eks-anywhere
dumb-init
Our great sponsors
eks-anywhere | dumb-init | |
---|---|---|
21 | 10 | |
1,914 | 6,689 | |
1.3% | 1.2% | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
5 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Go | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
eks-anywhere
-
Docker for Rancher?
I'd suggest move from rancher to EKS Anywhere and the respective Cluster API providers... Self-managed node pools on top of bottlerocket can be established using common terraform-aws-eks module, otherwise.
-
Is setting up a production k8s a one-man job?
There are plenty of vendor specific bugs, like no EBS in [EKS Fargate](https://github.com/aws/containers-roadmap/issues/1113), and settling a Kubernetes cluster on top of Bottlerocket and [EKS Anywhere](https://github.com/aws/eks-anywhere), on your own is somewhat impossible.
-
What's New with AWS: Announcing bare metal support for Amazon EKS Anywhere
To get started with Amazon EKS Anywhere on bare metal, visit the documentation site. To learn more about Amazon EKS Anywhere, visit the product page.
-
Systemd by Example
> It has no init system.
Apologies that I can't link directly to the "--init" flag but docker actually does have an init, it's just (err, was?) compiled into the binary: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/#op...
My recollection is that it either adopted, or inspired, https://github.com/Yelp/dumb-init#readme which folks used to put into their Dockerfile as the init system back in the day
Folks (ahem, I'm looking at you, eks-anywhere[0]) who bundle systemd into a docker container are gravely misguided, and the ones which do so for the ability to launch sshd alongside the actual container's main process are truly, truly lost
0: https://github.com/aws/eks-anywhere/issues/838#issuecomment-...
-
Homelab ideas for AWS Cloud Engineer
EKS anywhere looks like an adventure - https://anywhere.eks.amazonaws.com
- aws/eks-anywhere: Run Amazon EKS on your own infrastructure 🚀
-
EKS Anywhere: The What, The Why and The How
That brings us to the end of this walkthrough. Thank you very much for reading and I hope you will give EKS Anywhere a spin. The complete documentation is available here. If you are interested in contributing, please open an issue or pull request on the EKS Anywhere GitHub repo. Let me know your thoughts in the comments below. If you have more questions, feel free to reach out to me on LinkedIn or Twitter.
-
VCs are betting on Kubernetes: Here are the reasons why
First class integration and support by most of the cloud providers (DOKS, AKS (Which has been opensourced))
- AWS - {EKS-Anywhere}
- You can now run Amazon EKS on your own infra
dumb-init
-
Fargate: catching docker stopping
I think you are on the right track in thinking it’s a signal handling issue. You mentioned using some “bash scripts”, have you tried something like dumb-init?
-
"systemd doesn't follow Unix philosophy "
At the other extreme, there's dumb-init - it implements the special pid-1 behaviors and acts as a wrapper around the one script you want to run. It's ideal for containers or virtual machines that don't need user logins or more than one service.
-
What should readiness & liveness probe actually check for?
Oh, and another thing. Many containers launch their main process from a shell script. When this happens, the shell script receives the SIGTERM event, not the application. Your shell script MUST relay SIGTERM events back to the main process, and it doesn’t happen by default. You can use a shell script wrapper, like dumb-init (https://github.com/yelp/dumb-init), as your entry point if you need to use a shell script on container startup.
-
Distro balls
It's a plus because Gentoo fully supports the choice of Systemd or OpenRC. It also has minit, dumb-init, sysvinit, cinit in tree for the more adventurous. No one was calling the AUR bloat, the parent comment just mentions that Gentoo has an equivalent project, GURU.
- How to make containers handle the SIGTERM signal which makes K8s terminate application gracefully?
- Show HN: EnvKey 2.0 – End-To-End Encrypted Environments (now open source)
-
`COPY –chmod` reduced the size of my container image by 35%
, but I prefer to not have to make this assumption and use an init system instead.
[1]: https://github.com/Yelp/dumb-init
-
Systemd by Example
> It has no init system.
Apologies that I can't link directly to the "--init" flag but docker actually does have an init, it's just (err, was?) compiled into the binary: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/#op...
My recollection is that it either adopted, or inspired, https://github.com/Yelp/dumb-init#readme which folks used to put into their Dockerfile as the init system back in the day
Folks (ahem, I'm looking at you, eks-anywhere[0]) who bundle systemd into a docker container are gravely misguided, and the ones which do so for the ability to launch sshd alongside the actual container's main process are truly, truly lost
0: https://github.com/aws/eks-anywhere/issues/838#issuecomment-...
-
Question: How to handle events to safely terminate a Node.js inside Docker container
You can use something like dumb-init which is designed to correctly handle signals
- Docker e Nodejs - Dockerizando sua aplicação com boas praticas
What are some alternatives?
LocalStack - đź’» A fully functional local AWS cloud stack. Develop and test your cloud & Serverless apps offline
tini - A tiny but valid `init` for containers
kind - Kubernetes IN Docker - local clusters for testing Kubernetes
docker-centos7-systemd-unpriv - Dockerfile for CentOS7 with Systemd in unprivileged mode
eks-distro - Amazon EKS Distro (EKS-D) is a Kubernetes distribution based on and used by Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) to create reliable and secure Kubernetes clusters.
systemd - The systemd System and Service Manager
gardener - Kubernetes-native system managing the full lifecycle of conformant Kubernetes clusters as a service on Alicloud, AWS, Azure, GCP, OpenStack, vSphere, KubeVirt, Hetzner, EquinixMetal, MetalStack, and OnMetal with minimal TCO.
compiling-containers
eksctl - The official CLI for Amazon EKS
ko - Build and deploy Go applications
oci-cloud-controller-manager - Kubernetes Cloud Controller Manager implementation for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure
vault-exfiltrate - proof-of-concept for recovering the master key from a Hashicorp Vault process