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Results 1 - 10 of 30 for content_length:[500000 TO 999999] (0.02 sec)

  1. Versions in CustomResourceDefinitions | Kubernetes

    This page explains how to add versioning information to CustomResourceDefinitions, to indicate the stability level of your CustomResourceDefinitions or advance your API to a new version with conversion between API representations. It also describes how to upgrade an object from one version to another. Before you begin You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts.
    kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/extend-kubernetes/custom-resources/custom-resource-definition-versioning/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:56:16 UTC 2024
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  2. Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Us...

    Kustomize is a standalone tool to customize Kubernetes objects through a kustomization file. Since 1.14, Kubectl also supports the management of Kubernetes objects using a kustomization file. To view Resources found in a directory containing a kustomization file, run the following command: kubectl kustomize <kustomization_directory> To apply those Resources, run kubectl apply with --kustomize or -k flag: kubectl apply -k <kustomization_directory> Before you begin Install kubectl. You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster.
    kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/manage-kubernetes-objects/kustomization/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:48:19 UTC 2024
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  3. Configure a Pod to Use a ConfigMap | Kubernetes

    Many applications rely on configuration which is used during either application initialization or runtime. Most times, there is a requirement to adjust values assigned to configuration parameters. ConfigMaps are a Kubernetes mechanism that let you inject configuration data into application pods. The ConfigMap concept allow you to decouple configuration artifacts from image content to keep containerized applications portable. For example, you can download and run the same container image to spin up containers for the purposes of local development, system test, or running a live end-user workload.
    kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-pod-configmap/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:47:53 UTC 2024
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  4. Deployments | Kubernetes

    A Deployment manages a set of Pods to run an application workload, usually one that doesn't maintain state.
    kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/deployment/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:25:38 UTC 2024
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  5. Ingress | Kubernetes

    Make your HTTP (or HTTPS) network service available using a protocol-aware configuration mechanism, that understands web concepts like URIs, hostnames, paths, and more. The Ingress concept lets you map traffic to different backends based on rules you define via the Kubernetes API.
    kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:28:46 UTC 2024
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  6. kubeadm Configuration (v1beta4) | Kubernetes

    Overview Package v1beta4 defines the v1beta4 version of the kubeadm configuration file format. This version improves on the v1beta3 format by fixing some minor issues and adding a few new fields. A list of changes since v1beta3: TODO https://github.com/kubernetes/kubeadm/issues/2890 Support custom environment variables in control plane components under ClusterConfiguration. Use APIServer.ExtraEnvs, ControllerManager.ExtraEnvs, Scheduler.ExtraEnvs, Etcd.Local.ExtraEnvs. The ResetConfiguration API type is now supported in v1beta4. Users are able to reset a node by passing a --config file to kubeadm reset.
    kubernetes.io/docs/reference/config-api/kubeadm-config.v1beta4/
    Registered: Fri May 03 08:22:46 UTC 2024
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  7. Jobs | Kubernetes

    Jobs represent one-off tasks that run to completion and then stop.
    kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/job/
    Registered: Fri May 03 07:29:03 UTC 2024
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  8. Authenticating | Kubernetes

    This page provides an overview of authentication. Users in Kubernetes All Kubernetes clusters have two categories of users: service accounts managed by Kubernetes, and normal users. It is assumed that a cluster-independent service manages normal users in the following ways: an administrator distributing private keys a user store like Keystone or Google Accounts a file with a list of usernames and passwords In this regard, Kubernetes does not have objects which represent normal user accounts.
    kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/authentication/
    Registered: Fri May 03 08:01:55 UTC 2024
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  9. Kubernetes Metrics Reference | Kubernetes

    Details of the metric data that Kubernetes components export.
    kubernetes.io/docs/reference/instrumentation/metrics/
    Registered: Fri May 03 08:04:32 UTC 2024
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  10. StatefulSet Basics | Kubernetes

    This tutorial provides an introduction to managing applications with StatefulSets. It demonstrates how to create, delete, scale, and update the Pods of StatefulSets. Before you begin Before you begin this tutorial, you should familiarize yourself with the following Kubernetes concepts: Pods Cluster DNS Headless Services PersistentVolumes PersistentVolume Provisioning The kubectl command line tool You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster.
    kubernetes.io/docs/tutorials/stateful-application/basic-stateful-set/
    Registered: Fri May 03 08:01:36 UTC 2024
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