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strimzi.io | ||
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blog.nobugware.com
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| | | | | Manages Envoy Proxy with Envoy Gateway in Kubernetes | |
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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. | |
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blog.willemmelching.nl
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| | | | | Using Kubernetes for a small startup adds some complexity, but also has many advantages such as scaling and easy CI/CD. In this post we'll explore a simple AKS Kubernetes setup on Azure using Terraform serving a static page over HTTPS. | |
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brunoscheufler.com
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| | | Welcome back to the short series about getting started with Kubernetes, the practical way! If you haven't read the first post on provisioning a cluster and haven't set up your first cluster yet, please do that first and come back here. If you're running your cluster on Google's Kubernetes Engine, chances are that integrated metrics and services like Stackdriver are already great for monitoring your Kubernetes cluster, in that case, you might not actually need to deploy the following application.... | ||