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mattias.engineer
| | nedinthecloud.com
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| | The world of technology is constantly shifting and evolving. Stay up to date on the latest concepts and conversations with these posts from Ned in the Cloud.
| | blog.ropnop.com
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| | Default installations of Helm on Kubernetes can make it trivial for attackers to escalate to cluster admin. In this post I'll demonstrate how.
| | malgregator.com
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| | Lessons learned from the multi year operation of the HashiCorp Vault Open Source deployment.
| | 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.