The section about Ingress has been both simplified (separating
the content about taints and tolerations) and made somewhat
deeper, to make it more compatible with both live classes and
recorded videos.
A new section about setting up Ingress Controllers has been
added.
The structure of each deck should now be:
- title slide
- logistics (for live classes)
- chat room info (for live classes)
- shared/about-slides
- */prereqs* (when relevant; mostly k8s classes)
- shared/handson
- */labs-live (for live classes)
- shared/connecting (for live classes)
- */labs-async
- toc
This is more uniform across the different courses
(live and async; containers and K8S).
We now have better explanations on labels and selectors.
The kubectl run section was getting very long, so now
it is different parts: kubectl run basics; how to create
other resources like batch jobs; first contact with
labels and annotations; and showing the limitations
of kubectl logs.
Revamp most of the Helm content:
- overview of Helm moved to helm-intro.md
- explanation of chart format in helm-chart-format.md
- the very crude chart example is now in helm-create-basic-chart.md
- the more advanced chart (with templates etc) is now in helm-create-better-chart.md
- deep dive into Helm internals (how it stores it's data) in helm-secrets.md
This is all for Helm 3. Helm 2 is not supported anymore.
This introduces concepts more progressively (instead of
front-loading most of the theory before tackling first
useful commands). It was successfully testsed at PyCon
and at a few 1-day engagements and works really well.
I'm now making it the official flow.
I'm also reformatting the YAML a little bit to facilitate
content suffling.
Includes a simplified demo using Google OAuth Playground,
as well as numerous examples aiming at piercing the veil
to explain JWT, JWS, and associated protocols and algos.