wg-serverless
cert-manager
wg-serverless | cert-manager | |
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7 | 101 | |
1,505 | 11,566 | |
0.1% | 1.5% | |
2.3 | 9.8 | |
4 months ago | 1 day ago | |
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.
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wg-serverless
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Personal programming projects to improve my chances at a job (I have a homeserver)
Check out CNCF Projects. Contributing to some of these open source projects is a great way to gain skills and land a job.
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The quickest way to add an integration test to your kubernetes environment
would indicate if your cluster could retrieve content from cncf.io or if cncf.io is up.
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Stateless, Secretless Multi-cluster Monitoring in Azure Kubernetes Service with Thanos, Prometheus and Azure Managed Grafana
This solution builds upon well-established Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) open source projects like Thanos and Prometheus,together with a new managed services, Azure Managed Grafana, recently released in public preview. It allows for ephemeral clusters to still have updated metrics without the 2-hours local storage of metrics in the classic deployment of Thanos sidecar to Prometheus.
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DigitalOcean Functions: A powerful serverless computing solution
Not ELI5 but see https://github.com/cncf/wg-serverless/tree/master/whitepaper...
Some people go monolithic app but best practice is usually one function per route.
Traditional servers come with management overhead (e.g. defining/managing/monitoring scaling) and by using Serverless servers you avoid that overhead and optimize for good engineers which are almost always your bigger cost center.
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Serverless 101
github.com/cncf/wg-serverless/blob/master/w..
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Running Serverless Applications on Kubernetes with Knative
As stated in a white paper by the CNCF serverless working group, there are two primary serverless personas:
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Getting Started with CloudEvents and AsyncAPI
The CloudEvents specification is under the CNCF Serverless working group since 2018. The spec's purpose is describing event data in a common way. This is useful in many scenarios, for example, routing events to the appropriate subscribers depending on the type of the event. Since applications can use a lot of different transports to send and receive events, the CloudEvents spec is protocol-agnostic so it defines protocol bindings in order for the metadata to be correctly mapped for HTTP, AMQP, Kafka, etc.
cert-manager
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deploying a minio service to kubernetes
cert-manager
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Upgrading Hundreds of Kubernetes Clusters
The second one is a combination of tools: External DNS, cert-manager, and NGINX ingress. Using these as a stack, you can quickly deploy an application, making it available through a DNS with a TLS without much effort via simple annotations. When I first discovered External DNS, I was amazed at its quality.
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Run WebAssembly on DigitalOcean Kubernetes with SpinKube - In 4 Easy Steps
On top of its core components, SpinKube depends on cert-manager. cert-Manager is responsible for provisioning and managing TLS certificates that are used by the admission webhook system of the Spin Operator. Let’s install cert-manager and KWasm using the commands shown here:
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Importing kubernetes manifests with terraform for cert-manager
terraform { required_providers { kubectl = { source = "gavinbunney/kubectl" version = "1.14.0" } } } # The reference to the current project or a AWS project data "google_client_config" "provider" {} # The reference to the current cluster or EKS data "google_container_cluster" "my_cluster" { name = var.cluster_name location = var.cluster_location } # We configure the kubectl provider to use those values for authenticating provider "kubectl" { host = data.google_container_cluster.my_cluster.endpoint token = data.google_client_config.provider.access_token cluster_ca_certificate = base64decode(data.google_container_cluster.my_cluster.master_auth[0].cluster_ca_certificate) } #Download the multiple manifests file. data "http" "cert_manager_crds" { url = "https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/v${var.cert_manager_version}/cert-manager.crds.yaml" } data "kubectl_file_documents" "cert_manager_crds" { content = data.http.cert_manager_crds.response_body lifecycle { precondition { condition = 200 == data.http.cert_manager_crds.status_code error_message = "Status code invalid" } } } # We use the for_each or else this kubectl_manifest will only import the first manifest in the file. resource "kubectl_manifest" "cert_manager_crds" { for_each = data.kubectl_file_documents.cert_manager_crds.manifests yaml_body = each.value }
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An opinionated template for deploying a single k3s cluster with Ansible backed by Flux, SOPS, GitHub Actions, Renovate, Cilium, Cloudflare and more!
SSL certificates thanks to Cloudflare and cert-manager
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Deploy Rancher on AWS EKS using Terraform & Helm Charts
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/${CERT_MANAGER_VERSION}/cert-manager.crds.yaml
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Setup/Design internal PKI
put the Sub-CA inside hashicorp vault to be used for automatic signing of services like https://cert-manager.io/ inside our k8s clusters.
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Task vs Make - Final Thoughts
install-cert-manager: desc: Install cert-manager deps: - init-cluster cmds: - kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/{{.CERT_MANAGER_VERSION}}/cert-manager.yaml - echo "Waiting for cert-manager to be ready" && sleep 25 status: - kubectl -n cert-manager get pods | grep Running | wc -l | grep -q 3
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Easy HTTPS for your private networks
I've been pretty frustrated with how private CAs are supported. Your private root CA can be maliciously used to MITM every domain on the Internet, even though you intend to use it for only a couple domain names. Most people forget to set Name Constraints when they create these and many helper tools lack support [1][2]. Worse, browser support for Name Constraints has been slow [3] and support isn't well tracked [4]. Public CAs give you certificate transparency and you can subscribe to events to detect mis-issuance. Some hosted private CAs like AWS's offer logs [5], but DIY setups don't.
Even still, there are a lot of folks happily using private CAs, they aren't the target audience for this initial release.
[1] https://github.com/FiloSottile/mkcert/issues/302
[2] https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/issues/3655
[3] https://alexsci.com/blog/name-non-constraint/
[4] https://github.com/Netflix/bettertls/issues/19
[5] https://docs.aws.amazon.com/privateca/latest/userguide/secur...
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☸️ Managed Kubernetes : Our dev is on AWS, our prod is on OVH
the Cert Manager
What are some alternatives?
asyncapi-to-postman - Creates a Postman collection from an AsyncAPI file.
metallb - A network load-balancer implementation for Kubernetes using standard routing protocols
dotnet-nats-template - .NET template for NATS
aws-load-balancer-controller - A Kubernetes controller for Elastic Load Balancers
generator - Use your AsyncAPI definition to generate literally anything. Markdown documentation, Node.js code, HTML documentation, anything!
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
AKS - Azure Kubernetes Service
awx-operator - An Ansible AWX operator for Kubernetes built with Operator SDK and Ansible. 🤖
k8s-event-grid-bridge - A simple event bridge for Kubernetes native events to Azure Event Grid.
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
ingress-nginx - Ingress-NGINX Controller for Kubernetes
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.