> Why did it regress into Kubernetes The “KISS solution” didn’t scale to the requirements of modern business. I remember running chef - essentially a complicated ruby script - on 100ks of servers, each of which with…
>The high cost arises from needing to provision a bare-bones cluster with redundant management nodes. ?! How else are you managing your infrastructure besides having redundancy in the control plane? Even if it’s a chef…
Exactly this. If they didn’t do this, us-east-1a would be the biggest single point of failure the world has ever seen.
Notwithstanding the fact that this was a user misconfiguration, S3 allows you to configure public access blocks to prevent this sort of thing.
I’m no k3s expert, but this surprised me: > I noticed that there is only one k3s node that has the control-plane,master role. If that node fails you can no longer manager the cluster. This feels like a failing of k3s…
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All cloud providers provide public APIs for managing infrastructure, how is kubernetes any different? Your viewpoint operates on the assumption that a private network provides additional security in comparison to the…
> Why did it regress into Kubernetes The “KISS solution” didn’t scale to the requirements of modern business. I remember running chef - essentially a complicated ruby script - on 100ks of servers, each of which with…
>The high cost arises from needing to provision a bare-bones cluster with redundant management nodes. ?! How else are you managing your infrastructure besides having redundancy in the control plane? Even if it’s a chef…
Exactly this. If they didn’t do this, us-east-1a would be the biggest single point of failure the world has ever seen.
Notwithstanding the fact that this was a user misconfiguration, S3 allows you to configure public access blocks to prevent this sort of thing.
I’m no k3s expert, but this surprised me: > I noticed that there is only one k3s node that has the control-plane,master role. If that node fails you can no longer manager the cluster. This feels like a failing of k3s…
[dead]
All cloud providers provide public APIs for managing infrastructure, how is kubernetes any different? Your viewpoint operates on the assumption that a private network provides additional security in comparison to the…