3 Sep 2019
Abstract:
In this session, I will mention how to create a multi-tenant environment on Kubernetes to build a managed service. There will be real-life examples of Containerization, Monitoring, Tracing, and Microservices.
I will provide golden rules of building managed service on top of kubernetes with real-life examples as I gained experience during Hazelcast Cloud development. - Environment isolation - Microservice Architecture - Monitoring - Logging - Tracing will be the central topic for this session
In this session, I will mention how to create a multi-tenant environment on Kubernetes to build a managed service. There will be real-life examples of Containerization, Monitoring, Tracing, and Microservices.
I will provide golden rules of building managed service on top of kubernetes with real-life examples as I gained experience during Hazelcast Cloud development. - Environment isolation - Microservice Architecture - Monitoring - Logging - Tracing will be the central topic for this session
- 2 participants
- 44 minutes
25 Feb 2019
Leon Stigter, Developer Advocate at JFrog talked about implementing Go Centered modules for his Kubernetes Cluster. He also shared some of his favorite dad jokes and talked about his passon: cloud, serverless and cheesecake.
Check out jfrog.com for more about this awesome tool .
Check out jfrog.com for more about this awesome tool .
- 2 participants
- 31 minutes
22 Feb 2019
On Tuesday 19th February a bunch of Kubernauts - Kubernetes fanatics - gathered in the True warehouse. Alexander Charykov, innovation engineer at True talked about building Kubernetes-as-a-Service. Uhm, yes.. that's KaaS 🧀 (cheese) in Dutch.
- 3 participants
- 28 minutes
15 Oct 2018
The KubeEYE project: A visual landscape designer for Kubernetes.
Planning IT landscapes with customers typically is something we do based on a diagram. Drawing the "Big Bicture" is the most common way to translate the requirements into a shared vision.
The independent KubeEYE project developes an application, which allows visual designing and automatical deployment of the drawn landscapes. Basically, KubeEYE users draw a picture of the IT components and press a deployment button. KubeEYE pushes the picture data to a Kubernetes cluster, where the vision should become reality.
Planning IT landscapes with customers typically is something we do based on a diagram. Drawing the "Big Bicture" is the most common way to translate the requirements into a shared vision.
The independent KubeEYE project developes an application, which allows visual designing and automatical deployment of the drawn landscapes. Basically, KubeEYE users draw a picture of the IT components and press a deployment button. KubeEYE pushes the picture data to a Kubernetes cluster, where the vision should become reality.
- 2 participants
- 43 minutes
9 Jun 2018
Kubernetes/Cloud Native Online Meetup - 06.09.18 - Extending Kubernetes - Gigi Sayfan
- 1 participant
- 42 minutes
21 Mar 2018
View this talk presented by Karthik Ranganathan, Yugabyte Co-Founder and CTO, to get an introduction to YugabyteDB.
This talk was presented at Microservices and Cloud Native Apps SF Bay Area Meetup on March 29, 2018.
Learn more: https://www.yugabyte.com/
This talk was presented at Microservices and Cloud Native Apps SF Bay Area Meetup on March 29, 2018.
Learn more: https://www.yugabyte.com/
- 6 participants
- 40 minutes
30 Jan 2018
Come learn how DRP can make provisioning of your Kubernetes clusters easy. We can take zero infrastructure to fully deployed Kubernetes with minimal effort. Additionally, we are focusing on strong "Immutable Infrastructure" capabilities, with integrations for node admission.
