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Learn OpenShift

You're reading from   Learn OpenShift Deploy, build, manage, and migrate applications with OpenShift Origin 3.9

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788992329
Length 504 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (3):
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Denis Zuev Denis Zuev
Author Profile Icon Denis Zuev
Denis Zuev
Aleksey Usov Aleksey Usov
Author Profile Icon Aleksey Usov
Aleksey Usov
Artemii Kropachev Artemii Kropachev
Author Profile Icon Artemii Kropachev
Artemii Kropachev
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Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Containers and Docker Overview FREE CHAPTER 2. Kubernetes Overview 3. CRI-O Overview 4. OpenShift Overview 5. Building an OpenShift Lab 6. OpenShift Installation 7. Managing Persistent Storage 8. Core OpenShift Concepts 9. Advanced OpenShift Concepts 10. Security in OpenShift 11. Managing OpenShift Networking 12. Deploying Simple Applications in OpenShift 13. Deploying Multi-Tier Applications Using Templates 14. Building Application Images from Dockerfile 15. Building PHP Applications from Source Code 16. Building a Multi-Tier Application from Source Code 17. CI/CD Pipelines in OpenShift 18. OpenShift HA Architecture Overview 19. OpenShift HA Design for Single and Multiple DCs 20. Network Design for OpenShift HA 21. What is New in OpenShift 3.9? 22. Assessments 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Egress routers

As you have learned previously, routers in OpenShift direct ingress traffic from external clients to services that, in turn, forward it to pods. OpenShift also offers a reverse type of router intended for forwarding egress traffic from pods to a certain destination in the external network. But unlike ingress routers implemented via HAProxy, egress ones are built on Squid. Egress routers are potentially useful for cases such as:

  • Masking different external resources being used by several applications with a single global resource. For example, applications may be developed in such a way that they are built pulling dependencies from different mirrors, and collaboration between their development teams is rather loose. So, instead of getting them to use the same mirror, an operations team can just set up an egress router to intercept all traffic directed to those mirrors...
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