Getting Started with Cilium Service Mesh on Amazon EKS https://lnkd.in/ekFftVup by Dumlu Timuralp, Bijith Nair, Piotr Jablonski, and Praseeda Sathaye #Amazon #AWS #Kubernetes
Hugo Enrique Flores González’s Post
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💡Know what's news blog about AWS! 🔍 💡¡Conoce los nuevos blogs en AWS! 🔍 Streamline container application networking with built-in Amazon ECS support in Amazon VPC Lattice #awsnews #aws #news #whatsnew #tech #womantech
💡Know what's news blog about AWS! 🔍 💡¡Conoce los nuevos blogs en AWS! 🔍 Streamline container application networking with built-in Amazon ECS support in Amazon VPC Lattice \#awsnews \#aws \#news \#whatsnew \#tech \#womantech
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Container based Telco workloads use Multus CNI for traffic/network segmentation on Amazon EKS, enabling multiple network interfaces and advanced network configuration for Kubernetes apps on AWS. Multus CNI provides benefits like resource elasticity when running apps on AWS. #aws #awscloud #cloud #containers #technicalhowto #amazoneks #autoscaling #karpenter #multus
Deploying Karpenter Nodes with Multus on Amazon EKS
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Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) is a managed Kubernetes service that simplifies the process of deploying, managing, and scaling containerized applications. To ensure optimal functionality and performance, EKS relies on several essential add-ons. In this article, we’ll explore three crucial EKS add-ons: AWS VPC CNI, Kube-proxy, and CoreDNS. We’ll delve into what they are, how they work, why they’re indispensable for your EKS cluster, and when they became required components. https://lnkd.in/ed_rBPu3
AWS EKS Required Add-Ons: A Comprehensive Guide
awsmorocco.com
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🚀 Exciting News! My First Medium Article is Live! 🚀 As customers continue to modernize applications across AWS Cloud, on-premises, and edge environments, managing Kubernetes in these diverse settings has become increasingly critical. But it hasn’t been easy—until now. EKS Hybrid Nodes just launched, and it’s a game-changer! 🙌 With EKS hybrid nodes, you can now leverage your existing on-prem and edge infrastructure as nodes in your EKS cluster, unlocking a consistent Kubernetes experience across AWS Cloud, AWS Outposts, and your own customer-managed infrastructure. You still get to maintain the AWS control plane in the cloud while keeping nodes at the edge. Best part? You manage these nodes just like you would with AWS-based environments, using the same tools, processes, and security models. Whether your nodes are running in a remote data center, on-premises in your own hardware, or in a 5G edge location, the management is seamless and consistent. For example, managing these nodes involves using familiar kubectl commands, IAM roles, and security policies. I dive deep into this exciting new feature in my first article, which just went live! 🎉 Check it out and let me know your thoughts! 💬 A huge thanks to the incredible EKS team for making this innovation possible. Don’t miss what we presented on EKS at re:Invent—check it out here! 💡 https://lnkd.in/d3g2FMvt https://lnkd.in/ds3wbNVC #AWS #EKS #Kubernetes #HybridCloud #EdgeComputing #CloudMigration #DevOps #CloudInnovation #EKSHybridNodes
Deploy a Hybrid EKS Kubernetes Cluster: Use On-Premises nodes on Amazon EKS with Cilium CNI
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Amazon EKS Auto Mode fully automates compute, storage, and networking management for Kubernetes clusters, improving performance, security, and cost efficiency by dynamically scaling EC2 instances based on demand on Amazon Web Services (AWS) https://lnkd.in/dQ6hjPFw #AWS #awscloud #EKS #Kubernetes #CloudComputing
Announcing Amazon EKS Auto Mode - AWS
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Monitoring Kubernetes clusters deployed on Amazon EKS is crucial for performance, troubleshooting issues, and identifying bottlenecks. However, monitoring Kubernetes can be challenging due to dynamic infrastructure and multiple components. #aws #awscloud #cloud #amazonelastickubernetesservice #amazonmanagedgrafana #amazonmanagedserviceforprometheus #announcements #bestpractices #managementtools #technicalhowto #monitoring
Enhancing observability with a managed monitoring solution for Amazon EKS
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I just published a comprehensive guide on AWS VPC and VPC Peering. Learn how to set up secure and scalable networks on AWS, configure VPC peering connections, and implement NAT Gateways for secure internet access. Check it out and let me know your thoughts! 🔗 [Link to the article] #AWS #CloudComputing #Networking #DevOps #Medium B-HiTech Acada Learning Oxdit Technologies
Understanding VPC and VPC Peering: Building Secure and Scalable Networks on AWS
medium.com
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Karpenter offers advanced resource optimization, reducing cloud costs significantly, while EKS Cluster Autoscaler ensures seamless integration with Amazon EKS for reliability. Choosing between them depends on your cloud strategy and workload needs...
Karpenter vs EKS Cluster Autoscaler: Key Differences & Benefits
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Running microservice architectures in the cloud can become complex with many independent workloads and infrastructure dependencies distributed across domains. Teams must manage growing components across EC2 instances, containers, Lambda functions, etc. #aws #awscloud #cloud #amazonelastickubernetesservice #containers #amazoneks #observability
Monitoring and automating recovery from AZ impairments in Amazon EKS with Istio and ARC Zonal Shift
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This post demonstrates a deployment model of an EKS cluster with Karpenter provisioned nodepools with Multus interfaces. The deployment model is recommended for – but not limited to – Telco workloads on AWS. It aims to leverage Karpenter as a group-less nodepool and as an autoscaling solution. #AWS #AmazonWebServices #Cloud #CloudComputing #EKS #K8S #Containers #Kubernetes
Deploying Karpenter Nodes with Multus on Amazon EKS | Amazon Web Services
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