Ansible
Ansible - AWX (1/2)
So, you wrote your first playbooks, played with collections and command line tools, and you consider to have a UI for Ansible?
The most used container orchestration software.
Ansible
So, you wrote your first playbooks, played with collections and command line tools, and you consider to have a UI for Ansible?
Kubernetes
In some past articles, I talked about Kubernetes and how to get started. Minikube is awesome for local development, but what about Kubernetes on small environments? k3s is one of the easiest ways to deploy and run a Kubernetes instance, which can also be used to create high available clusters.
Fedora
With the release of Fedora Linux 37, I switched back to Fedora Silverblue. I took this opportunity to revamp my Fedora Workstation repository and therefore my Ansible playbook for the same.
Linux
Containers are these fancy new thingies (technical term), that are made to make our lives as developers and operators easier. Or aren't they? This article shows what a container really is and why cgroups and the Linux Kernel are an elemental part of it.
Container
Building your own containers is very easy and fast to learn. But very soon, you may end up with large container images and no idea how to reduce the footprint. Since you need to download and store each image, it can be useful to minimize the images, and this article will address exactly this.
Kubernetes
In the last article, we were starting with Kubernetes and talked about the basic concepts, namespaces and pods. For this article, we will have a look at deployments, ingress and service objects.
Kubernetes
Kubernetes, the software that is often referred to as the operating system for application development. It's true, Kubernetes changed a lot in the application development world. But what are Deployments, Ingress, Service or Namespaces?
Home
Just a few days ago, somebody reached out to me and asked: Daniel, how do you do your home server? Since this question is not really easy to answer, I will provide a series of articles, that will enable you to set up your own home server.
Fedora
Before digging into Kubernetes, you will need a minimal Kubernetes Setup. Such a setup should spin up fast, should work like a real cluster, and hopefully integrate well in other tools. For me, Minikube fulfills these needs, and you can run it on Fedora, too.
Container
If you want to name a single technology, that needs to be in your portfolio, it will be containers. But, what does this mean? What is a container? What about this Docker, Kubernetes or Podman?