strapi-k8s-blog-post
helm-charts
strapi-k8s-blog-post | helm-charts | |
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2 | 99 | |
3 | 4,659 | |
- | 1.2% | |
10.0 | 9.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | Mustache | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
strapi-k8s-blog-post
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How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 1/2
First, for the Development Dockerfile (or any Dockerfile), there should always be a .dockerignore in the same location as the Dockerfile with content similar to this:
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How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 2/2
You can check out the source code of this article on GitHub. The code is separated into two folders, one for each part.
helm-charts
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Introducing a Custom Operator for Unified Management of Kubernetes Tools
Installation example for prometheus:
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You get what you Measure: Understanding your applications health with Grafana, Loki and Prometheus
Prometheus can be deployed using the Prometheus Helm Chart. This helm chart contains a lot of features such as the already mentioned Push Gateway, Alert Manager and so on. For simplicity reasons of this tutorial I will not show all the Helm chart configuration but you can see a real example used by me here.
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Multi-Cluster Prometheus: Scaling Metrics Across Kubernetes Clusters
Building upon Bartłomiej Płotka's insightful blog on Prometheus and its passthrough agent mode, this post dives into implementing multi-cluster Prometheus support. Notably, the official inclusion of support in the widely-used kube-prometheus-stack came with the release in July 2023, making it easier to extend Prometheus monitoring across clusters.
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Hands On: Pull metrics into Kubernetes from anywhere and treat them generically with the Keptn Metrics Server
The first thing you'll need, of course, is at least one backend to store metrics. So install Prometheus now:
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Kubernetes Ingress Visibility
For the request following, something like jeager https://www.jaegertracing.io/, because you are talking more about tracing than necessarily logging. For just monitoring, https://github.com/prometheus-community/helm-charts/tree/main/charts/kube-prometheus-stack would be the starting point, then it depends. Nginx gives metrics out of the box, then you can pull in the dashboard like https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/14314-kubernetes-nginx-ingress-controller-nextgen-devops-nirvana/ , or full metal with something like service mesh monitoring which would provably fulfil most of the requirements
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Smart-Cash project -Adding monitoring to EKS using Prometheus operator
kube-prometheus-stack is a Helm chart that contains several components to monitor the Kubernetes cluster, along with Grafana dashboards Grafana Dashboards to visualize the data. This option will be used in this article.
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K8s Monitoring Per Namespace
This one I highly recommend: https://github.com/prometheus-community/helm-charts/tree/main/charts/kube-prometheus-stack
- Is Prometheus the right tool for my use case here?
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Do we have any Prometheus metric to get the kubernetes cluster-level CPU/Memory requests/limits?
We use kube-prometheus-stack for metrics and have added the K8s views dashboards from grafana-dashboards-kubernetes. You should check out the k8s-views-global dashboard. I believe it's just what you are looking for.
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Alertmanager SMTP configuration
You should take a look at "kube-prometheus-stack". It not only includes prometheus, node-exporter and Grafana but also a ton of preconfigured alerts and dashboards. Will save you a lot of work!
What are some alternatives?
Vegeta - HTTP load testing tool and library. It's over 9000!
tanka - Flexible, reusable and concise configuration for Kubernetes
litmus - Litmus helps SREs and developers practice chaos engineering in a Cloud-native way. Chaos experiments are published at the ChaosHub (https://hub.litmuschaos.io). Community notes is at https://hackmd.io/a4Zu_sH4TZGeih-xCimi3Q
kube-thanos - Kubernetes specific configuration for deploying Thanos.
k3d-nfs-dynamic-volumes - Dynamic nfs volumes using k3d and nfs-ganesha-server-and-external-provisioner
kube-prometheus - Use Prometheus to monitor Kubernetes and applications running on Kubernetes
helm-secrets - A helm plugin that help manage secrets with Git workflow and store them anywhere
kustomize - Customization of kubernetes YAML configurations
autoscaler - Autoscaling components for Kubernetes
pihole-kubernetes - PiHole on kubernetes
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
pack - CLI for building apps using Cloud Native Buildpacks