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- What is the meaning of CPU and core in Kubernetes?
To clarify what's described here in the Kubernetes context, 1 CPU is the same as a core (Also more information here)
- kubernetes - How to check if network policy have been applied to pod . . .
I'm trying to restrict to my openvpn to allow accessing internal infrastructure and limit it only by 'develop' namespace, so I started with simple policy that denies all egress traffic and see no e
- Reasons for OOMKilled in kubernetes - Stack Overflow
Kubernetes has a different approach: with the node allocatable feature enabled (which is the default currently) it "carves" only a part of the node's memory for use by the pods How much that is depends on the value of 3 parameters, captured in the previous link (kube-reserved, system-reserved, and eviction-threshold)
- Whats the difference between Docker Compose and Kubernetes?
Kubernetes (from Introduction to Kubernetes): Kubernetes is a container orchestrator like Docker Swarm, Mesos Marathon, Amazon ECS, Hashicorp Nomad Container orchestrators are the tools which group hosts together to form a cluster, and help us make sure applications: are fault-tolerant, can scale, and do this on-demand use resources optimally
- What is an endpoint in Kubernetes? - Stack Overflow
155 I am new to Kubernetes and started reading through the documentation There often the term 'endpoint' is used but the documentation lacks an explicit definition What is an 'endpoint' in terms of Kubernetes? Where is it located? What I can imagine is that the 'endpoint' is some kind of access point for an individual 'node' But that's just
- kubernetes - What is a headless service, what does it do accomplish . . .
Let me break this question into each sub-parts the way we do in agile What exactly is a headless service It is used for discovering individual pods (especially IPs) which allows another service to interact directly with the Pods instead of a proxy With NodePort, LoadBalancer, ExternalName, and ClusterIP clients usually connect to the pods through a Service (Kubernetes Services simply
- kubernetes - Namespace stuck as Terminating. How do I remove it . . .
I've had a quot;stuck quot; namespace that I deleted showing in this eternal quot;terminating quot; status
- kubernetes - How does kubectl port-forward create a connection? - Stack . . .
As far as I understand, to access any application within Kubernetes cluster there should be a Service resource created and that should have an IP address which is accessible from an external network But in case of port-forward how does kubectl create a connection to the application without an IP address which is accessible externally?
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