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You're reading from  Kubernetes for Developers

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2018
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788834759
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Joseph Heck
Joseph Heck
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Joseph Heck

Joseph Heck has broad development and management experience across start-ups and large companies. He has architected, developed, and deployed a wide variety of solutions, ranging from mobile and desktop applications to cloud-based distributed systems. He builds and directs teams and mentors individuals to improve the way they build, validate, deploy, and run software. He also works extensively with and in open source, collaborating across many projects, including Kubernetes.
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Imperative versus declarative commands


Our examples thus far have focused on quick and imperative commands such as kubectl run to create a deployment that in turn runs our software. This is convenient for something quick, but does not easily expose the full flexibility of the API. To leverage all the options available via Kubernetes, it is often more effective to manage files that describe the deployment you want.

When using these files, you can use commands such as kubectl create, kubectl delete, and kubectl replace along with the -f option to specify the file to use. The imperative commands are easy and effective for simple setups, but you quickly need a sequence of commands that you repeat again and again to take full advantage of all the capabilities. You might be storing sets of these commands in a cheatsheet, but that can get cumbersome and isn't always clear.

Kubernetes offers a declarative mechanism as well, leveraging the kubectl apply command, which takes in files, reviews the current...

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Kubernetes for Developers
Published in: Apr 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788834759

Author (1)

author image
Joseph Heck

Joseph Heck has broad development and management experience across start-ups and large companies. He has architected, developed, and deployed a wide variety of solutions, ranging from mobile and desktop applications to cloud-based distributed systems. He builds and directs teams and mentors individuals to improve the way they build, validate, deploy, and run software. He also works extensively with and in open source, collaborating across many projects, including Kubernetes.
Read more about Joseph Heck