Reader small image

You're reading from  Cloud Penetration Testing for Red Teamers

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2023
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803248486
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Right arrow
Author (1)
Kim Crawley
Kim Crawley
author image
Kim Crawley

Kim Crawley is a thought leader in cybersecurity, from pentesting to defensive security, and from policy to cyber threat research. For nearly a decade, she has contributed her research and writing to the official corporate blogs of AT&T Cybersecurity, BlackBerry, Venafi, Sophos, CloudDefense, and many others. She has been an internal employee of both Hack The Box and IOActive, a leading cybersecurity research firm. With the hacker mindset, she hacked her way into various information security subject matters. She co-authored one of the most popular guides to pentester careers on Amazon, The Pentester Blueprint, with Philip Wylie for Wiley Tech. She wrote an introductory guide to cybersecurity for business, 8 Steps to Better Security, which was also published by Wiley Tech. She also wrote Hacker Culture: A to Z for O'Reilly Media. To demonstrate her knowledge of cybersecurity operations, she passed her CISSP exam in 2023. In her spare time, she loves playing Japanese RPGs and engaging in social justice advocacy. She's always open to new writing, research, and security practitioner opportunities.
Read more about Kim Crawley

Right arrow

How Kubernetes works in GCP

Kubernetes can be used to deploy containerized applications in AWS and Azure. In Chapters 6 and 9, I walked you through deploying Kubernetes on those platforms, and we pentested them. But GCP is arguably the home of Kubernetes. Here’s why.

Kubernetes was originally developed by a team at Google. The Kubernetes project was announced by Google cloud computing specialist Eric Brewer in 2014 (https://web.archive.org/web/20150910171929/http:/www.wired.com/2014/06/google-kubernetes). Kubernetes was inspired by some of the containerization innovations pioneered by Docker. But Kubernetes was mainly influenced by Borg (https://web.archive.org/web/20160701040235/http:/www.wired.com/2015/06/google-kubernetes-says-future-cloud-computing/), which was proprietary in-house cloud computing middleware that Google wanted to keep for its own purposes. Borg helps to run the backend for Gmail, Google Search, Google Maps, and a number of other popular Google services...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Cloud Penetration Testing for Red Teamers
Published in: Nov 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803248486

Author (1)

author image
Kim Crawley

Kim Crawley is a thought leader in cybersecurity, from pentesting to defensive security, and from policy to cyber threat research. For nearly a decade, she has contributed her research and writing to the official corporate blogs of AT&T Cybersecurity, BlackBerry, Venafi, Sophos, CloudDefense, and many others. She has been an internal employee of both Hack The Box and IOActive, a leading cybersecurity research firm. With the hacker mindset, she hacked her way into various information security subject matters. She co-authored one of the most popular guides to pentester careers on Amazon, The Pentester Blueprint, with Philip Wylie for Wiley Tech. She wrote an introductory guide to cybersecurity for business, 8 Steps to Better Security, which was also published by Wiley Tech. She also wrote Hacker Culture: A to Z for O'Reilly Media. To demonstrate her knowledge of cybersecurity operations, she passed her CISSP exam in 2023. In her spare time, she loves playing Japanese RPGs and engaging in social justice advocacy. She's always open to new writing, research, and security practitioner opportunities.
Read more about Kim Crawley