubernetes, a powerful and flexible open-source container orchestration system: what it is, how it works, and the main entities Kubernetes users work with. Containers are taking over the IT world, and while building and running them locally is simple, running them in production on a distributed infrastructure is much more involved. Oleg will show how Kubernetes can help orchestrating containers across multiple compute nodes and clouds. We will cover: - distributed container orchestration - architecture of Kubernetes clusters - important Kubernetes objects: namespaces, pods, services - overview controllers: deployment, daemonset, stateful set]]>
Thu, 14 Jan 2021 00:23:13 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-101-241298487/241298487 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes 101 Kublr Kubernetes 101: Intro to Kubernetes namespaces, workloads, and architecture In this webinar Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will explain the basics of Kubernetes, a powerful and flexible open-source container orchestration system: what it is, how it works, and the main entities Kubernetes users work with. Containers are taking over the IT world, and while building and running them locally is simple, running them in production on a distributed infrastructure is much more involved. Oleg will show how Kubernetes can help orchestrating containers across multiple compute nodes and clouds. We will cover: - distributed container orchestration - architecture of Kubernetes clusters - important Kubernetes objects: namespaces, pods, services - overview controllers: deployment, daemonset, stateful set <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/kubernetes101-210114002313-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Kubernetes 101: Intro to Kubernetes namespaces, workloads, and architecture In this webinar Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will explain the basics of Kubernetes, a powerful and flexible open-source container orchestration system: what it is, how it works, and the main entities Kubernetes users work with. Containers are taking over the IT world, and while building and running them locally is simple, running them in production on a distributed infrastructure is much more involved. Oleg will show how Kubernetes can help orchestrating containers across multiple compute nodes and clouds. We will cover: - distributed container orchestration - architecture of Kubernetes clusters - important Kubernetes objects: namespaces, pods, services - overview controllers: deployment, daemonset, stateful set
Kubernetes 101 from Kublr
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Advanced Scheduling in Kubernetes /slideshow/advanced-scheduling-in-kubernetes/238896831 202004advancedschedulinginkubernetes-201016200901
Kubernetes pods / container scheduling 201 - pod and node affinity and anti-affinity, node selectors, taints and tolerations, persistent volumes constraints, scheduler configuration and custom scheduler development and more.]]>

Kubernetes pods / container scheduling 201 - pod and node affinity and anti-affinity, node selectors, taints and tolerations, persistent volumes constraints, scheduler configuration and custom scheduler development and more.]]>
Fri, 16 Oct 2020 20:09:01 GMT /slideshow/advanced-scheduling-in-kubernetes/238896831 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Advanced Scheduling in Kubernetes Kublr Kubernetes pods / container scheduling 201 - pod and node affinity and anti-affinity, node selectors, taints and tolerations, persistent volumes constraints, scheduler configuration and custom scheduler development and more. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/202004advancedschedulinginkubernetes-201016200901-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Kubernetes pods / container scheduling 201 - pod and node affinity and anti-affinity, node selectors, taints and tolerations, persistent volumes constraints, scheduler configuration and custom scheduler development and more.
Advanced Scheduling in Kubernetes from Kublr
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Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step /slideshow/setting-up-cicd-pipeline-with-kubernetes-and-kublr-step-bystep/238384635 settingupcicdpipelinewithkubernetesandkublrstep-by-step-200903135040
Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step]]>

Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step]]>
Thu, 03 Sep 2020 13:50:40 GMT /slideshow/setting-up-cicd-pipeline-with-kubernetes-and-kublr-step-bystep/238384635 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step Kublr Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/settingupcicdpipelinewithkubernetesandkublrstep-by-step-200903135040-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step
Setting up CI/CD Pipeline with Kubernetes and Kublr step by-step from Kublr
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Canary Releases on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, & Prometheus (2020) /slideshow/canary-releases-on-kubernetes-with-spinnaker-istio-prometheus-2020/234485530 202004canaryreleasesonkuberneteswithspinnakeristioandprometheus-200522231327
In a microservices world, applications consist of dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of components. Manually deploying and verifying deployment quality in production is virtually impossible. Kubernetes, which natively supports rolling updates, enables blue-green application deployments with Spinnaker. However, the gradual rollout is a feature that doesnt come out-of-the-box but can be achieved by adding Istio and Prometheus to the equation. During this meetup, Slava will discuss canary release implementations on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, and Prometheus. Hell examine the role of each tool in the process and how they are all connected. During a demo, he will demonstrate a successful and failed canary release, and how these tools enable IT teams, to properly roll out changes to their customer base without any downtime.]]>

