by truthbrother | Sep 5, 2018 | AWS EKS, Docker, Kubernetes, Terraform by HashiCorp
Kubernetes can run on various platforms: from your laptop, to VMs on a cloud provider, to a rack of bare metal servers. The effort required to set up a cluster varies from running a single command to crafting your own customized cluster. Use this guide to choose a...
by truthbrother | Sep 4, 2018 | AWS EKS
Amazon Elastic Container Service for Kubernetes (Amazon EKS) is now generally available and supported for production use to run Kubernetes on AWS without needing to install, operate, and maintain the Kubernetes management infrastructure. Amazon Elastic Container...
by truthbrother | Sep 4, 2018 | Amazon ECS
Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) now supports launching T2 Unlimited EC2 instances directly from the Amazon ECS console during cluster creation. A T2 Unlimited instance can sustain high CPU performance for any period of time whenever required. Previously,...
by truthbrother | Sep 4, 2018 | Amazon ECS
You can now easily configure your containerized application to access storage volumes backed by Local instance storage, Amazon Elastic Block Storage (EBS) or Amazon Elastic File System (EFS) volumes through the use of Docker volume drivers and volume plugins such as...
by truthbrother | Sep 4, 2018 | AWS EKS
There are a number of ways to create a Kubernetes cluster using Amazon Elastic Container Service. eksctl gives you a simple, single, one-line command to bring up a cluster with a basic VPC, and completes the process by writing a new KUBECONFIG and deploying...