We discuss the architecture of DRP, immutable provisioning, kubernetes deployment integration, and advanced concepts around node admission. Capping off the presentation will be a Demo of deploying multiple hosts, and demonstrating multiple Kubernetes clusters deployed on those hosts
We discuss the architecture of DRP, immutable provisioning, kubernetes deployment integration, and advanced concepts around node admission. Capping off the presentation will be a Demo of deploying multiple hosts, and demonstrating multiple Kubernetes clusters deployed on those hosts
- 2 participants
- 47 minutes
17 Oct 2017
Topic Summary
Modern apps are built around microservices, linked by a complex mesh of connections. Cloud native orchestrators like Kubernetes enable developers to describe the connectivity requirements of their pods using intent-based documents called network policy. Network policy enables zero trust and satisfies security models that microservices communications require. In this session, we will cover the Kubernetes networking stack, network policy with Project Calico and application service mesh. Also a demo will be shown to reinforce the concepts.
About Christopher Liljenstolpe
Christopher is the CTO and co-founder of Tigera, Inc, and the original architect of Project Calico. Before devoting his life to making cloud networking simple and secure, he gained plenty of practical experience in how it was not ever thus, designing and running several OpenStack clusters, and architecting some of the earliest SDN solutions at Big Switch Networks. He also ran architecture at two large carriers (Telstra - AS1221, and Cable & Wireless/iMCI - AS3561), spent time in Asia as the IP CTO for Alcatel, and run networks in Antarctica (hint, bend radius becomes REALLY important at -50C). In his spare time he was foolish enough to do two stints as a working group co-chair in the IETF. Occasionally you can have the (mis-)fortune of hearing him speak at conferences and the like.
Modern apps are built around microservices, linked by a complex mesh of connections. Cloud native orchestrators like Kubernetes enable developers to describe the connectivity requirements of their pods using intent-based documents called network policy. Network policy enables zero trust and satisfies security models that microservices communications require. In this session, we will cover the Kubernetes networking stack, network policy with Project Calico and application service mesh. Also a demo will be shown to reinforce the concepts.
About Christopher Liljenstolpe
Christopher is the CTO and co-founder of Tigera, Inc, and the original architect of Project Calico. Before devoting his life to making cloud networking simple and secure, he gained plenty of practical experience in how it was not ever thus, designing and running several OpenStack clusters, and architecting some of the earliest SDN solutions at Big Switch Networks. He also ran architecture at two large carriers (Telstra - AS1221, and Cable & Wireless/iMCI - AS3561), spent time in Asia as the IP CTO for Alcatel, and run networks in Antarctica (hint, bend radius becomes REALLY important at -50C). In his spare time he was foolish enough to do two stints as a working group co-chair in the IETF. Occasionally you can have the (mis-)fortune of hearing him speak at conferences and the like.
- 3 participants
- 58 minutes
22 Mar 2017
Topic Summary:
Loodse uses Kubernetes to deploy multiple clusters in public and private clouds and in hybrid scenarios. This approach simplifies the set-up and upgrade of clusters and allows smooth and user-friendly orchestration. In this talk, Loodse will demonstrate how to run Kubernetes on Kubernetes to provide a Cluster-as-a-Service architecture.
Speaker:
Jason Murray is a Senior Infrastructure Architect at Loodse. He has contributed to both Kubernetes and Container Linux, focusing on large scale bare metal deployments. Prior to joining Loodse, Jason worked as an Operations Engineer at Collins and was Head of Development at Contetto.
Loodse uses Kubernetes to deploy multiple clusters in public and private clouds and in hybrid scenarios. This approach simplifies the set-up and upgrade of clusters and allows smooth and user-friendly orchestration. In this talk, Loodse will demonstrate how to run Kubernetes on Kubernetes to provide a Cluster-as-a-Service architecture.
Speaker:
Jason Murray is a Senior Infrastructure Architect at Loodse. He has contributed to both Kubernetes and Container Linux, focusing on large scale bare metal deployments. Prior to joining Loodse, Jason worked as an Operations Engineer at Collins and was Head of Development at Contetto.
- 2 participants
- 39 minutes
10 Feb 2017
Topic Summary:
Kubernetes represents one of the most mature container orchestration systems available today.In this session we will demonstrate how Rancher, an open source container management platform, automates the complex task of deployment and management of Kubernetes clusters. The presentation will cover Ranchers cloud agnostic approach to infrastructure management as well as it's production-grade Kubernetes distribution.
