字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント Lets run an app on the atomic systems we deployed earlier We'll use the Cockpit admin interface it includes a dashboard to drive your cluster directly Modern apps are structured around micro-services that run in separate containers Kubernetes is what we'll use to orchestrate the containers of our app Atomic supports kubernetes out of the box Nulecule is a way of delivering and packaging these containerized apps Lets type the name of our application Namespaces are a way of partitioning your cluster so that different apps and projects can run separately The app is getting pulled down and extracted Now we see that it requires a bit of configuration before we can go We need a public IP address to run at and we're ready! Now it's instantiating the services, pulling the containers, starting them up If you wanted to develop a kubernetes based application, you would use Openshift But here we've taken an example app that's already built and deployed it Now that it's started up, we can verify that it's working It's a simple guestbook It just stores values But under the covers it's a bit more complicated than that Lets look at the containers that make up this application Here you can see the various containers that have been started They're running this image There's multiple instances Redis is running both a master and a slave This is the console of a redis container We can pop into a shell inside containers wherever they are running This container is running a Go application You'll notice all these containers were started on a single node That's not what you would call a "cluster" Lets add some more atomic nodes We set these up in an earlier demo To prove that I'm actually just running kubernetes commands I'm going to add a node from the command line You can see the nodes starting up We can scale our application out across those different nodes Lets have six frontend containers and maybe 3 Redis slaves The containers are starting up The resource usage is starting to rise Lets take a look at the moving parts What is happening inside Kubernetes Things are alive, scurrying around and interacting You can hide stuff, if it makes the view clearer and drag stuff around Here we see a service, the Redis slave listening on this IP It's routing requests to these pods here and its using this image This pod is on this node Pods are groups of containers There's just one container in this pod If we start an application, this time from the command line you can see everything coming to life in kubernetes and getting connected These services are not routing to any pods yet You can see them getting hooked up as the application comes up I hope you've enjoyed this look at Kubernetes and Cockpit
B1 中級 米 アトミックアプリケーションのデプロイ(例2 (Deploying an Atomic application (example 2)) 31 2 王鈞平 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語