k3s
kubefwd
k3s | kubefwd | |
---|---|---|
7 | 5 | |
15,937 | 3,697 | |
- | 0.6% | |
9.2 | 4.8 | |
about 3 years ago | 12 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.
k3s
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Kubernetes: Multi-cluster communication with Flomesh Service Mesh (Part 2)
In this demo, we will be using k3d a lightweight wrapper to run k3s (Rancher Lab’s minimal Kubernetes distribution) in docker, to create 4 separate clusters named control-plane, cluster-1, cluster-2, and cluster-3 respectively.
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Pipy: Protecting Kubernetes Apps from SQL Injection & XSS Attacks
To run the demo locally, we recommend k3d a lightweight wrapper to run k3s (Rancher Lab’s minimal Kubernetes distribution) in docker.
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When a node goes down, how long should k8s wait before migrating pods to other nodes?
I've been messing around with k8s (k3s) lately, and got to the "issue" of downtime/inconsistencies caused by one of multiple workers being down, who had pods running on them. I found a couple useful parameters here that helped me reduce the time needed to redeploy the old pods on other nodes, as well as stop sending requests to the NotReady node. But that got me thinking, how long should k8s wait before doing these things? Or is there perhaps a better option for increasing avaliability?
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Kubernetes Development Environments – A Comparison
Local Kubernetes clusters are clusters that are running on the individual computer of the developer. There are many tools that provide such an environment, such as Minikube, microk8s, k3s, or kind. While they are not all the same, their use as a development environment is quite comparable.
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Local Cluster vs. Remote Cluster for Kubernetes-Based Development
Since the developer is the only one who has to access this cluster for development, local clusters can be a feasible solution for this purpose. Over time, several solutions have emerged that are particularly made for running Kubernetes in local environments. The most important ones are Kubernetes in Docker (kind), MicroK8s, minikube and k3s. For a comparison of these local Kubernetes options, you can look at this post.
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Kubernetes: Virtual Clusters As Development Environments
With local Kubernetes environments such as minikube or k3s, developers can create their own Kubernetes clusters on their local computers. This often leads to developers struggling with the management and setup of these pared-down Kubernetes technologies that are also not completely realistic compared to “real-world”, cloud-based environments. The upside of this approach is that the developers have full control over their environment and can independently create it whenever they need it.
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[Recap] The API Hangout #31
K3d - a lightweight wrapper to run k3s in docker.
kubefwd
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Interesting tools?
kubefwd bulk port forward: https://github.com/txn2/kubefwd
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Opening a range of ports in Kubernetes
Not sure if it covers what you need, but I was using kubefwd to do my port forwarding for services and I was super happy
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5 tools for k8s every developer should have
kubefwd (Kube Forward)
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Using Telepresence 2 for Kubernetes debugging and local development
Kubefwd works similar to Telepresence by making your local environment think it is inside the cluster. The networking tunnel is one direction only. Telepresence is much smarter as it also makes the other cluster applications think that your local app is inside the same cluster. So with Kubefwd you only get 50% of what basic Telepresence offers. Telepresence also has volume mounting support for more advanced scenarios.
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kubefwd tool to bulk port forwarding #Kubernetes services for local development.
For anyone that doesn't want to open youtube for the link to github: https://github.com/txn2/kubefwd
What are some alternatives?
minikube - Run Kubernetes locally
tilt-extensions - Extensions for Tilt
devspace-plugin-loft - Loft Plugin for DevSpace - adds commands like `devspace create space` or `devspace create vcluster` to DevSpace
CDK - 📦 Make security testing of K8s, Docker, and Containerd easier.
cilium - eBPF-based Networking, Security, and Observability
loki-multi-tenant-proxy - Grafana Loki multi-tenant Proxy. Needed to deploy Grafana Loki in a multi-tenant way
multi-tenancy - A working place for multi-tenancy related proposals and prototypes.
kubecolor - colorizes kubectl output
fsm - Lightweight service mesh for Kubernetes East-West and North-South traffic management, uses ebpf for layer4 and pipy proxy for layer7 traffic management, support multi cluster network.
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
k3v - Virtual Kubernetes
pack - CLI for building apps using Cloud Native Buildpacks