Speaker:
Jan Bruder is a Linux containers and open source enthusiast. He joined Rancher Labs in 2016 and is working with Rancher users all over Europe on next-gen containerized application environments.
Kubernetes represents one of the most mature container orchestration systems available today.In this session we will demonstrate how Rancher, an open source container management platform, automates the complex task of deployment and management of Kubernetes clusters. The presentation will cover Ranchers cloud agnostic approach to infrastructure management as well as it's production-grade Kubernetes distribution.
Speaker:
Jan Bruder is a Linux containers and open source enthusiast. He joined Rancher Labs in 2016 and is working with Rancher users all over Europe on next-gen containerized application environments.
- 2 participants
- 54 minutes
1 Feb 2017
Tobias' bio:
Tobias Schwab is a Software Engineer with over 10 years of experience in Extreme Programming and Test Driven Development. Before co-founding PhraseApp he implemented Continuous Delivery Pipelines for projects such as Simfy, Wimdu, Wunderlist and Locafox.
Topic Summary:
"Don't we all want to deploy like Google does? We can! Making your application "container ready" is only the first step to deploy your application with containers. A far bigger concern is scheduling and orchestration of containers in a production deployment. Initiated by Google, Kubernetes is an open source container scheduler which leverages 15 years of experience running containers at scale. In this talk you will get a brief introduction to Kubernetes and learn how we use it to deploy PhraseApp. Also, I will share our best practices for production deployments with Kubernetes including topics such as * Building Docker Images * Configuration Management * Load Balancing * Deploying Microservices * Monitoring * Logging"
Tobias Schwab is a Software Engineer with over 10 years of experience in Extreme Programming and Test Driven Development. Before co-founding PhraseApp he implemented Continuous Delivery Pipelines for projects such as Simfy, Wimdu, Wunderlist and Locafox.
Topic Summary:
"Don't we all want to deploy like Google does? We can! Making your application "container ready" is only the first step to deploy your application with containers. A far bigger concern is scheduling and orchestration of containers in a production deployment. Initiated by Google, Kubernetes is an open source container scheduler which leverages 15 years of experience running containers at scale. In this talk you will get a brief introduction to Kubernetes and learn how we use it to deploy PhraseApp. Also, I will share our best practices for production deployments with Kubernetes including topics such as * Building Docker Images * Configuration Management * Load Balancing * Deploying Microservices * Monitoring * Logging"
- 6 participants
- 1:39 hours
18 Jan 2017
Cameron's Topic Summary:
Kubernetes is taking the market by storm with remarkable levels of ecosystem and enterprise adoption. Not to mention one of the most robust communities of contributors in the open source world. While Kubernetes is fabulous for deploying, managing and scaling microservice-based applications, the enterprise is a brown field of technologies and workloads that don’t always fit neatly into the microservice mold. Navops Command augments Kubernetes by allowing organizations to not only share resources in Kubernetes clusters across projects and teams, but allows for the running of non-containerized batch workloads in the same environment, thus addressing some of the more complex, legacy needs of the enterprise. This talk will discuss resource management within Kubernetes and will include a demonstration of running complex, mixed workloads in a shared environment.
Kubernetes is taking the market by storm with remarkable levels of ecosystem and enterprise adoption. Not to mention one of the most robust communities of contributors in the open source world. While Kubernetes is fabulous for deploying, managing and scaling microservice-based applications, the enterprise is a brown field of technologies and workloads that don’t always fit neatly into the microservice mold. Navops Command augments Kubernetes by allowing organizations to not only share resources in Kubernetes clusters across projects and teams, but allows for the running of non-containerized batch workloads in the same environment, thus addressing some of the more complex, legacy needs of the enterprise. This talk will discuss resource management within Kubernetes and will include a demonstration of running complex, mixed workloads in a shared environment.
- 3 participants
- 36 minutes