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دسته بندی: شبکه سازی: اینترنت ویرایش: 1 نویسندگان: Jacques Chester سری: ISBN (شابک) : 1617296643, 9781617296642 ناشر: Simon and Schuster سال نشر: 2021 تعداد صفحات: 273 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 11 مگابایت
کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب Knative در عمل: DevOps، مقیاس پذیری، Kubernetes، Load Balancing، Knative
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Knative in Action به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب Knative در عمل نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Knative in Action brief contents contents foreword preface acknowledgements about this book Who should read this book? How this book is organized: A roadmap About the code liveBook discussion forum Other online resources about the author about the cover illustration 1 Introduction 1.1 What is Knative? 1.1.1 Deploying, upgrading, and routing 1.1.2 Autoscaling 1.1.3 Eventing 1.2 So what? 1.3 Where Knative shines 1.3.1 Workloads with unpredictable, latency-insensitive demand 1.3.2 Stitching together events from multiple sources 1.3.3 Decomposing monoliths in small increments 1.4 It’s a hit 1.4.1 Trouble in paradise 1.5 Changing things 1.6 What’s in the Knative box? 1.6.1 Serving 1.6.2 Eventing 1.6.3 Serving and Eventing 1.7 Keeping things under control 1.7.1 Loops 1.7.2 Loops within loops 1.8 Are you ready? Summary References 2 Introducing Knative Serving 2.1 A walkthrough 2.1.1 Your first deployment 2.1.2 Your second deployment 2.1.3 Conditions 2.1.4 What does Active mean? 2.1.5 Changing the image 2.1.6 Splitting traffic 2.2 Serving components 2.2.1 The controller and reconcilers 2.2.2 The Webhook 2.2.3 Networking controllers 2.2.4 Autoscaler, Activator, and Queue-Proxy Summary References 3 Configurations and Revisions 3.1 Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to redeploy it 3.2 The bedtime story version of the history of deployment as a concept 3.2.1 The Blue/Green deployment 3.2.2 The Canary deployment 3.2.3 Progressive deployment 3.2.4 Back to the future 3.3 The anatomy of Configurations 3.3.1 Configuration status 3.3.2 Taking it all in with kubectl describe 3.4 The anatomy of Revisions 3.4.1 Revision basics 3.4.2 Container basics 3.4.3 Container images 3.4.4 The command 3.4.5 The environment, directly 3.4.6 The environment, indirectly 3.4.7 Configuration via files 3.4.8 Probes 3.4.9 Setting consumption limits 3.4.10 Container concurrency 3.4.11 Timeout seconds Summary References 4 Routes 4.1 Using kn to work with Routes 4.2 The anatomy of Routes 4.3 The anatomy of TrafficTargets 4.3.1 configurationName and revisionName 4.3.2 latestRevision 4.3.3 tag Summary 5 Autoscaling 5.1 The autoscaling problem 5.2 Autoscaling when there are zero instances 5.2.1 The Autoscaler panics 5.3 Autoscaling when there are one or a few instances 5.4 Autoscaling when there are many instances 5.5 A little theory 5.5.1 Control 5.5.2 Queueing 5.6 The actual calculation 5.6.1 To panic, or not to panic, that is the question 5.7 Configuring autoscaling 5.7.1 How settings get applied 5.7.2 Setting scaling limits 5.7.3 Setting scaling rates 5.7.4 Setting target values 5.7.5 Setting decision intervals 5.7.6 Setting window size 5.7.7 Setting the panic threshold 5.7.8 Setting the target burst capacity 5.7.9 Other autoscalers 5.8 A cautionary note Summary References 6 Introduction to Eventing 6.1 The road to CloudEvents 6.2 The anatomy of CloudEvents 6.2.1 Required attributes 6.2.2 Optional attributes 6.2.3 Extension attributes 6.3 A word about event formats and protocol bindings 6.3.1 Structured content mode 6.3.2 Binary content mode 6.3.3 Batched content mode 6.4 A walkthrough 6.5 The basic architecture of Eventing 6.5.1 Messaging 6.5.2 Eventing 6.5.3 Sources 6.5.4 Flows 6.5.5 Duck types Summary References 7 Sources and Sinks 7.1 Sources 7.1.1 The anatomy of Sources 7.1.2 Using kn to work with Sources 7.2 The Sink 7.3 The mysterious SinkBinding (and its sidekick, ContainerSource) 7.3.1 Provisioning and binding are not the same 7.4 Other Sources Summary References 8 Filtering and Flowing 8.1 The Broker 8.2 Filters 8.2.1 Filtering on custom attributes 8.2.2 Nice things that Eventing adds for you 8.3 Sequences 8.3.1 A walkthrough 8.4 The anatomy of Sequences 8.4.1 Step 8.4.2 Reply 8.4.3 ChannelTemplate and Channels 8.4.4 Mixing Sequences and filters 8.5 Parallels 8.5.1 A walkthrough 8.6 Dealing with failures 8.6.1 Retries and backoffs 8.6.2 Dead letters 8.6.3 The bad news Summary References 9 From Conception to Production 9.1 Turning your software into something runnable 9.1.1 Always use digests 9.1.2 Using Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNBs) and the pack tool 9.2 Getting your software to somewhere it runs 9.3 Knowing how your software is running 9.3.1 Logs 9.3.2 Metrics 9.3.3 Traces Summary References Appendix—Installing Knative for Development A.1 Installing kubectl and kn A.2 Installing Knative index Numerics A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y