ingress-nginx
kubernetes
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ingress-nginx | kubernetes | |
---|---|---|
200 | 651 | |
16,522 | 106,117 | |
1.6% | 1.2% | |
9.6 | 10.0 | |
6 days ago | about 23 hours ago | |
Go | 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.
ingress-nginx
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[06/52] Accessible Kubernetes with Terraform and DigitalOcean
resource "helm_release" "icrelease" { name = "nginx-ingress" repository = "https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx" chart = "ingress-nginx" version = "4.9.1" namespace = kubernetes_namespace.icnamespace.metadata[0].name set { name = "controller.ingressClassResource.default" value = "true" } }
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Deploy Ghost with MySQL DB replication using helm chart
helm repo add ingress-nginx https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx helm repo update helm upgrade --install ingress-nginx ingress-nginx/ingress-nginx --namespace ingress-nginx --create-namespace -f custom/ghost/nginx.yaml
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Kubernetes Gateway API v1.0: Should You Switch?
For example, if you chose Nginx Ingress, you will use some of its dozens of annotations that are not portable if you decide to switch to another Ingress implementation like Apache APISIX.
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Deploy Rancher on AWS EKS using Terraform & Helm Charts
helm repo add jetstack https://charts.jetstack.io helm repo add ingress-nginx https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx helm repo add rancher-latest https://releases.rancher.com/server-charts/latest helm repo update helm repo list
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☸️ Kubernetes NGINX Ingress Controller: 10+ Complementary Configurations for Web Applications
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: Ingress metadata: annotations: # sticky session, from documentation: https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx/examples/affinity/cookie/ nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/affinity: "cookie" nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/affinity-mode: "persistent" # change to "balanced" (default) to redistribute some sessions when scaling pods nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/session-cookie-name: "name-distinguishing-services" nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/session-cookie-max-age: "172800" # in seconds, equivalent to 48h [...]
Everything in the YAML snippets below — except for ingress configuration — relates to configuring the NGINX ingress controller. This includes customizing the default configuration.
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Implementing TLS in Kubernetes
helm repo add ingress-nginx https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx helm repo update helm install ingress-nginx ingress-nginx/ingress-nginx -f ingress-values.yaml
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Apollo Backend just made public, "The goal of making the code for this repo available is to show that despite statements otherwise by Reddit...
Kubernetes alone is enough of an example. So are various cloud utilities used all around the world, such as ingress-nginx, cert-manager, traefik, Docker and countless others. Go is what smart modern web developers actually want to use to create great products. Everything else is what industry dinosaurs force them to use to make a living at big companies peddling trash.
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Ingress controller for vanilla k8s
This: https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx/ Not this: https://docs.nginx.com/nginx-ingress-controller/
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Unleash Your Pipeline Creativity: Local Development with Argo Workflows and MinIO on Minikube
helm repo add ingress-nginx https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx
kubernetes
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Open Source Ascendant: The Transformation of Software Development in 2024
Open Source and Cloud Computing: A Match Made in Heaven The cloud is accelerating OSS adoption. Cloud-native technologies like Kubernetes [https://kubernetes.io/] and Istio [https://istio.io/], both open-source projects, are revolutionizing how applications are built and deployed across cloud platforms.
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Open source at Fastly is getting opener
Through the Fast Forward program, we give free services and support to open source projects and the nonprofits that support them. We support many of the world’s top programming languages (like Python, Rust, Ruby, and the wonderful Scratch), foundational technologies (cURL, the Linux kernel, Kubernetes, OpenStreetMap), and projects that make the internet better and more fun for everyone (Inkscape, Mastodon, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Terms of Service; Didn’t Read).
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Experience Continuous Integration with Jenkins | Ansible | Artifactory | SonarQube | PHP
In this project, you will understand and get hands on experience around the entire concept around CI/CD from applications perspective. To fully gain real expertise around this idea, it is best to see it in action across different programming languages and from the platform perspective too. From the application perspective, we will be focusing on PHP here; there are more projects ahead that are based on Java, Node.js, .Net and Python. By the time you start working on Terraform, Docker and Kubernetes projects, you will get to see the platform perspective of CI/CD in action.