In a microservices world, applications consist of dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of components. Manually deploying and verifying deployment quality in production is virtually impossible. Kubernetes, which natively supports rolling updates, enables blue-green application deployments with Spinnaker. However, the gradual rollout is a feature that doesnt come out-of-the-box but can be achieved by adding Istio and Prometheus to the equation. During this meetup, Slava will discuss canary release implementations on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, and Prometheus. Hell examine the role of each tool in the process and how they are all connected. During a demo, he will demonstrate a successful and failed canary release, and how these tools enable IT teams, to properly roll out changes to their customer base without any downtime.]]>
Fri, 22 May 2020 23:13:27 GMT /slideshow/canary-releases-on-kubernetes-with-spinnaker-istio-prometheus-2020/234485530 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Canary Releases on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, & Prometheus (2020) Kublr In a microservices world, applications consist of dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of components. Manually deploying and verifying deployment quality in production is virtually impossible. Kubernetes, which natively supports rolling updates, enables blue-green application deployments with Spinnaker. However, the gradual rollout is a feature that doesnt come out-of-the-box but can be achieved by adding Istio and Prometheus to the equation. During this meetup, Slava will discuss canary release implementations on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, and Prometheus. Hell examine the role of each tool in the process and how they are all connected. During a demo, he will demonstrate a successful and failed canary release, and how these tools enable IT teams, to properly roll out changes to their customer base without any downtime. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/202004canaryreleasesonkuberneteswithspinnakeristioandprometheus-200522231327-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In a microservices world, applications consist of dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of components. Manually deploying and verifying deployment quality in production is virtually impossible. Kubernetes, which natively supports rolling updates, enables blue-green application deployments with Spinnaker. However, the gradual rollout is a feature that doesnt come out-of-the-box but can be achieved by adding Istio and Prometheus to the equation. During this meetup, Slava will discuss canary release implementations on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, and Prometheus. Hell examine the role of each tool in the process and how they are all connected. During a demo, he will demonstrate a successful and failed canary release, and how these tools enable IT teams, to properly roll out changes to their customer base without any downtime.
Canary Releases on Kubernetes with Spinnaker, Istio, & Prometheus (2020) from Kublr
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How to Run Kubernetes in Restrictive Environments /Kublr/how-to-run-kubernetes-in-restrictive-environments 2020-05runningkubernetesinrestrictiveenvironments-200521170229
Meeting the Needs of Enterprise Governance and Security Installing Kubernetes is easy. Ensuring it complies with your organizations enterprise governance and security requirements isnt. During this webinar, Oleg will explain how to use Kubernetes while meeting enterprise requirements. In this technically-focused talk, hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs. The presentation will include basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Because on-premise Kubernetes deployments dont come without their challenges, Oleg will cover the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades. Hell close with a quick outlook of whats next, including infrastructure as code, immutable infrastructure, and GitOps.]]>

Meeting the Needs of Enterprise Governance and Security Installing Kubernetes is easy. Ensuring it complies with your organizations enterprise governance and security requirements isnt. During this webinar, Oleg will explain how to use Kubernetes while meeting enterprise requirements. In this technically-focused talk, hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs. The presentation will include basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Because on-premise Kubernetes deployments dont come without their challenges, Oleg will cover the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades. Hell close with a quick outlook of whats next, including infrastructure as code, immutable infrastructure, and GitOps.]]>
Thu, 21 May 2020 17:02:29 GMT /Kublr/how-to-run-kubernetes-in-restrictive-environments Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) How to Run Kubernetes in Restrictive Environments Kublr Meeting the Needs of Enterprise Governance and Security Installing Kubernetes is easy. Ensuring it complies with your organizations enterprise governance and security requirements isnt. During this webinar, Oleg will explain how to use Kubernetes while meeting enterprise requirements. In this technically-focused talk, hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs. The presentation will include basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Because on-premise Kubernetes deployments dont come without their challenges, Oleg will cover the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades. Hell close with a quick outlook of whats next, including infrastructure as code, immutable infrastructure, and GitOps. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2020-05runningkubernetesinrestrictiveenvironments-200521170229-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Meeting the Needs of Enterprise Governance and Security Installing Kubernetes is easy. Ensuring it complies with your organizations enterprise governance and security requirements isnt. During this webinar, Oleg will explain how to use Kubernetes while meeting enterprise requirements. In this technically-focused talk, hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs. The presentation will include basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Because on-premise Kubernetes deployments dont come without their challenges, Oleg will cover the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades. Hell close with a quick outlook of whats next, including infrastructure as code, immutable infrastructure, and GitOps.
How to Run Kubernetes in Restrictive Environments from Kublr
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Building Portable Applications with Kubernetes /slideshow/building-portable-applications-with-kubernetes/233444786 applicationportabilitywithkubernetes2020-05-08-200508213254
Containers and Kubernetes enable code portability across on-premise VMs, bare metal, or multiple clouds. However, many developers may include configuration and application definitions that constrain or even eliminate application portability. We'll outline best practices for configuration as code in a Kubernetes environment. He'll demonstrate how a properly constructed containerized app can be deployed to both Amazon and Azure using the Kublr platform, and how Kubernetes objects, such as persistent volumes, ingress rules, and services, can be leveraged to abstract from the infrastructure.]]>

