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The Kubernetes Workshop

You're reading from  The Kubernetes Workshop

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838820756
Pages 780 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (6):
Zachary Arnold Zachary Arnold
Profile icon Zachary Arnold
Sahil Dua Sahil Dua
Profile icon Sahil Dua
Wei Huang Wei Huang
Profile icon Wei Huang
Faisal Masood Faisal Masood
Profile icon Faisal Masood
Mélony Qin Mélony Qin
Profile icon Mélony Qin
Mohammed Abu Taleb Mohammed Abu Taleb
Profile icon Mohammed Abu Taleb
View More author details

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface
1. Introduction to Kubernetes and Containers 2. An Overview of Kubernetes 3. kubectl – Kubernetes Command Center 4. How to Communicate with Kubernetes (API Server) 5. Pods 6. Labels and Annotations 7. Kubernetes Controllers 8. Service Discovery 9. Storing and Reading Data on Disk 10. ConfigMaps and Secrets 11. Build Your Own HA Cluster 12. Your Application and HA 13. Runtime and Network Security in Kubernetes 14. Running Stateful Components in Kubernetes 15. Monitoring and Autoscaling in Kubernetes 16. Kubernetes Admission Controllers 17. Advanced Scheduling in Kubernetes 18. Upgrading Your Cluster without Downtime 19. Custom Resource Definitions in Kubernetes

How Admission Controllers Work

Kubernetes provides a set of more than 25 admission controllers. A set of admission controllers is enabled by default and the cluster administrator can pass flags to the API server to control enabling/disabling the additional controllers (configuring the API server in a production-grade cluster is outside the scope of this book). These can be broadly divided into two types:

  • Mutating admission controllers allow you to modify the request before it gets applied to the Kubernetes platform. LimitRanger is one such example, which applies the defaultRequests to the Pod if it is undefined by the Pod itself.
  • Validating admission controllers validate the request and cannot change the request object. If this controller rejects the request, it will not be actioned by the Kubernetes platform. An example of this would be the NamespaceExists controller, which rejects the request if the namespace referenced in the request is not available.

Essentially...

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