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Best Practices for Monitoring Kubernetes using Grafana

Microservices and containers have taken the tech industry by storm. Kubernetes is one of the tools that has evolved to manage these new aspects of software development. It is an open-source system for automating deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications. One of the biggest challenges that organizations face when adopting Kubernetes is performing monitoring tasks in this dynamic environment.

Fleet Management for Kubernetes is Here

Today I’m excited to announce Fleet, a new open source project from the team at Rancher focused on managing fleets of Kubernetes clusters. Ever since Rancher 1.0 shipped in 2016, Rancher has provided a central control plane for managing multiple clusters. As pioneers of Kubernetes multi-cluster management, we have seen firsthand how users have consistently increased the number of clusters under management.

Making the Business Case for DevOps

Engineering and “the business” don’t always speak the same language. That’s why in this blog post and webinar, we want to show you how to bridge the gap using the language “the business” understands: cold hard cash. When talking to the business value, here are four areas that DevOps provide value for your organization with associated calculators so you can get an exact value to share with your organization.

From Web Scale to Edge Scale: Rancher 2.4 Supports 2,000 Clusters on its Way to 1 Million

Rancher 2.4 is here – with new under-the-hood changes that pave the way to supporting up to 1 million clusters. That’s probably the most exciting capability in the new version. But you might ask: why would anyone want to run thousands of Kubernetes clusters – let alone tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands or more? At Rancher Labs, we believe the future of Kubernetes is multi-cluster and fully heterogeneous.

Weathering an Economic Downturn: How Cycle Can Help Your Business Survive

In the last month, we’ve seen one of the most dramatic movements in economic activity ever recorded. Many business owners are clutched in the grips of mandatory closures and uncertainty of the future, for their business and for their employees. The tech world has been hit less hard — at least for now. Remote work is second nature to many of us and offering our products in the digital space means we are open for business.

Kubernetes Day Two: Transitioning from Development to Production

As your organization gets more comfortable with Kubernetes in development, you’ll want to prepare to adopt it in production. But mastering Kubernetes in dev does not necessarily translate into mastering it in prod. There are many additional components that must be configured and fine tuned to ensure reliable, self-healing production clusters. In this blog, we’ll walk through the key elements of a Kubernetes production setup.

Deploying Your Applications Using Codefresh, Google Cloud Platform, and Google Kubernetes Engine

Kubernetes offers scalability and reliability for your container-based applications. Combine this with GKE, and you now eliminate the need to install or operate clusters on your own. A huge plus to using GKE is that you now will be running Kubernetes in a GCP environment, therefore you can utilize all the handy integrations Google has to offer. Codefresh simplifies the process even more, by automating the process of getting your code built, tested, and deployed.