More things to bear in mind:
- Kubernetes clusters are made up of master nodes, which run the control plane, and worker nodes, which run your workloads.
- Production clusters must be highly available, meaning that the failure of a master node won’t lose data or affect the operation of the cluster.
- It’s a long way from a simple demo cluster to one that’s ready for critical production workloads. High availability, security, and node management are just some of the issues involved.
- Managing your own clusters requires a significant investment of time, effort, and expertise. Even then, you can still get it wrong.
- Managed services like Google Kubernetes Engine do all the heavy lifting for you, at much lower cost than self-hosting.
- Turnkey services are a good compromise between self-hosted and fully managed Kubernetes. Turnkey providers like Stackpoint manage the master nodes for you, while you run worker nodes on your own machines.
- If you have to host your own cluster, kops is a mature and widely used tool that can provision and manage production-grade clusters on AWS and Google Cloud.
- You should use managed Kubernetes if you can. This is the best option for most businesses in terms of cost, overhead, and quality.
- If managed services aren’t an option, consider using turnkey services as a good compromise.
- Don’t self-host your cluster without sound business reasons. If you do self-host, don’t underestimate the engineering time involved for the initial setup and ongoing maintenance overhead.
Cloud Native DevOps with Kubernetes
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