cloud-foundation-fabric
kubefed
cloud-foundation-fabric | kubefed | |
---|---|---|
8 | 7 | |
1,340 | 2,476 | |
1.6% | - | |
9.8 | 6.6 | |
6 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
HCL | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cloud-foundation-fabric
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Hi Guy, I am working with below git project and trying to test it by deploying it. For the life of my I can't find any documentation on values for : bq_table_overwrite, target_node. I appreciate it. Thank you.
From the source code it looks like bq_table_overwrite is a boolean, and as it name implies allows tables to be overwritten, while target_node is pointing to the organization id.
- How to build an environment to deploy micro services on GCP?
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CloudRun is an awesome product... but domains are so painfull
I recently set up a custom domain mapping for CloudRun and you are right, the classic way of doing so via Load Balancer has a lot of moving parts. However, there are a lot of great tutorials and blueprints out there. I highly recommend the Google Cloud Foundation Fabric.
- Manage GCP Stuff with Terraform
- Does GCP have anything that would be similar to AWS Transit Gateway? Currently we're trying to gather requirements for a GCP Landing Zone
- How do you guys create a migration strategy for gcp?
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Architecting your Cloud Native Infrastructure
If you would like to look at some sample implementations, I would recommend looking at this repository which helps users setup all these different networking models in GCP including hub and spoke via peering, hub and spoke via VPN, DNS and Google Private Access for on-premises, Shared VPC with GKE support, ILB as next hop and so on using Terraform
kubefed
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Scaling Kubernetes to multiple clusters and regions
The project is similar (in spirit) to kubefed.
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Build a Federation of Multiple Kubernetes Clusters With Kubefed V2
What Is KubeFed? KubeFed (Kubernetes Cluster Federation) allows you to use a single Kubernetes cluster to coordinate multiple Kubernetes clusters. It can deploy multiple-cluster applications in different regions and design for disaster recovery. To learn more about KubeFed: https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kubefed
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Evolution of code deployment tools at Mixpanel
There's active work on a standard called kubefed [0] that is being worked on.
> I want a scale-to-zero node-pool in every region, and one kube master api for the world.
Personally, I'd generalize this to: "I want to describe the reliability requirements and configuration for my software and have an automated system solve for where, how many, when, and how to route to it"
I want to have something where I can say "I need to have high availability, lowest latency, and X GB of RAM and Y cores" and have a system automatically schedule me wherever compute is cheapest while also intelligently routing traffic to my servers based on client origins.
[0] - https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kubefed
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Building a Kubernetes-based Solution in a Hybrid Environment by Using KubeMQ
Two of the more common approaches to deploying Kubernetes in hybrid environments are from cloud-to-cloud and cloud to on-prem. Whether this is from using a single control plane like Rancher, Platform9, or Gardener to create multiple clusters that are managed from a single location, or utilizing Kubernetes federation to create a cluster that spans different regions, this model has become a key feature offered by Kubernetes that has helped drive adoption.
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Infrastructure Engineering — Deployment Strategies
This is made possible by the very nature of Kubernetes being a standard portable platform across cloud providers, ability to manage infrastructure as code, ability to setup networking between them whenever needed with the help of multi-cluster service meshes and also due to the ability to orchestrate the deployments using Kubefed and Crossplane.
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Architecting your Cloud Native Infrastructure
And the interesting thing about networking in cloud is that it need not be just be limited to the cloud provider within your region but can span across multiple providers across multiple regions as needed and this is where projects like Kubefed, Crossplane definitely does help.
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Infrastructure Engineering - Diving Deep
Projects like Kubefed and Crossplane are especially useful here since they help you to manage and orchestrate clusters and the requests you send across different cloud providers even if its going to be across regions.
What are some alternatives?
alertmanager - Prometheus Alertmanager
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
build-a-platform-with-krm - Build a platform with the Kubernetes resource model!
karmada - Open, Multi-Cloud, Multi-Cluster Kubernetes Orchestration
gRPC - The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
virtual-kubelet - Virtual Kubelet is an open source Kubernetes kubelet implementation.
consul - Consul is a distributed, highly available, and data center aware solution to connect and configure applications across dynamic, distributed infrastructure.
velero - Backup and migrate Kubernetes applications and their persistent volumes
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
CoreDNS - CoreDNS is a DNS server that chains plugins
OpenFaaS - OpenFaaS - Serverless Functions Made Simple