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jpetazzo.github.io
| | www.tremolosecurity.com
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| | Combine OpenUnison and Okta for a simple and powerful access solution for Kubernetes. Combine CLI access and the dashboard to provide a unified login system for your Kubernetes clusters and control access using Okta groups..
| | blog.alexellis.io
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| | Learn how to configure K3s on bare-metal to run a Kubernetes cluster with just as much resilience and fault tolerance as a managed service.
| | www.joshkasuboski.com
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| | Deploying a cheap kubernetes cluster on GKE with Terraform
| | arveknudsen.com
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| In my previous blog post I showed how to use the Kops tool to create a production ready Kubernetes cluster on Amazon Web Services (AWS). In this follow-up post I will show how to install Elasticsearch and its graphical counterpart Kibana in the cluster, in order to be able to collect and store logs from your cluster and search/read them. We will also install Fluentd as this component is responsible for transmitting the standard Kubernetes logs to Elasticsearch. This is generally known as the ELK stack, which stands for Elasticsearch, Logstash (precursor to Fluentd) and Kibana.