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The DevOps 2.3 Toolkit

You're reading from   The DevOps 2.3 Toolkit Kubernetes: Deploying and managing highly-available and fault-tolerant applications at scale

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789135503
Length 418 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Viktor Farcic Viktor Farcic
Author Profile Icon Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. How Did We Get Here? FREE CHAPTER 2. Running Kubernetes Cluster Locally 3. Creating Pods 4. Scaling Pods With ReplicaSets 5. Using Services to Enable Communication between Pods 6. Deploying Releases with Zero-Downtime 7. Using Ingress to Forward Traffic 8. Using Volumes to Access Host's File System 9. Using ConfigMaps to Inject Configuration Files 10. Using Secrets to Hide Confidential Information 11. Dividing a Cluster into Namespaces 12. Securing Kubernetes Clusters 13. Managing Resources 14. Creating a Production-Ready Kubernetes Cluster 15. Persisting State 16. The End 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Running multiple containers in a single Pod

Pods are designed to run multiple cooperative processes that should act as a cohesive unit. Those processes are wrapped in containers. All the containers that form a Pod are running on the same machine. A Pod cannot be split across multiple nodes.

All the processes (containers) inside a Pod share the same set of resources, and they can communicate with each other through localhost. One of those shared resources is storage. A volume defined in a Pod can be accessed by all the containers thus allowing them all to share the same data. We'll explore storage in more depth later on. For now, let's take a look at the pod/go-demo-2.yml specification:

cat pod/go-demo-2.yml  

The output is as follows:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: go-demo-2
  labels:
    type: stack
spec:
  containers:
  - name: db
    image: mongo:3.3
...
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