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Intro to the cloud-native world of Kubernetes -...

Intro to the cloud-native world of Kubernetes -- Helsinki October meetup

I created these slides as an introduction to CNCF & Kubernetes and the broader landscape in time for the first Finnish CNCF & Kubernetes meetup that I'm organizing.

I hope this serves the broader community as well.

Video recording of the presentation here: https://youtu.be/9Oc69MpmCoU
Meetup: https://www.meetup.com/Kubernetes-Finland/events/242096170/
Location: UpCloud Oy, Helsinki, Finland

Lucas Käldström

October 04, 2017
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  1. Intro to the cloud-native world with Kubernetes Lucas Käldström -

    luxas labs 4th October 2017 - Helsinki Image credit: @ashleymcnamara http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  2. $ whoami Lucas Käldström, Upper Secondary School Student, just turned

    18 CNCF Ambassador and Certified Kubernetes Administrator Speaker at KubeCon Berlin 2017 and now at KubeCon Austin later this year Kubernetes Maintainer since April 2016, active in the community for +2 years Driving luxas labs which currently performs contracting for Weaveworks A guy that has never attended a computing class Image credit: Dan Kohn
  3. What is CNCF? A non-profit foundation for getting Cloud Native:

    a) open source projects b) companies c) enthusiasts to come together in a neutral place. CNCF was founded in December 2015 and is a part of The Linux Foundation. CNCF curates and promotes a toolkit of trusted projects for modern applications. Helps hosted projects to succeed in various ways, one of them is by organizing events where the community can meet in person. http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  4. What is the “Cloud Native” mindset? Cloud Native computing uses

    an open source software stack that is: 1. Containerized 2. Dynamically orchestrated 3. Microservices oriented There are three main keywords: 1. Speed 2. Freedom 3. Trust Alexis Richardson, CEO of Weaveworks, gave a good keynote on this topic at KubeCon Berlin 2017 http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  5. Most importantly: What does “Kubernetes” mean? Kubernetes = Greek for

    “pilot” or “helmsman of a ship” http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  6. What is Kubernetes? = A Production-Grade Container Orchestration System Google-grown,

    based on Borg and Omega, systems that run inside of Google right now and are proven to work at Google for over 10 years. Google spawns 2 billion containers per week with these systems. Created by three Google employees initially during the summer of 2014; grew exponentially and became the first project to get donated to the CNCF. Hit the first production-grade version v1.0.1 in July 2015. Have continually released a new minor version every three months since v1.2.0 in March 2016. v1.8.0 was just released 28th September 2017. http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  7. So what does Kubernetes actually do? One thing: Abstract away

    the underlying hardware. Abstract away the concept Node. Principle: Manage your applications like Cattle (generic, bulk operations) instead of like Pets (every operation is customized with care and love for the individual) Kubernetes is the Linux for distributed systems. In the same manner Linux (an OS) abstracts away the hardware differences (with different CPU types, etc.), Kubernetes abstracts away the fact that you have 5 000 nodes in the node pool and provides consistent UX and operation methods for apps You (the admin) declares the desired state, Kubernetes' main task is to make the desired state the actual state. http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  8. Kubernetes’ popularity measured briefly KUBERNETES MESOS DOCKER SWARM CLOUD FOUNDRY

    OPENSTACK Google Search interest over time in the 1.10.2012-1.10.2017 timespan Kubernetes is one of the fastest moving open source projects in history http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  9. Stats about the Kubernetes project 60 000+ commits the latest

    year 2 300+ unique authors 32 000+ opened Pull Requests the latest year 18 000+ opened issues the latest year ~23 PRs merges/day in the core repo Source 1 Source 2 25 000+ Kubernetes professionals 5 700+ Kubernetes jobs 22 000+ users on Slack 11 000+ edX course enrolls in less than 3 months Source 3 Source 4 http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides Last updated: 1.10.2017
  10. Node Pool Master Kubernetes component architecture Node 3 Hardware OS

    Container Runtime Kubelet Networking Node 2 Hardware OS Container Runtime Kubelet Networking Node 1 Hardware OS Container Runtime Kubelet Networking API Server (REST API) Controller Manager (Controller Loops) Scheduler (Bind Pod to Node) etcd (key-value DB, SSOT) gRPC User with kubectl http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  11. What are Kubernetes' core concepts? Pod: The basic and atomically

    schedulable building block of Kubernetes, represents a single instance of an application in Kubernetes. Each Pod has it’s own, uniquely assigned and internal IP. Pods are mortal. Deployment: Includes a Pod template and a replicas field. Kubernetes will make sure the actual state (amount of replicas, Pod template) always matches the desired state. When you update a Deployment it will perform a “rolling update”. Service: Selects Pods by a matching label selector and provides a stable, immortal way to talk to your application by using the internal IP or DNS name. Namespace: A logical isolation method, most resources are namespace-scoped. You can then group logically similar workloads and enforce different policies. http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  12. apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: web-frontend spec: selector: app:

