k8s-device-plugin
external-dns
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k8s-device-plugin | external-dns | |
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11 | 79 | |
2,393 | 7,242 | |
6.3% | 1.7% | |
9.5 | 9.6 | |
3 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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k8s-device-plugin
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Unlocking AI and ML Metal Performance with QBO Kubernetes Engine (QKE) Post
https://github.com/NVIDIA/k8s-device-plugin/issues/332#issue...
- Nos – Open-Source to Maximize GPU Utilization in Kubernetes
- Show HN: Nos – Open-Source to Maximize GPU Utilization in Kubernetes
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Time-Slicing GPUs with Karpenter
K8s-device-plugin
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Understanding Kubernetes Limits and Requests
This framework allows the use of external devices (e.g., NVIDIA GPUs, AMD GPUS, SR-IOV NICs) without modifying core Kubernetes components.
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Nvidia GPU Plugin: Am I really limited to one pod per GPU?
Not talking about MIG. NVIDIA device plugin. https://github.com/NVIDIA/k8s-device-plugin
- Nvidia Kubernetes plugin install option that does not require Helm?
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What is the difference between nvidia device plugin and GPU operator?
GPU Operator Device plugin
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Share a GPU between pods on AWS EKS
If you ever tried to use GPU-based instances with AWS ECS, or on EKS using the default Nvidia plugin, you would know that it's not possible to make a task/pod shared the same GPU on an instance. If you want to add more replicas to your service (for redundancy or load balancing), you would need one GPU for each replica.
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Looking for a sanity check on a project I'm working on at home, hoping you fine people can help - Raspberry Pi Kubernetes Cluster
Some notes on Plex/Emby/Kodi and transcoding. If you want true transcoding with GPU acceleration, you have to have Nvidia GPU or be a k8s device plugin genius. The whole idea of mounting elastic devices in k8s is fairly new and rather complex. In the mean time transcoding is best done on a beefy device with a proper CPU (eg i7) or specifically Nvidia GPU because there are numerous pre-made plugins. I just run Plex and Emby on an old ATX gaming machine without GPU acceleration and it works totally fine. They were barely usable for just me when running on the RPis, wouldn't recommend it unless you can figure out how to mount the correct devices in the pod using a custom raspberry pi device plugin . . . lol good luck! - Arm labs device manager: https://community.arm.com/developer/research/b/articles/posts/a-smarter-device-manager-for-kubernetes-on-the-edge - Deis labs Akri device manager: https://github.com/deislabs/akri - Nvidia GPU plugin: https://github.com/NVIDIA/k8s-device-plugin
external-dns
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Upgrading Hundreds of Kubernetes Clusters
The second one is a combination of tools: External DNS, cert-manager, and NGINX ingress. Using these as a stack, you can quickly deploy an application, making it available through a DNS with a TLS without much effort via simple annotations. When I first discovered External DNS, I was amazed at its quality.
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Kubernetes External DNS provider for Hetzner
One of the reasons why I chose Hetzner was that it WAS supported by the ExternalDNS project. I didn't quite understand why the Hetzner provider was pulled, but I saw that an attempt of re-adding it was refused, on the ground that the upcoming webhook architecture would have allowed to better maintain providers.
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Istio Multi-Cluster Setup
Write a custom controller for the external DNS controller, or setup some form of ArgoCD app / appset templating.
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Looking for ExternalDns alternative for non k8s environment
so I am looking at having an automated way for new routers registered in Traefik to also have the corresponding DNS entry added to my Pihole instance similar to external-dns but obviously, this is exclusive to ingress on k8s environments. my current setup is traefik in a container on unraid.
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Is a Load Balancer necessary for a HA Cluster?
You technically don’t need to run a load balancer or have a virtual IP for your control plane. If you control your dns, you can add an A record pointing to all IPs for your control plane nodes. It won’t load balance your traffic, but combined with something like External DNS it gives you HA for the control plane.
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How can I assign an EIP to a Kubernetes deployment?
I normally deploy external-dns, which automatically updates DNS with the ingress controller's external IP address.
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Registering DNS with Windows Domain DNS
Background: Having a look I can see this https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/external-dns
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Cluster nodes on different networks
3) Use the Kubernetes External-DNS. I've never used this, but this is assuming it can update DNS for each pods/app to point to the correct Node (it'd need to update my Homelab DNS running on Windows Server)
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I am stuck on learning how to provision K8s in AWS. Security groups? ALB? ACM? R53?
So here’s the solution I have taken for our current stack. EKS and its dependencies are created through terraform using the eks module as well as provision a route53 subdomain and a wildcard cert. Once we have that created, I have installed this deployment into the cluster via the helm module: https://kubernetes-sigs.github.io/aws-load-balancer-controller/v2.4/. This allows me to use kuberentes resources (load balancers or ingress objects) and it will handle all the provisioning of load balancers and security groups for me, based on my application yaml and annotations. We also use https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/external-dns to manage all of our specific host names for the applications through annotations. So to generally put, terraform manages out Kubernetes clusters, and Kubernetes manages the deployment of anything needed for the application including volumes, load balancers, hostnames though Kubernetes system deployments
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How to expose services/apps to my home network with custom DNS names
Metallb for your load balancer (layer2 mode will do) NginX-ingress, will be spot on for internal home apps External-dns to publish your dns record to your Dns server at home, https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/external-dns
What are some alternatives?
kubevirt-gpu-device-plugin - NVIDIA k8s device plugin for Kubevirt
metallb - A network load-balancer implementation for Kubernetes using standard routing protocols
harvester - Open source hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) software
cloudflare-ingress-controller - A Kubernetes ingress controller for Cloudflare's Argo Tunnels
aws-eks-share-gpu - How to share the same GPU between pods on AWS EKS
ingress-nginx - Ingress-NGINX Controller for Kubernetes
aws-virtual-gpu-device-plugin - AWS virtual gpu device plugin provides capability to use smaller virtual gpus for your machine learning inference workloads
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
terraform-provider-kubernetes - Terraform Kubernetes provider
PowerDNS - PowerDNS Authoritative, PowerDNS Recursor, dnsdist
containers-roadmap - This is the public roadmap for AWS container services (ECS, ECR, Fargate, and EKS).
awx-operator - An Ansible AWX operator for Kubernetes built with Operator SDK and Ansible. 🤖