By Vic Iglesias, Cloud Solutions Architect
Many Google Cloud Platform (GCP) users are now migrating production workloads to Container Engine, our managed Kubernetes environment. You can spin up a Container Engine cluster for development, then quickly start porting your applications. First and foremost, a production application must be resilient and fault tolerant and deployed using Kubernetes best practices. You also need to prepare the Kubernetes environment for production by hardening it. As part of the migration to production, you may need to lock down who or what has access to your clusters and applications, both from an administrative as well as network perspective.
We recently created a guide that will help you with the push towards production on Container Engine. The guide walks through various patterns and features that allow you to lock down your Container Engine workloads. The first half focuses on how to control access to the cluster administratively using IAM and Kubernetes RBAC. The second half dives into network access patterns teaching you to properly configure your environment and Kubernetes services. With the IAM and networking models locked down appropriately, you can rest assured that you’re ready to start directing your users to your new applications.
Read the full solution guide for using Container Engine for production workloads, or learn more about Container Engine from the documentation.
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform
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