    webapp role: frontend ports: - port: 80 targetPort: 80 apiVersion: apps/v1beta2 kind: Deployment metadata: labels: app: webapp role: frontend name: web-frontend spec: replicas: 3 template: metadata: labels: app: webapp role: frontend spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.13.1 name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 name: http Ok, show me what a Kubernetes manifest looks like! Image source http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  13. apiVersion: apps/v1beta2 kind: Deployment metadata: labels: app: webapp role: frontend

    name: web-frontend spec: replicas: 3 template: metadata: labels: app: webapp role: frontend spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.13.3 name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 name: http Perform a rolling updates easily... Image source http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  14. apiVersion: apps/v1beta2 kind: Deployment metadata: labels: app: webapp-2 role: frontend

    name: web-frontend-2 spec: replicas: 3 template: metadata: labels: app: webapp-2 role: frontend spec: containers: - image: nginx:1.13.5 name: nginx ports: - containerPort: 80 name: http ...or do blue/green deployments Image source http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  15. How do I kick the tires with Kubernetes? Play with

    Kubernetes right away in your browser! Create a single-node cluster on your laptop or workstation with minikube Create a real cluster with only a couple of commands with kubeadm Create a production-ready cluster on AWS with kops Create a Kubernetes cluster on GCE with GKE (Google Container Engine) kubicorn is a Kubernetes installer project which has gained some traction
  16. Create a cluster with kubeadm 1. Provision a Linux machine

    with Ubuntu, Debian, RHEL, CentOS or Fedora 2. Install kubeadm: 3. Make kubeadm set up a master node for you: 4. Install a Pod Network solution from a third-party provider: 5. Repeat step 1 & 2 on an other node and join the cluster: curl -s https://packages.cloud.google.com/apt/doc/apt-key.gpg | apt-key add - cat <<EOF >/etc/apt/sources.list.d/kubernetes.list deb http://apt.kubernetes.io/ kubernetes-xenial main EOF apt-get update && apt-get install -y kubeadm docker.io kubeadm init kubectl apply -f https://git.io/weave-kube-1.6 kubeadm join --token <token> <master-ip>:6443 http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  17. A couple of core Kubernetes features... - Self-healing: Restarts containers

    that fail, replaces and reschedules containers when nodes die, kills containers that don't respond to your user-defined health check, and doesn't advertise them to clients until they are ready to serve - Automatic binpacking: Automatically places containers based on their resource requirements and other constraints, while not sacrificing availability. Mix critical and best-effort workloads in order to drive up utilization and save even more resources. - Horizontal scaling and autoscaling: Scale your application up and down with a simple command, with a UI, or automatically based on CPU usage or custom metrics - Automated rollouts and rollbacks: Kubernetes progressively rolls out changes to your application or its configuration, while monitoring application health to ensure it doesn't kill all your instances at the same time. If something goes wrong, Kubernetes will rollback the change for you. - Service Discovery and Load Balancing: No need to modify your application to use an unfamiliar service discovery mechanism. Kubernetes gives containers their own IP addresses and a single DNS name for a set of containers, and can load-balance across them - Secret and configuration management: Deploy and update secrets and application configuration without rebuilding your image and without exposing secrets in your stack configuration - Storage Orchestration: Automatically mount the storage system of your choice, whether from local storage, a public cloud provider such as GCP or AWS, or a network storage system such as NFS, iSCSI, Gluster, Ceph, Cinder, or Flocker - Batch Execution: In addition to services, Kubernetes can manage your batch and CI workloads, replacing containers that fail, if desired http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  18. Everything is done in SIG (Special Interest Groups) Special Interest

    Groups manage Kubernetes’ various components and features. All code in the Kubernetes Github organization should be owned by one or more SIGs; with directory-level granularity. SIGs have regular (often weekly) video meetings where the attendees discuss design decisions, new features, bugs, testing, onboarding or whatever else that is relevant to the group. Attending these meetings is the best way to get to know the project http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides Image source
  19. Next steps? Follow the Kubernetes blog, YouTube channel & Twitter

    feed Do as 11 000+ others and take the free edX "Introduction to Kubernetes" course Join 22 500+ others in the Kubernetes Slack: http://slack.k8s.io Prep for and take the Certified Kubernetes Administrator exam Join a Special Interest Group and attend the weekly meetings Kick the tires with Kubernetes on your machines with minikube or kubeadm Check out the weekly Kubernetes Community Meeting at Zoom Read the in-depth analysis of the Kubernetes ecosystem ebook by The New Stack http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides
  20. Let’s go to KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Austin! KubeCon London, March

    2016, ~500 attendees ----> CNCF starts to organize KubeCon + CloudNativeCon: KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Seattle, November 2016, ~1000 attendees KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Berlin, March 2017, ~1500 attendees - 400+ CFP submissions KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Austin, December 2017, ~3000 attendees - 900+ CFP submissions KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Copenhagen, May 2017
  21. Other good links / resources Kubernetes Community Meeting - Dan

    Kohn, 18th of May 2017 Kubernetes: State of the Project - Tim Hockin, 2nd June 2017 Migrating Legacy Monoliths to Cloud Native Microservices Architectures on Kubernetes - Dan Kohn CNCF Overview - Dan Kohn Kubernetes Growth and Community - Chris Gaun, Sept 15 2016 Pretty good introduction to Kubernetes video http://bit.ly/k8sfin-intro-slides