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Jan Safranek 49921ada74 Configure lower NFS grace period.
From RFC 3530:
  During the grace period, the server must reject READ and WRITE operations
  and non-reclaim locking requests (i.e., other LOCK and OPEN operations)
  with an error of NFS4ERR_GRACE.

That basically means that all open() calls from clients are blocked until the
grace period is over (90 seconds by default).

We want the grace period as low as possible to speed up the tests. '10'
seconds were tested on Fedora 21 and Ubuntu 15.04 as the hosts.

The test image is rebased to Fedora in order to get 'rpc.nfsd -G <n>' option,
Ubuntu does not support it.
2015-08-27 17:50:05 +02:00
Godeps Revert "Bump cadvisor godep" 2015-08-27 10:53:18 +02:00
api/swagger-spec Revert "LimitRange updates for Resource Requirements Requests" 2015-08-27 10:50:50 +02:00
build Refactor to use docker-machine or boot2docker 2015-08-26 17:33:02 -04:00
cluster Merge pull request #13246 from kubernetes/revert-12492-limit_range_api 2015-08-27 11:12:04 +02:00
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docs Merge pull request #13218 from mbforbes/versioning 2015-08-27 07:12:20 -07:00
examples Make --validate default on and shows how to turn if off 2015-08-25 03:18:32 -07:00
hack Moved failing tests to the flaky suite on Jenkins 2015-08-27 15:26:25 +02:00
hooks hack and hooks scripts for generating swagger docs 2015-08-22 02:27:41 +02:00
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plugin Revert "LimitRange updates for Resource Requirements Requests" 2015-08-27 10:50:50 +02:00
test Configure lower NFS grace period. 2015-08-27 17:50:05 +02:00
third_party add jsonpath to kubectl 2015-08-20 08:57:24 +08:00
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README.md

Kubernetes

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Are you ...

  • Interested in learning more about using Kubernetes? Please see our user-facing documentation on kubernetes.io
  • Interested in hacking on the core Kubernetes code base? Keep reading!

Kubernetes is an open source system for managing containerized applications across multiple hosts, providing basic mechanisms for deployment, maintenance, and scaling of applications.

Kubernetes is:

  • lean: lightweight, simple, accessible
  • portable: public, private, hybrid, multi cloud
  • extensible: modular, pluggable, hookable, composable
  • self-healing: auto-placement, auto-restart, auto-replication

Kubernetes builds upon a decade and a half of experience at Google running production workloads at scale, combined with best-of-breed ideas and practices from the community.


Kubernetes can run anywhere!

However, initial development was done on GCE and so our instructions and scripts are built around that. If you make it work on other infrastructure please let us know and contribute instructions/code.

Kubernetes is ready for Production!

With the 1.0.1 release Kubernetes is ready to serve your production workloads.

Concepts

Kubernetes works with the following concepts:

Cluster
A cluster is a set of physical or virtual machines and other infrastructure resources used by Kubernetes to run your applications. Kubernetes can run anywhere! See the Getting Started Guides for instructions for a variety of services.
Node
A node is a physical or virtual machine running Kubernetes, onto which pods can be scheduled.
Pod
Pods are a colocated group of application containers with shared volumes. They're the smallest deployable units that can be created, scheduled, and managed with Kubernetes. Pods can be created individually, but it's recommended that you use a replication controller even if creating a single pod.
Replication controller
Replication controllers manage the lifecycle of pods. They ensure that a specified number of pods are running at any given time, by creating or killing pods as required.
Service
Services provide a single, stable name and address for a set of pods. They act as basic load balancers.
Label
Labels are used to organize and select groups of objects based on key:value pairs.

Documentation

Kubernetes documentation is organized into several categories.

Community, discussion and support

If you have questions or want to start contributing please reach out. We don't bite!

Please see the troubleshooting guide, or how to get more help.

If you are a company and are looking for a more formal engagement with Google around Kubernetes and containers at Google as a whole, please fill out this form and we'll be in touch.

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