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There are four steps you should take if you are running Tiller (Helm's server-side component) in a cluster that has untrusted users or pods. These steps are done at installation time, and will substantially improve Helm's security. The easiest way to install Tiller is with the helm init command. Run just like that, it will install a version of Tiller into the cluster. But the version it installs h
Brian Donohue | Pinterest engineering manager, Product Engineering About 100 days ago, our product engineering team began experimenting with a three-day no-meeting schedule for individual contributors on our teams. It’s not a big revelation that software development requires long stretches of uninterrupted time to focus. As Pinterest has grown, we’ve noticed the number of meetings also has increas
Join our free online training sessions to learn more about Kubernetes, containers, and Rancher. Today we reach an important milestone. Rancher 2.0, a release we worked on in the past year, has achieved GA and is ready for production deployment. I’d like to thank everyone who has worked on this release, and to thank all Rancher customers, users, and partners who have provided so much valuable suppo
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Why founders need hobbies Josh Pigford on May 09, 2018 As founders, a lot of our identities get wrapped up in our companies. Certainly within our industries, but even to family and friends it’s how people know us. And over time, we sort of become our companies. Most founders or CEOs are the “face” of their businesses and eventually they’re inseparable. Maybe that’s fine in the short run if you’re
The other day at work I needed to edit 200 files at once. I wanted to do something pretty simple: basically, I had files that looked like this: foo: - bar - baz - bananas and I wanted to insert an extra line after the baz line that said elephant foo: - bar - baz - elephant - bananas I had one extra weird requirement which was that some of the lines were indented with 2 spaces, and some with 4 spac
This article is more than one year old. Older articles may contain outdated content. Check that the information in the page has not become incorrect since its publication. Since Last We MetSince the initial announcement of Kubeflow at the last KubeCon+CloudNativeCon, we have been both surprised and delighted by the excitement for building great ML stacks for Kubernetes. In just over five months, t
Speaker: Russ Cox It’s time to add versioning to the Go toolchain, the Go ecosystem, and Go workflows. Go 1.11 will add opt-in support for package versions. This talk will explain the background, motivation, and rationale for the new version support and help you understand how to use it effectively. Produced by Engineers.SG
Joe Beda had a great twitter thread this morning about the complexity of Kubernetes. You can read it in full, and I suggest you do, but I wanted to quote a few things I found to be particularly thought provoking: First off: Kubernetes is a complex system. It does a lot and brings new abstractions. Those abstractions aren't always justified for all problems. I'm sure that there are plenty of people
It is complicated to diagnose and debug complicated systems. It often takes multiple levels of diagnostics data to understand the possible causes of latency issues. A distributed system is made of many servers that are depending on each other to serve a user request. At any time, A process in the system might be handling a large number of requests.In highly concurrent servers, there is no easy way
UPDATE: You can watch a video of me giving this talk at Gophercon 2019:
Today, Solo.io is pleased to announce a new open source project, the Envoy Operator. The Envoy Operator is a tool designed to simplify deploying, scaling, and managing Envoy instances inside of Kubernetes. This operator was made possible thanks to the folks at CoreOS who just open-sourced the incredibly useful Operator SDK, which we used to build the Envoy Operator. Through our work on Gloo, Solo.
Try Red Hat products and technologies without setup or configuration fees for 30 days with this shared Openshift and Kubernetes cluster.
Simple, serverless APIsUse the Event Gateway alongside with Serverless Framework to get the simplest, most productive developer experience possible for developing APIs. A single configuration file allows you to list your functions and define the endpoints that they’re subscribed to. Hit deploy and you’re live. Subscribe functions to webhooksThe Event Gateway makes it dead simple to wire functions
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