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blog.mariom.pl
| | managing.blue
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| | Questions at the Kubernetes slack are always interesting and sometimes nerd sniping. One such question came along the #ingress-nginx-users channel where a user was trying to make the nginx controller work as a reverse proxy too for a site outside of the Kubernetes cluster in question. The user tried to do this with configuration snippets,...
| | sookocheff.com
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| | Disaster events are one of the biggest challenges that a software organization can face. Natural disasters like earthquakes or floods, technical failures such as power or network loss, and human actions such as unauthorized attacks can disable an entire fleet of systems, leading to complete failure for a business. To deal with disaster scenarios requires a proactive approach to prepare and recover from failure. One of the key benefits of running in the cloud is how easy it is to run workloads in multiple regions. This allows you to deploy a resilient architecture that supports disaster recovery, even in the cases where an entire region is disabled.
| | devopsdirective.com
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| | [AI summary] The article explains how to create a maintenance page for a Kubernetes service using nginx and ConfigMaps without requiring a custom container image.
| | willhaley.com
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| These are the steps I use to set up k3s lightweight kubernetes for local development with Arch Linux. This guide results in a deployment using LetsEncrypt via Traefik, HTTPS support, and a vanilla nginx web server. Note that, with these instructions, LetsEncrypt will only generate a valid HTTPS certificate if the computer where k3s is being installed can be reached via HTTP on port 80 over the public Internet using the domain name we specify below. Routing and Firewall Enable IP forwarding.