Kubernetes is an open–source system for automating deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications. It offers the ability to schedule and manage containers at scale. In this course you’ll learn the fundamentals of Kubernetes
This course will get you up and running with Kubernetes where you’ll learn how to set up a Kubernetes environment up on Mac or Windows using Minikube, and understand the components for Kubernetes.
You’ll also learn how to deploy a sample Kubernetes application, and manage it using the Kubernetes dashboard. We’ll also show how to deploy a more complicated application with a database and APIs.
Finally, we’ll get into more advanced topics on Kubernetes, including production deployments, namespaces, monitoring and logging, and authentication and authorization.
Instructor Details
Courses : 1
Specification: Fundamentals of Kubernetes
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9 reviews for Fundamentals of Kubernetes
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Price | $14.99 |
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Provider | |
Duration | 2.5 hours |
Year | 2020 |
Level | All |
Language | English |
Certificate | Yes |
Quizzes | No |
$19.99 $14.99
Lisa Nevin –
Concise and clear explanations Great introduction to concepts! Would like quizzes and text version of the lecture.
Ryan Poplin –
To the point! Love it.
Andreas Ek –
Perhaps to short
Shawn Scott –
The session needs to be updated. Heapster and other areas are no longer in use. External access and ingress would have been nice. How do customers actually deploy and have customers access their applications.
Claudia Solano Leon –
Very good
Maxwell Larimer –
The content is great, speed is solid, and voice is not annoying. Great course!
Jay Docherty –
Some things were a bit out dated.
Eugene C –
The course is great for fundamentals.
Joel S nchez Pedroza –
The content in general was good structured, however half course was theory and the other half was practical; it leads into a speed sessions where some topics are covered quickly without too many details. The material was good, however a hello world from scratch will help to understand better the yaml files and its structure. I noticed that material is a little old too, I’ve amend some yaml files due the hearers were using beta versions. Few of them did not work for me, specialty the ones tagged with extensions/v1beta1