kubernetes-ingress
smi-spec
kubernetes-ingress | smi-spec | |
---|---|---|
28 | 12 | |
4,542 | 1,047 | |
0.6% | - | |
9.8 | 2.7 | |
4 days ago | 7 months ago | |
Go | Makefile | |
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.
kubernetes-ingress
-
☸️ Kubernetes NGINX Ingress Controller: 10+ Complementary Configurations for Web Applications
Everything in the YAML snippets below — except for ingress configuration — relates to configuring the NGINX ingress controller. This includes customizing the default configuration.
-
Breaking Terraform files into composable layers
In these examples, I assume that users have deployed an nginx-ingress-controller to their cluster through the eks layer. This controller is responsible for creating an nlb and exposing Elasticsearch and Kibana to the internet through their ingresses.
-
Implementing TLS in Kubernetes
Now, you need to install the Nginx Ingress Controller so that it can redirect incoming requests to your payment app to use HTTPS. Since you've exposed the app using nodePort, you need to install the Ingress using a custom value file that specifies the service type to NodePort.
-
Kubernetes cannot upload files larger than 1MB
Kubernetes We have a kubernetes cluster which has a dropwizard based web application running as a service. This application has a rest uri to upload files. It cannot upload files larger than 1MB. I get the following error: ERROR [2017-07-27 13:32:47,629] io.dropwizard.jersey.errors.LoggingExceptionMapper: Error handling a request: ea812501b414f0d9! com.fasterxml.jackson.core.JsonParseException: Unexpected character ('<' (code 60)): expected a valid value (number, String, array, object, 'true', 'false' or 'null')! at [Source: ! 413 Request Entity Too Large! ! 413 Request Entity Too Large! nginx/1.11.3! ! Hide resultsI have tried the suggestions given in https://github.com/nginxinc/kubernetes-ingress/issues/21. I have edited the Ingress to set the proxy-body-size annotation. Also, I have tried using the configMap without any success. we are using kubernetes version 1.5. Please let me know if you need additional information. Answer link : https://codehunter.cc/a/kubernetes/kubernetes-cannot-upload-files-larger-than-1mb
-
A Comprehensive Guide to API Gateways, Kubernetes Gateways, and Service Meshes
The example below shows how to configure a canary deployment using Nginx Ingress. The custom annotations used here are specific to Nginx:
-
Ingress controller for vanilla k8s
This: https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx/ Not this: https://docs.nginx.com/nginx-ingress-controller/
-
Assign an External IP to a Node
So far, i've been following the example here to set up an nginx Ingress Controller and some test services behind it. However, I am unable to follow Step 6 which displays the external IP for the node that the load balancer is running on as my node does not have an ExternalIP in the addresses section, only a LegacyHostIP and InternalIP.
- List of template objects & properties to use with templates?
-
How to use ACM public certificate for Nginx ingress controller?
Also, of personal note, I highly recommend you use the "ingress-nginx" controller which has a huge community and is of much higher quality and flexibility than the "nginx-ingress controller by nginx inc". I've had a lot of success with dozens of clients with this controller. It rocks!
-
Questions about Blue/Green & Canary Deployments (Vanilla K8)
For example, the ingress project from NGINX has its own CRDs that give better control over service versions and blue/green and canary cutovers https://github.com/nginxinc/kubernetes-ingress/tree/v3.0.0/examples/custom-resources/traffic-splitting
smi-spec
-
A Comprehensive Guide to API Gateways, Kubernetes Gateways, and Service Meshes
The Service Mesh Interface (SMI) specification was created to solve this portability issue.
-
Service Mesh Use Cases
> I suspect if a Service Mesh is ultimately shown to have broad value, one will make it's way into the K8S core
I'm not so sure. I suspect it'll follow the same roadmap as Gateway API, which it already kind of is with the Service Mesh Interface (https://smi-spec.io/)
-
Service Mesh Considerations
It is very common that a service mesh deploys a control plane and a data plane. The control plane does what you might expect; it controls the service mesh and gives you the ability to interact with it. Many service meshes implement the Service Mesh Interface (SMI) which is an API specification to standardize the way cluster operators interact with and implement features.
-
Kubernetes: Cross-cluster traffic scheduling - Access control
Before we start, let's review the SMI Access Control Specification. There are two forms of traffic policies in osm-edge: Permissive Mode and Traffic Policy Mode. The former allows services in the mesh to access each other, while the latter requires the provision of the appropriate traffic policy to be accessible.
-
Announcing osm-edge 1.1: ARM support and more
osm-edge is a simple, complete, and standalone service mesh and ships out-of-the-box with all the necessary components to deploy a complete service mesh. As a lightweight and SMI-compatible Service Mesh, osm-edge is designed to be intuitive and scalable.
- KubeCon 2022 - Jour 1
-
Kubernetes State Of The Union — KubeCon 2019, San Diego
I started on Monday, attending ServiceMeshCon2019. My guesstimate is that about 1000 people attended it. I believe Service Mesh is playing such a crucial role in scaling cloud native technologies that large scale cloud-native deployments may not be possible without service mesh. Just like you cannot really succeed in deploying a microservices based application without a microservices orchestration engine, like Kubernetes, you cannot scale the size and capacity of a microservices-based application without service mesh. That’s what makes it so compelling to see all the service mesh creators — Istio, Linkerd, Consul, Kuma — and listen to them. There was also a lot of discussion of SMI (Service Mesh Interface) — a common interface among all services mesh. The panel at the end of the day included all the major service mesh players, and some very thought provoking questions were asked and answered by the panel.
-
GraphQL - Usecase and Architecture
Do you need a Service Mesh?
-
Introducing the Cloud Native Compute Foundation (CNCF)
In the episode with Annie, she gave a great overview of the CNCF and a handful of projects that she's excited about. Those include Helm, Linkerd, Kudo, Keda and Artifact Hub. I gave a bonus example of the Service Mesh Interface project.
-
Service Mesh Interface
SMI official website: https://smi-spec.io
What are some alternatives?
amicontained - Container introspection tool. Find out what container runtime is being used as well as features available.
cni - Container Network Interface - networking for Linux containers
ingress-nginx - Ingress-NGINX Controller for Kubernetes
cloudwithchris.com - Cloud With Chris is my personal blogging, podcasting and vlogging platform where I talk about all things cloud. I also invite guests to talk about their experiences with the cloud and hear about lessons learned along their journey.
docker-swarm-ingress - Nginx swarm ingress controller, a minimalistic approach to allow routing into a Docker Swarm based on the public hostnames.
emissary - open source Kubernetes-native API gateway for microservices built on the Envoy Proxy
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.
pipy - Pipy is a programmable proxy for the cloud, edge and IoT.
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy [Moved to: https://github.com/traefik/traefik]
osm-edge - osm-edge is a lightweight service mesh for the edge-computing. It's forked from openservicemesh/osm and use pipy as sidecar proxy.
ingress - Ingress-NGINX Controller for Kubernetes [Moved to: https://github.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx]
kubefed - Kubernetes Cluster Federation