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To describe some typical ways of provisioning Kubernetes clusters for development

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Kubernetes for Development

The Motivation

There is no limitation while you're provisioning Kubernetes cluster(s) for your development purposes. We're lucky enough to have such a diversified community where offers all kinds of cool tools and well-written tutorials.

So this is really subject to your preference, requirements and resource constraints.

For me, I have set some objectives while thinking the "best way" to have a local Kubernetes cluster for learning, development right in my laptop.

In short, the Kubernetes cluster provisioned:

  • MUST be multiple "nodes", e.g. 1 Masters + 3 Workers;
  • MUST be easily accessible to each component for necessary tweaking;
  • MUST consume bare minimum resources -- I do care about my laptop's battery life;
  • MUST be embedded with best practices, as more as possible.

The Ways

The potential ways might keep growing/evolving along the days.

But as of now, below are what I've tried and considered "great".

Ranking Approach Docs
1 k3s + k3d Refer to README-K3D-K3S.md
2 Kubernetes in Docker, aka kind Refer to README-KIND.md
3 Vagrant + VirtualBox Refer to README-VAGRANT.md

If you like the OKD/OpenShift approach, instead of the upstream K8s, you may try these:

Note: all the experiments were on Mac, but working in a Linux env should be very similar.

Enjoy!

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To describe some typical ways of provisioning Kubernetes clusters for development

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