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
The single most important development in hosting since the invention of EC2 is defined by its own 3-letter acronym: k8s. Kubernetes has won the “container orchestrator” space, becoming the default way that teams across industries are managing their compute nodes and scheduling their workloads, from data pipelines to web services.
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The Road To Kubernetes: How Older Technologies Add Up
Kubernetes was first released on September 9, 2014. This release timeline is part of what helped it gain a foothold over Docker Swarm. It was an open source version of an internal Google project. Features of container orchestration were presented in a more modular fashion along with scaling functionality. You can chose how your networking stack works, your load balancing, container runtime, and filesystem interfaces. Availability of an API allowed for more programmatic interactions with orchestration, making it tie in very well with CI/CD solutions. However, the big issue it has is complexity of setup. Putting together a Kubernetes cluster with basic functionality is certainly no easy feat.
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Deploying flask app to Kubernetes using Minikube
Kubernetes manages the deployment, scaling, and operation of containerized applications across a cluster of machines. Kubernetes relies on tools such as container runtimes like Docker, to run the containers.
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Oasis – a small, statically-linked Linux system
If you go by version number and anything < 1.0 being not production ready, I recommend avoiding reading any of the dependency files for large software products which are often used in produciton, they might cause you some concern...
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/master/go.mod for one obvious example.
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Fun with Avatars: Containerize the app for deployment & distribution | Part. 2
Container Orchestration tools: These are used to automate the deployment, scaling, monitoring, and management of containerized applications. These tools simplify the complexities of managing and coordinating containers across a cluster of machines. They include Kubernetes, Docker Swarm, Amazon ECS, Microsoft AKS, Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE), etc.
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Exploring OpenShift with CRC
OpenShift Container Platform (OCP), otherwise known as just OpenShift, is a comprehensive, feature-complete enterprise PaaS offering by Red Hat built on top of Kubernetes, available both as a fully managed service on popular public cloud platforms such as AWS (ROSA) and as an internal developer platform (IDP) to be deployed on-premises on existing private cloud infrastructure, as VMs or on bare metal.
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Why bad scientific code beats code following "best practices"
There are some things that should be in one long function (or method).
Consider dealing with the output of a (lexical) tokeniser. It is much easier to maintain a massive switch statement (or a bunch of ifs/elseifs) to handle each token, with calls to other functions to do the actual processing, such that each case is just a token and a function call. Grouping them in some way not required by the code is an illusory "gain": it hides the complexity of the actual function in a bunch of files you don't look at, when this is not a natural abstraction of the problem at all and when those files introduce extra layers of flow control where tricky bugs can hide. Or see the "PLEASE DO NOT ATTEMPT TO SIMPLIFY THIS CODE" comment from the Kubernetes source[0]. A 300 line function that does one thing and which cannot be usefully divided into smaller units is more maintainable than any alternative. Attempting to break it up will make it worse.
That being said, I agree that nearly all 300 line functions in the wild are not like this.
[0] https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/ec2e767e593953...
What are some alternatives?
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy
Apache ZooKeeper - Apache ZooKeeper
emissary - open source Kubernetes-native API gateway for microservices built on the Envoy Proxy
metallb - A network load-balancer implementation for Kubernetes using standard routing protocols
bosun - Time Series Alerting Framework
Rundeck - Enable Self-Service Operations: Give specific users access to your existing tools, services, and scripts
cilium-cli - CLI to install, manage & troubleshoot Kubernetes clusters running Cilium
kine - Run Kubernetes on MySQL, Postgres, sqlite, dqlite, not etcd.
haproxy-ingress - HAProxy Ingress
BOSH - Cloud Foundry BOSH is an open source tool chain for release engineering, deployment and lifecycle management of large scale distributed services.
application-gateway-kubernetes-ingress - This is an ingress controller that can be run on Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) to allow an Azure Application Gateway to act as the ingress for an AKS cluster.
Juju - Orchestration engine that enables the deployment, integration and lifecycle management of applications at any scale, on any infrastructure (Kubernetes or otherwise).