kube-monkey
k9s
kube-monkey | k9s | |
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9 | 126 | |
2,920 | 24,930 | |
- | - | |
3.4 | 9.3 | |
13 days ago | 2 days 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.
kube-monkey
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Does your company have a Change Advisory Board (CAB)?
Not in the typical sense, but we have plenty of standard practices and cross-team checkpoints to limit risk. By the time we're deploying changes to production, the work has had a card created, assigned points (which necessarily involves discussing scope and risk), architected (as a group), code peer reviewed, hit unit tests (automated), integration tests (automated), functional tests (automated), smoke tested (automated) end-to-end tests (a few automated, but mostly manual by QA), acceptance tested (by QA and business), resilience tests (chaos engineering with kube-monkey), been deployed to at least 3 environments (with the same exact same artifacts, just with config changes), and monitored for failures (pod restarts, log anomalies, etc -- all automated). Deploy to production is well communicated, and ANY team can request a halt to the deploy if they have concerns.
- Kube-monkey: an implementation of Netflix's Chaos Monkey for Kubernetes clusters
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What happens when a service fails in your infra, or in other words, do you practice chaos engineering?
Part of being a cloud native company means designing services for failure. What happens, for example, if the payment service/pod goes down? Do the rest of your services continue operating normally? One thing tools like kube-monkey does is automatically kill pods for you on a certain date at a certain time in order to plan for failure events. Just wondering if anyone has dove into the deep end with this type of tooling and really just gone all out, besides Netflix?
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Chaos Mesh for chaos engineering in Kubernetes
Chaos Mesh is a popular solution (about 5k GitHub stars), but β obviously β not the only one. E.g., Litmus is a powerful platform to test many things, and kube-monkey might be a good option for more basic stuff.
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How many of you actually test your infrastructure code? For those that do, what benefits did you discover that testing brings to your code base?
Exactly the kind of thing I love to see! Sounds like a great use case for a tool like kube-monkey as well.
- GitHub - asobti/kube-monkey: An implementation of Netflix's Chaos Monkey for Kubernetes clusters
- kube-monkey: An implementation of Netflix's Chaos Monkey for Kubernetes clusters
- 27 open-source tools that can make your Kubernetes workflow easier ππ₯³
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Awesome Kubernetes Resources
Kube Monkey
k9s
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Upgrading Hundreds of Kubernetes Clusters
Pierre: The first tool I recommend is K9s. It's not just a time-saver but a productivity booster. With its intuitive interface, you can speed up all the usual kubectl commands, access logs, edit resources and configurations, and more. It's like having a personal assistant for your cluster management tasks.
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Easy Access to Terminal Commands in Neovim using FTerm
The last thing you really need is a common set of tools that you want fingertip access to. I really commonly use LazyGit and K9s in my day job so those are the tools I will show off in this article.
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π Five tools to make your K8s experience more enjoyable π
K9s is your best friend (get it? πΆ) when exploring your cluster via the terminal. It shares commonality with Vim for its interaction style using shortcuts and starting commands with: but donβt let that discourage you. K9s keeps a vigilant eye on Kubernetes activities, providing real-time information and intuitive commands for resource interaction.
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Building a Kubernetes Operator with the Operator Framework
k9s: brew install k9s
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Harlequin: SQL IDE for Your Terminal
I would like to put in a vote for k9s, which is also on the list at Terminal Trove. [0] It's the most convenient tool I've ever found for Kubernetes management. Based on that experience I'll definitely be checking out Harlequin.
[0] https://k9scli.io/
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Your First K8S+Istio
$ wget https://github.com/derailed/k9s/releases/download/v0.29.1/k9s_Darwin_amd64.tar.gz $ tar -xzf k9s_Darwin_amd64.tar.gz $ sudo mv k9s /usr/local/bin/
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Seeking Guidance for Transitioning to Kubernetes and SRE/DevOps for traditional infrastructure team
All in all, run things, do some kubectl apply -f something.yml every day, install k9s, and try to configure a big one cluster at some point.
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Architecting for Resilience: Crafting Opinionated EKS Clusters with Karpenter & Cilium Cluster Mesh β Part 1
(K9s is one of my favorite tools for navigating Kubernetes clusters through the CLI).
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Top 10 CLI Tools for DevOps Teams
K9s is an open-source, terminal-based UI for interacting with your Kubernetes clusters, making navigating, observing, and managing your apps easier. If you use Kubectl but wish it was easier and faster to use, K9s might be just what you're looking for!
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Use Tetragon to Limit Network Usage for a set of Binary
k9s
What are some alternatives?
chaoskube - chaoskube periodically kills random pods in your Kubernetes cluster.
lens - Lens - The way the world runs Kubernetes
istio - Connect, secure, control, and observe services.
k8s - How to deploy Portainer inside a Kubernetes environment.
kube-bench - Checks whether Kubernetes is deployed according to security best practices as defined in the CIS Kubernetes Benchmark
minikube - Run Kubernetes locally
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
popeye - π A Kubernetes cluster resource sanitizer
kube-burner - Kubernetes performance and scale test orchestration framework written in golang
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
quay - Build, Store, and Distribute your Applications and Containers
stern - β Multi pod and container log tailing for Kubernetes