Kubernetes is an open source system to automate the deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications. If you are running more than just a few containers or want automated management of your containers, you need Kubernetes.
This book mainly focuses on the advanced management of Kubernetes clusters. It covers problems that arise when you start using container orchestration in production. We start by giving you an overview of the guiding principles in Kubernetes design and show you the best practises in the fields of security, high availability, and cluster federation.
You will discover how to run complex stateful microservices on Kubernetes including advanced features as horizontal pod autoscaling, rolling updates, resource quotas, and persistent storage back ends. Using real-world use cases, we explain the options for network configuration and provides guidelines on how to set up, operate, and troubleshoot various Kubernetes networking plugins. Finally, we cover custom resource development and utilization in automation and maintenance workflows.
By the end of this book, you’ll know everything you need to know to go from intermediate to advanced level.
Mastering Kubernetes is an all-directions guide to Kubernetes.
It's very rich in covering a broad range of aspects of Kubernetes - from overview, architecture, setup in different platforms, cluster hardening, CNI, writing your own plugins for networking or extending the k8s apiserver with custom resource definitions.
However with all those topics in mind, the book is very limited to what it can really cover with "mastering" and what with just a standard "up and running"-level of coverage.
In just ~430 pages the topics that are in my opinion, "mastery"-worthy are:
* architecture, * setup in different platforms - although this is a stretch, * security - although secrets without encryptions are just base64 text, * CNI - there's an attempt to guide you where to start with writing your own CNI plugin, but nowadays the links that are mentioned, are dead. * running a k8s federation, * extending the k8s api server with custom resource definitions - however the `ThirdPartyResource` mentioned here is nowadays deprecated, but migration is covered in https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/acce...
Overall this is a very good book, but it needs to cover more content and be "mastery"-worthy in each topic part. Let's hope if there's a 2nd edition, it'll do better cause this here has potential.
An adequate tutorial-in-a-book for Kubernetes. As with many Packt offerings, I would argue that the material typically remains too high-level to be "mastering" a topic and the book feels a bit padded. But, again, if you don't know Kubernetes this will give you a decent starting point - but you will have to read the official docs at some point.
It's seems like a book written from pearson which doesn't have experience with teaching. Book contain a lot bla bla things. Important things are not well explained. You can receive a brief impression what kubernetes is, but not master it.
Probably beyond what most people are setting up, but I might be able to make use of this in my next role. Book has examples and you can build along side.