Containers and Kubernetes enable code portability across on-premise VMs, bare metal, or multiple clouds. However, many developers may include configuration and application definitions that constrain or even eliminate application portability. We'll outline best practices for configuration as code in a Kubernetes environment. He'll demonstrate how a properly constructed containerized app can be deployed to both Amazon and Azure using the Kublr platform, and how Kubernetes objects, such as persistent volumes, ingress rules, and services, can be leveraged to abstract from the infrastructure.]]>
Fri, 08 May 2020 21:32:54 GMT /slideshow/building-portable-applications-with-kubernetes/233444786 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Building Portable Applications with Kubernetes Kublr Containers and Kubernetes enable code portability across on-premise VMs, bare metal, or multiple clouds. However, many developers may include configuration and application definitions that constrain or even eliminate application portability. We'll outline best practices for configuration as code in a Kubernetes environment. He'll demonstrate how a properly constructed containerized app can be deployed to both Amazon and Azure using the Kublr platform, and how Kubernetes objects, such as persistent volumes, ingress rules, and services, can be leveraged to abstract from the infrastructure. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/applicationportabilitywithkubernetes2020-05-08-200508213254-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Containers and Kubernetes enable code portability across on-premise VMs, bare metal, or multiple clouds. However, many developers may include configuration and application definitions that constrain or even eliminate application portability. We&#39;ll outline best practices for configuration as code in a Kubernetes environment. He&#39;ll demonstrate how a properly constructed containerized app can be deployed to both Amazon and Azure using the Kublr platform, and how Kubernetes objects, such as persistent volumes, ingress rules, and services, can be leveraged to abstract from the infrastructure.
Building Portable Applications with Kubernetes from Kublr
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Introduction to Kubernetes RBAC /slideshow/introduction-to-kubernetes-rbac/231769803 introductiontokubernetesrbac-200410213658
Incredibly powerful and flexible, Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC) is an essential tool to effectively manage production clusters. Yet many Ops and DevOps engineers are still facing barriers to efficiently use it at scale. These include a steep learning curve, YAML-based configuration, lack of standardized best practices, and the general complexity of this functionality at large -- it truly can be somewhat overwhelming. During this meetup Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will discuss Kubernetes RBAC concepts and objects. He'll explore different use cases ranging from simple permission management for in-cluster application accounts to integrations with external identity providers for SSO and enterprise user access management. Leveraging the Kublr Platform, Oleg will demonstrate how it simplifies the management of access and RBAC rules in a cloud native environment while staying vendor-independent and compatible with any Kubernetes distribution.]]>

