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www.andrew-kirkpatrick.com | ||
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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. | |
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hoelz.ro
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| | | | | Field selectors are a handy filter you can provide kubectl get via the --field-selector option to pare down the list of resources you get back from the server. The docs mention that supported fields vary from resource to resource, but sadly don't mention which resources support which fields. I did a little bit of poking around, and - as far as I can tell - this isn't documented anywhere! So, seeing as reading source code is one of my Maslow's hammers, I broke out that particular hammer and got to reading. | |
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hypernephelist.com
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| | | | | Traefik is a modern, dynamic load-balancer that was designed specifically with containers in mind. It is able to react to service deployment events from many... | |
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juandebravo.com
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| | | Juan de Bravo - Personal thoughts about technology (@juandebravo) | ||