If you take the approach of a managed kubernetes instance, I really recommend GKE, everything is taken care of for you. On the other hand EKS offers what I'd call a "managed kubernetes master", everything else is still…
This is definitely a point. Kubernetes resource definitions are verbose, but you can expect them to always be about that verbose and nothing else. Ansible playbook instead really depend on the author, they can both be…
If you take the approach of a managed kubernetes instance, I really recommend GKE, everything is taken care of for you. On the other hand EKS offers what I'd call a "managed kubernetes master", everything else is still…
This is definitely a point. Kubernetes resource definitions are verbose, but you can expect them to always be about that verbose and nothing else. Ansible playbook instead really depend on the author, they can both be…