vcluster
cnab-spec
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vcluster | cnab-spec | |
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5 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
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vcluster
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Amazon EC2 Enhances Defense in Depth with Default IMDSv2
Kubernetes? You mean the container orchestration system where they forgot to add Multi-tenancy? And no namespaces are not Multi-tenancy...
https://www.vcluster.com/
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Mirantis Unveils K0smotron: An Open-Source Kubernetes Management Project
Whats the difference between this and vcluster (https://github.com/loft-sh/vcluster)?
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Codespaces but open-source, client-only, and unopinionated
Yep, as we see it they compliment each other quite well. DevPod takes your workspace to the cloud and DevSpace let's you develop against your Kubernetes cluster - potentially the same one you used to start your workspace.
Internally we use both in our development setup, spinning up remote workspaces using DevPod, installing DevSpace and kind into the devcontainer, then using DevSpace to develop against the cluster. See the vcluster setup[1] as an example
[1]https://github.com/loft-sh/vcluster/tree/main/.devcontainer
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Anyone using Kata Containers?
The tenants are internal dev teams so yeah maybe not. I was considering multi-tenanting different environments isolated at the kube layer with vCluster and have the vCluster pods running in Kata containers giving maximum isolation but still having a single management cluster. Ideally also avoiding the need to buy a second set of hardware for a dev environment
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Multi-tenancy in Kubernetes
Vcluster
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Kub'rin' a breeze: Developing on ephemeral cloud-based K8s clusters
Looks interesting. How does this solution compare to vcluster?
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Same cluster for different development environments
sounds like the best option for you , is a tool called VCluster by loft ( https://www.vcluster.com/) , this way you can install as many k8s cluster as you want in the same k8s host cluster , those cluster share workers nodes and networking, but each has a separated "api server" , so it looks like you have a dedicated cluster with their own namespaces and tools . take a look at the docs to get a better understanding and how they work.
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Is it a good idea to use k8s namespace-based multitenancy for delivering managed service of an application?
We're about to run a PoC with vcluster for isolated sandboxes, this might be relevant to you too
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Questions for Heroku-like Project
I think namespaces, RBAC and network policies are sufficient to partition users from the same organisation. I would investigate the use of vcluster ig you want to give your users even more isolation and capability (such as installing CRDs)
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Multiple Tenancy, Namespaces, Securing Workloads
Depends on the use case. Namespaces provides soft isolation (so it means they share same Apiserver, PV's and global resources such as CRD's), but can be restricted with network policies. So it means, there's still potential in breaking other namespaces if you change PV's or CRD's which are used by other namespaces. Multi-Cluster solution can provide full isolation, but its also really expensive in resource consumption and maintenance/management effort. If namespaced-isolation isnt enough for your use case, you can consider vclusters (https://www.vcluster.com/)
cnab-spec
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No docker options
CNAB
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Kubernetes Application Archive !! Bundle up a Kubernetes application 📦 into a single static OCI compliant archive.
Similar to https://cnab.io/ then?
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Stronger abstraction for deployments
IMO Cloud native application bundle is what you are looking for: https://cnab.io/
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Deployment Packaging Solutions
have you looked at CNAB ? since it uses standard OCI compliance you can have your entire application bundle on Azure registry (azure registry is OCI 2 compliant registry) and you can get more information about how to do it using ORAS cli
- Tools to Run Kubernetes Locally
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k8s based platform
Check https://cnab.io/ and https://porter.sh/
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Terraform 1.0 Release
I'm closely tracking an effort by Microsoft that aims to do a lot of what you're describing since I find myself bridging between these tools and deploying stacks that span tools and roles. [CNAB](https://cnab.io/) and the front-running implementation, [Porter](https://porter.sh/), enable one-step infra deployments, packaged as a single OCI-compatible container, with any number of steps, using the best tools for each of those steps. Think of using aws-cli for some initialization step (create or verify presence of a state bucket), applying some terraform to create infra, and finishing with a helm chart to complete deployment of app components. Each stage in a bundle packages not only the code to run it but also the execution binary of the tool that runs it. The spec and porter are still a moving target but it's a promising space and a nice adjacent evolution of the current state of tooling.
- Cloud Native Application Bundles Security (CNAB-SEC) 1.0.0 GA 2020
What are some alternatives?
capsule - Multi-tenancy and policy-based framework for Kubernetes.
kapp-controller - Continuous delivery and package management for Kubernetes.
kind - Kubernetes IN Docker - local clusters for testing Kubernetes
helm-charts - Komodor.io public helm charts
kiosk - kiosk 🏢 Multi-Tenancy Extension For Kubernetes - Secure Cluster Sharing & Self-Service Namespace Provisioning
kubevela - The Modern Application Platform.
cluster-api-provider-nested - Cluster API Provider for Nested Clusters
porter - Porter enables you to package your application artifact, client tools, configuration and deployment logic together as an installer that you can distribute, and install with a single command.
hierarchical-namespaces - Home of the Hierarchical Namespace Controller (HNC). Adds hierarchical policies and delegated creation to Kubernetes namespaces for improved in-cluster multitenancy.
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
kpt - Automate Kubernetes Configuration Editing