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Kubernetes and Docker - An Enterprise Guide

You're reading from   Kubernetes and Docker - An Enterprise Guide Effectively containerize applications, integrate enterprise systems, and scale applications in your enterprise

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839213403
Length 526 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Marc Boorshtein Marc Boorshtein
Author Profile Icon Marc Boorshtein
Marc Boorshtein
Scott Surovich Scott Surovich
Author Profile Icon Scott Surovich
Scott Surovich
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Docker and Container Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Docker and Container Essentials FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Working with Docker Data 4. Chapter 3: Understanding Docker Networking 5. Section 2: Creating Kubernetes Development Clusters, Understanding objects, and Exposing Services
6. Chapter 4: Deploying Kubernetes Using KinD 7. Chapter 5: Kubernetes Bootcamp 8. Chapter 6: Services, Load Balancing, and External DNS 9. Section 3: Running Kubernetes in the Enterprise
10. Chapter 7: Integrating Authentication into Your Cluster 11. Chapter 8: RBAC Policies and Auditing 12. Chapter 9: Deploying a Secured Kubernetes Dashboard 13. Chapter 10: Creating PodSecurityPolicies 14. Chapter 11: Extending Security Using Open Policy Agent 15. Chapter 12: Auditing using Falco and EFK 16. Chapter 13: Backing Up Workloads 17. Chapter 14: Provisioning a Platform 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 6: Services, Load Balancing, and External DNS

When you deploy an application to a Kubernetes cluster, your pods are assigned ephemeral IP addresses. Since the assigned addresses are likely to change as pods are restarted, you should never target a service using a pod IP address; instead, you should use a service object, which will map a service IP address to backend pods based on labels. If you need to offer service access to external requests, you can deploy an Ingress controller, which will expose your service to external traffic on a per-URL basis. For more advanced workloads, you can deploy a load balancer, which provides your service with an external IP address, allowing you to expose any IP-based service to external requests.

We will explain how to implement each of these by deploying them on our KinD cluster. To help us understand how the Ingress works, we will deploy a NGINX Ingress controller to the cluster and expose a web server. Since Ingress rules are based...

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