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Kubernetes Demos

This repository contains the demos used at certain Workshops about Kubernetes.

It is grouped by the different abstractions and concepts used in Kubernetes. Each directory contains its own README to explain how to use it. The following table gives an overview of the content:

Directory Content
pods Basics of Pods
deployments Deploying Pods
services Services to access pods
configuration Store configuration and secrets and apply it to pods
ingress Organize access to services from the outside world
jobs Running pods regularly
persistent_volumes Storing data in a cluster
stateful_sets Allow Pods to carry state
namespaces Splitting a cluster into namespaces
helm Using the Kubernetes package manager
kustomize Using Kustomize to maintain yaml files.
monitoring Monitoring your Kubernetes cluster
REST API Accessing the Kubernetes REST API
Custom Resource Definitions Creating and using Custom Resource Definitions
Authentication Ways to authenticate to a Kubernetes cluster.
RBAC Role Based Access Control
Pod Security Policies Implementing Pod Security Policies

Requirements to run the demos

The kubernetes cluster

To run the demos you need a Kubernetes cluster. An easy way to run it on a local machine is using minikube. Please follow the instructions on their website to install it on your local machine:

https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-minikube/

In the examples we will use minikube to explain specific setups that might be necessary.

Dashboard

To see the results of your actions it can be useful to take a look at the kubernetes dashboard. If you are using minikube it is installed and activated by default. You can watch it using the following command:

minikube dashboard

The diagnose pod

For some demos it is necessary to connect to a pod that runs inside the cluster. This is e.g. necessary when you want to test network connections that are not visible outside the cluster. The Kubernetes configuration in diagnose.yaml defines a pod that does nothing and has a certain number of tools already installed. Install this container in the cluster using:

kubectl apply -f diagnose.yaml

You can open a shell inside this container using:

kubectl exec -ti <diagnose-...> sh

Where <diagnose-...> is the name of the pod that you can either find using shell completion (if installed) or by listing all pods using:

kubectl get pods

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Demos used in several Kubernetes Workshops

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