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Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications

You're reading from  Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788477321
Pages 764 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Daniel Li Daniel Li
Profile icon Daniel Li

Table of Contents (26) Chapters

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. The Importance of Good Code 2. The State of JavaScript 3. Managing Version History with Git 4. Setting Up Development Tools 5. Writing End-to-End Tests 6. Storing Data in Elasticsearch 7. Modularizing Our Code 8. Writing Unit/Integration Tests 9. Designing Our API 10. Deploying Our Application on a VPS 11. Continuous Integration 12. Security – Authentication and Authorization 13. Documenting Our API 14. Creating UI with React 15. E2E Testing in React 16. Managing States with Redux 17. Migrating to Docker 18. Robust Infrastructure with Kubernetes 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Persisting data


However, we're not finished yet! Right now, if all of our Elasticsearch containers fail, the data stored inside them would be lost.

This is because containers are ephemeral, meaning that any file changes inside the container, be it addition or deletion, only persist for as long as the container persists; once the container is gone, the changes are gone.

 

 

This is fine for stateless applications, but our Elasticsearch service's primary purpose is to hold state. Therefore, similar to how we persist data using Volumes in Docker, we need to do the same with Kubernetes.

Introducing Kubernetes Volumes

Like Docker, Kubernetes has an API Object that's also called Volume, but there are several differences between the two.

With both Docker and Kubernetes, the storage solution that backs a Volume can be a directory on the host machine, or it can be a part of a cloud solution like AWS.

And for both Docker and Kubernetes, a Volume is an abstraction for a piece of storage that can be attached...

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