Incredibly powerful and flexible, Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC) is an essential tool to effectively manage production clusters. Yet many Ops and DevOps engineers are still facing barriers to efficiently use it at scale. These include a steep learning curve, YAML-based configuration, lack of standardized best practices, and the general complexity of this functionality at large -- it truly can be somewhat overwhelming. During this meetup Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will discuss Kubernetes RBAC concepts and objects. He'll explore different use cases ranging from simple permission management for in-cluster application accounts to integrations with external identity providers for SSO and enterprise user access management. Leveraging the Kublr Platform, Oleg will demonstrate how it simplifies the management of access and RBAC rules in a cloud native environment while staying vendor-independent and compatible with any Kubernetes distribution.]]>
Fri, 10 Apr 2020 21:36:58 GMT /slideshow/introduction-to-kubernetes-rbac/231769803 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Introduction to Kubernetes RBAC Kublr Incredibly powerful and flexible, Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC) is an essential tool to effectively manage production clusters. Yet many Ops and DevOps engineers are still facing barriers to efficiently use it at scale. These include a steep learning curve, YAML-based configuration, lack of standardized best practices, and the general complexity of this functionality at large -- it truly can be somewhat overwhelming. During this meetup Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will discuss Kubernetes RBAC concepts and objects. He'll explore different use cases ranging from simple permission management for in-cluster application accounts to integrations with external identity providers for SSO and enterprise user access management. Leveraging the Kublr Platform, Oleg will demonstrate how it simplifies the management of access and RBAC rules in a cloud native environment while staying vendor-independent and compatible with any Kubernetes distribution. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/introductiontokubernetesrbac-200410213658-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Incredibly powerful and flexible, Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC) is an essential tool to effectively manage production clusters. Yet many Ops and DevOps engineers are still facing barriers to efficiently use it at scale. These include a steep learning curve, YAML-based configuration, lack of standardized best practices, and the general complexity of this functionality at large -- it truly can be somewhat overwhelming. During this meetup Oleg, CTO at Kublr, will discuss Kubernetes RBAC concepts and objects. He&#39;ll explore different use cases ranging from simple permission management for in-cluster application accounts to integrations with external identity providers for SSO and enterprise user access management. Leveraging the Kublr Platform, Oleg will demonstrate how it simplifies the management of access and RBAC rules in a cloud native environment while staying vendor-independent and compatible with any Kubernetes distribution.
Introduction to Kubernetes RBAC from Kublr
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How Self-Healing Nodes and Infrastructure Management Impact Reliability /slideshow/how-selfhealing-nodes-and-infrastructure-management-impact-reliability/193588452 201910self-healingnodes-191114152203
Self-healing does not equal self-healing. There are multiple layers to it, whether a self-healing infrastructure, cluster, pods, or Kubernetes. Kubernetes itself ensures self-healing pods. But how do you ensure your applications, whose reliability depends on every single layer, are truly reliable? This presentation covers the different self-healing layers, what Kubernetes does and doesn't do (at least not by default), and what you should look out for to ensure true reliable applications. Hint: infrastructure provisioning plays a key role.]]>

Self-healing does not equal self-healing. There are multiple layers to it, whether a self-healing infrastructure, cluster, pods, or Kubernetes. Kubernetes itself ensures self-healing pods. But how do you ensure your applications, whose reliability depends on every single layer, are truly reliable? This presentation covers the different self-healing layers, what Kubernetes does and doesn't do (at least not by default), and what you should look out for to ensure true reliable applications. Hint: infrastructure provisioning plays a key role.]]>
Thu, 14 Nov 2019 15:22:03 GMT /slideshow/how-selfhealing-nodes-and-infrastructure-management-impact-reliability/193588452 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) How Self-Healing Nodes and Infrastructure Management Impact Reliability Kublr Self-healing does not equal self-healing. There are multiple layers to it, whether a self-healing infrastructure, cluster, pods, or Kubernetes. Kubernetes itself ensures self-healing pods. But how do you ensure your applications, whose reliability depends on every single layer, are truly reliable? This presentation covers the different self-healing layers, what Kubernetes does and doesn't do (at least not by default), and what you should look out for to ensure true reliable applications. Hint: infrastructure provisioning plays a key role. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/201910self-healingnodes-191114152203-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Self-healing does not equal self-healing. There are multiple layers to it, whether a self-healing infrastructure, cluster, pods, or Kubernetes. Kubernetes itself ensures self-healing pods. But how do you ensure your applications, whose reliability depends on every single layer, are truly reliable? This presentation covers the different self-healing layers, what Kubernetes does and doesn&#39;t do (at least not by default), and what you should look out for to ensure true reliable applications. Hint: infrastructure provisioning plays a key role.
How Self-Healing Nodes and Infrastructure Management Impact Reliability from Kublr
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Kubernetes as Infrastructure Abstraction /slideshow/kubernetes-as-infrastructure-abstraction/177846583 2019-09kubernetesasinfrastructureabstraction-190930174824
While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. This deck will outline a plan that leverages Kubernetes as an infrastructure abstraction (hint: there is a lot more to it than just container orchestration!). Such an approach allows enterprises to untie themselves from infrastructure provider-specific technology stack and free development to use whichever tool fits their use case best. But how do you implement open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements? Well summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc.]]>

