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I just showed you how to deploy your simple python application to Kubernetes using kubectl and Harness. We have a well-documented MERN Stack application repository that you can fork and start understanding the complete CI/CD pipeline. The code for the application is in the harnessapps/MERN-Stack-Example repository, the Kubernetes configuration is in the harnessapps/MERN-Stack-Example-DevOps repository.
I just showed you how to deploy your simple python application to Kubernetes using kubectl and Harness. We have a well-documented MERN Stack application repository that you can fork and start understanding the complete CI/CD pipeline. The code for the application is in the harnessapps/MERN-Stack-Example repository, the Kubernetes configuration is in the harnessapps/MERN-Stack-Example-DevOps repository.
Kubernetes has become the de-facto tool for container orchestration and has a solid community. The whole cloud-native era began with the evolution and Kubernetes and is still growing. As a result, Kubernetes is not just popular but has become a way of deploying applications to make sure they are highly available and scalable. The developer community is focused on this tool, and every day, many companies use Kubernetes to safely deploy their applications to production. Since it has become the talk of the cloud-native town, we thought to show you how you can easily use Kubernetes to deploy a simple python application.