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Azure for Architects

You're reading from   Azure for Architects Create secure, scalable, high-availability applications on the cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839215865
Length 698 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Jack Lee Jack Lee
Author Profile Icon Jack Lee
Jack Lee
Ritesh Modi Ritesh Modi
Author Profile Icon Ritesh Modi
Ritesh Modi
Rithin Skaria Rithin Skaria
Author Profile Icon Rithin Skaria
Rithin Skaria
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting started with Azure 2. Azure solution availability, scalability, and monitoring FREE CHAPTER 3. Design pattern – Networks, storage, messaging, and events 4. Automating architecture on Azure 5. Designing policies, locks, and tags for Azure deployments 6. Cost management for Azure solutions 7. Azure OLTP solutions 8. Architecting secure applications on Azure 9. Azure Big Data solutions 10. Serverless in Azure – Working with Azure Functions 11. Azure solutions using Azure Logic Apps, Event Grid, and Functions 12. Azure Big Data eventing solutions 13. Integrating Azure DevOps 14. Architecting Azure Kubernetes solutions 15. Cross-subscription deployments using ARM templates 16. ARM template modular design and implementation 17. Designing IoT solutions 18. Azure Synapse Analytics for architects 19. Architecting intelligent solutions Index

14. Architecting Azure Kubernetes solutions

Containers are one of the most talked-about infrastructure components of the last decade. Containers are not a new technology; they have been around for quite some time. They have been prevalent in the Linux world for more than two decades. Containers were not well known in the developer community due to their complexity and the fact that there was not much documentation regarding them. However, around the beginning of this decade, in 2013, a company was launched known as Docker that changed the perception and adoption of containers within the developer world.

Docker wrote a robust API wrapper on top of existing Linux LXC containers and made it easy for developers to create, manage, and destroy containers from the command-line interface. When containerizing applications, the number of containers we have can increase drastically over time, and we can reach a point where we need to manage hundreds or even thousands of containers. This...

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