While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. This deck will outline a plan that leverages Kubernetes as an infrastructure abstraction (hint: there is a lot more to it than just container orchestration!). Such an approach allows enterprises to untie themselves from infrastructure provider-specific technology stack and free development to use whichever tool fits their use case best. But how do you implement open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements? Well summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc.]]>
Mon, 30 Sep 2019 17:48:24 GMT /slideshow/kubernetes-as-infrastructure-abstraction/177846583 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Kubernetes as Infrastructure Abstraction Kublr While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. This deck will outline a plan that leverages Kubernetes as an infrastructure abstraction (hint: there is a lot more to it than just container orchestration!). Such an approach allows enterprises to untie themselves from infrastructure provider-specific technology stack and free development to use whichever tool fits their use case best. But how do you implement open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements? Well summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2019-09kubernetesasinfrastructureabstraction-190930174824-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. This deck will outline a plan that leverages Kubernetes as an infrastructure abstraction (hint: there is a lot more to it than just container orchestration!). Such an approach allows enterprises to untie themselves from infrastructure provider-specific technology stack and free development to use whichever tool fits their use case best. But how do you implement open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements? Well summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc.
Kubernetes as Infrastructure Abstraction from Kublr
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Centralizing Kubernetes Management in Restrictive Environments /slideshow/centralizing-kubernetes-management-in-restrictive-environments/156317492 2019-07centralizingkubernetesmanagementinrestrictiveenvironments-190718180222
While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. During his presentation, Oleg will outline a plan that leverages open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements. Hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc. The presentation will cover basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Additionally, the audience will learn whether cloud-hosted Kubernetes cover these requirements, how to integrate a compliant Kubernetes installation with their existing cloud infrastructure, the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades.]]>

While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. During his presentation, Oleg will outline a plan that leverages open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements. Hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc. The presentation will cover basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Additionally, the audience will learn whether cloud-hosted Kubernetes cover these requirements, how to integrate a compliant Kubernetes installation with their existing cloud infrastructure, the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades.]]>
Thu, 18 Jul 2019 18:02:22 GMT /slideshow/centralizing-kubernetes-management-in-restrictive-environments/156317492 Kublr@slideshare.net(Kublr) Centralizing Kubernetes Management in Restrictive Environments Kublr While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. During his presentation, Oleg will outline a plan that leverages open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements. Hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc. The presentation will cover basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Additionally, the audience will learn whether cloud-hosted Kubernetes cover these requirements, how to integrate a compliant Kubernetes installation with their existing cloud infrastructure, the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2019-07centralizingkubernetesmanagementinrestrictiveenvironments-190718180222-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> While developers see and realize the benefits of Kubernetes, how it improves efficiencies, saves time, and enables focus on the unique business requirements of each project; InfoSec, infrastructure, and software operations teams still face challenges when managing a new set of tools and technologies, and integrating them into existing enterprise infrastructure. This is especially true for environments where security and governance requirements are so strict as to come into conflict with the cloud-native reference architectures. During his presentation, Oleg will outline a plan that leverages open source cloud-native technologies while meeting enterprise security and governance requirements. Hell summarize common prerequisites for running Kubernetes in production, and how to leverage fine-grained controls and separation of responsibilities to meet enterprise governance and security needs; whats needed for a general architecture of a centralized Kubernetes operations layer based on open source components such as Prometheus, Grafana, ELK Stack,Keycloak, etc. The presentation will cover basic requirements for audit, security, authentication, authorization, integration with existing identity management, logging, and monitoring. Additionally, the audience will learn whether cloud-hosted Kubernetes cover these requirements, how to integrate a compliant Kubernetes installation with their existing cloud infrastructure, the limitations of a bare-metal installation, interactions with vSpheres API, achieving HA, reliability and disaster recovery, as well as handling OS upgrades, security patches, and Kubernetes upgrades.
Centralizing Kubernetes Management in Restrictive Environments from Kublr
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