k8s-prometheus-adapter
cert-manager
k8s-prometheus-adapter | cert-manager | |
---|---|---|
13 | 101 | |
1,841 | 11,566 | |
1.5% | 1.5% | |
6.3 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | 1 day 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.
k8s-prometheus-adapter
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Upgrading Hundreds of Kubernetes Clusters
The last one is mostly an observability stack with Prometheus, Metric server, and Prometheus adapter to have excellent insights into what is happening on the cluster. You can reuse the same stack for autoscaling by repurposing all the data collected for monitoring.
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Helm: Is there a way to access templates of a sibling subchart
I'm deploying kube-prometheus-stack along with prometheus-adapter in my monitoring stack for custom metrics.
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Deploy prometheus-adapter with kube-prometheus-stack monitoring stack?
I would like to see if anyone deployed prometheus-adapter and kube-prometheus-stack together for monitoring?
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Horizontal Pod Autoscale
For us it is saturation of CPU and thread pool. It's implemented by exposing metrics of the thread pool to prometheus and turning that into a custom metric. (see) Looking at scaling based on job queue length next.
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Steps to write own adaptor
If you are using Prometheus or kube-prometheus-stack, you will need https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/prometheus-adapter We are using it to scale our Pods based on number of messages in RabbitMQ queue. There also a walkthrough on https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/prometheus-adapter/blob/master/docs/walkthrough.md
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Monitoring Your Spacelift Account via Prometheus
A prometheus-adapter installation.
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Advanced Features of Kubernetes' Horizontal Pod Autoscaler
Prometheus adapter to get custom/external metrics from Prometheus instance into Kubernetes API.
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Pod spread by percentage
I never tested this but you have customized metrics API if the value % is available should work from my point of view Check this here https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/prometheus-adapter
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Practical Introduction to Kubernetes Autoscaling Tools with Linode Kubernetes Engine
CPU and memory might not be the right metrics for your application to make scaling decisions. In such cases, you can use HPA (or VPA) with custom metrics as an alternative. To use custom metrics for autoscaling, you can use a custom metrics adapter instead of the Kubernetes Metrics Server. Popular custom metrics adapters are the Prometheus adapter and Kubernetes Event-Driven Autoscaler (KEDA).
- How to scale containers that are unrelated to physical traits like CPU or Memory?
cert-manager
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deploying a minio service to kubernetes
cert-manager
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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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Run WebAssembly on DigitalOcean Kubernetes with SpinKube - In 4 Easy Steps
On top of its core components, SpinKube depends on cert-manager. cert-Manager is responsible for provisioning and managing TLS certificates that are used by the admission webhook system of the Spin Operator. Let’s install cert-manager and KWasm using the commands shown here:
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Importing kubernetes manifests with terraform for cert-manager
terraform { required_providers { kubectl = { source = "gavinbunney/kubectl" version = "1.14.0" } } } # The reference to the current project or a AWS project data "google_client_config" "provider" {} # The reference to the current cluster or EKS data "google_container_cluster" "my_cluster" { name = var.cluster_name location = var.cluster_location } # We configure the kubectl provider to use those values for authenticating provider "kubectl" { host = data.google_container_cluster.my_cluster.endpoint token = data.google_client_config.provider.access_token cluster_ca_certificate = base64decode(data.google_container_cluster.my_cluster.master_auth[0].cluster_ca_certificate) } #Download the multiple manifests file. data "http" "cert_manager_crds" { url = "https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/v${var.cert_manager_version}/cert-manager.crds.yaml" } data "kubectl_file_documents" "cert_manager_crds" { content = data.http.cert_manager_crds.response_body lifecycle { precondition { condition = 200 == data.http.cert_manager_crds.status_code error_message = "Status code invalid" } } } # We use the for_each or else this kubectl_manifest will only import the first manifest in the file. resource "kubectl_manifest" "cert_manager_crds" { for_each = data.kubectl_file_documents.cert_manager_crds.manifests yaml_body = each.value }
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An opinionated template for deploying a single k3s cluster with Ansible backed by Flux, SOPS, GitHub Actions, Renovate, Cilium, Cloudflare and more!
SSL certificates thanks to Cloudflare and cert-manager
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Deploy Rancher on AWS EKS using Terraform & Helm Charts
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/${CERT_MANAGER_VERSION}/cert-manager.crds.yaml
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Setup/Design internal PKI
put the Sub-CA inside hashicorp vault to be used for automatic signing of services like https://cert-manager.io/ inside our k8s clusters.
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Task vs Make - Final Thoughts
install-cert-manager: desc: Install cert-manager deps: - init-cluster cmds: - kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/{{.CERT_MANAGER_VERSION}}/cert-manager.yaml - echo "Waiting for cert-manager to be ready" && sleep 25 status: - kubectl -n cert-manager get pods | grep Running | wc -l | grep -q 3
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Easy HTTPS for your private networks
I've been pretty frustrated with how private CAs are supported. Your private root CA can be maliciously used to MITM every domain on the Internet, even though you intend to use it for only a couple domain names. Most people forget to set Name Constraints when they create these and many helper tools lack support [1][2]. Worse, browser support for Name Constraints has been slow [3] and support isn't well tracked [4]. Public CAs give you certificate transparency and you can subscribe to events to detect mis-issuance. Some hosted private CAs like AWS's offer logs [5], but DIY setups don't.
Even still, there are a lot of folks happily using private CAs, they aren't the target audience for this initial release.
[1] https://github.com/FiloSottile/mkcert/issues/302
[2] https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/issues/3655
[3] https://alexsci.com/blog/name-non-constraint/
[4] https://github.com/Netflix/bettertls/issues/19
[5] https://docs.aws.amazon.com/privateca/latest/userguide/secur...
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☸️ Managed Kubernetes : Our dev is on AWS, our prod is on OVH
the Cert Manager
What are some alternatives?
keda - KEDA is a Kubernetes-based Event Driven Autoscaling component. It provides event driven scale for any container running in Kubernetes
metallb - A network load-balancer implementation for Kubernetes using standard routing protocols
metrics-server - Scalable and efficient source of container resource metrics for Kubernetes built-in autoscaling pipelines.
aws-load-balancer-controller - A Kubernetes controller for Elastic Load Balancers
k9s - 🐶 Kubernetes CLI To Manage Your Clusters In Style!
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
cluster-proportional-autoscaler - Kubernetes Cluster Proportional Autoscaler Container
awx-operator - An Ansible AWX operator for Kubernetes built with Operator SDK and Ansible. 🤖
spring-auto-scaling-k8
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
prometheus - The Prometheus monitoring system and time series database.
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.