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Building Micro Frontends with React 18

You're reading from  Building Micro Frontends with React 18

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610961
Pages 218 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Vinci J Rufus Vinci J Rufus
Profile icon Vinci J Rufus

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Microfrontends
2. Chapter 1: Introducing Microfrontends 3. Chapter 2: Key Principles and Components of Microfrontends 4. Chapter 3: Monorepos versus Polyrepos for Microfrontends 5. Part 2: Architecting Microfrontends
6. Chapter 4: Implementing the Multi-SPA Pattern for Microfrontends 7. Chapter 5: Implementing the Micro-Apps Pattern for Microfrontends 8. Chapter 6: Server-Rendered Microfrontends 9. Part 3: Deploying Microfrontends
10. Chapter 7: Deploying Microfrontends to Static Storage 11. Chapter 8: Deploying Microfrontends to Kubernetes 12. Part 4: Managing Microfrontends
13. Chapter 9: Managing Microfrontends in Production 14. Chapter 10: Common Pitfalls to avoid when Building Microfrontends 15. Part 5: Emerging Trends
16. Chapter 11: Latest Trends in Microfrontends 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Setting up a managed Kubernetes Cluster on Azure

In this section, we will learn how to set up a managed Kubernetes cluster on Azure. The reason it’s called managed is because the master node, which is sort of the brain of Kubernetes, is managed by Azure, and we only need to spin up the worker nodes. We will see how to log in to Azure and create a subscription key, and we will install Azure CLI and collect the various credentials that we need for our DevOps pipeline.

For this chapter, we will use Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) to set up our cloud-based managed Kubernetes cluster. You can also set up a managed Kubernetes cluster on Google Cloud using Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE), or you can use Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) on AWS.

Irrespective of whichever hosting provider you use to set up your Kubernetes cluster, the Dockerfile and the Kubernetes configuration .yaml files remain the same.

Logging into the Azure portal and setting up a subscription key

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