PodParley PodParley

Kubernetes Networking

An episode of the PodCTL - Enterprise Kubernetes podcast, hosted by Brian Gracely & Tyler Britten, titled "Kubernetes Networking" was published on March 12, 2018 and runs 29 minutes.

March 12, 2018 ·29m · PodCTL - Enterprise Kubernetes

0:00 / 0:00

Show: 29 Show Overview: Brian and Tyler talk with Marc Curry (@redhatmarc, OpenShift Principal Product Manager, Container Infrastructure) about the basics of Kubernetes networking, CNI plugins, managing Network Policy, granular ingress and egress routing, and how CaaS/PaaS and IaaS are being integrated. Show News: Kubernetes becomes a “Graduated Project” in CNCFShow Notes: Kubernetes Network PluginsKubernetes Cluster NetworkingKubernetes Network PolicyKubernetes IngressKubernetes Contain...

Show: 29

Show Overview: Brian and Tyler talk with Marc Curry (@redhatmarc, OpenShift Principal Product Manager, Container Infrastructure) about the basics of Kubernetes networking, CNI plugins, managing Network Policy, granular ingress and egress routing, and how CaaS/PaaS and IaaS are being integrated.

Show News:

Show Notes:

Topic 1 - Welcome to the show. Tell us about your background and some of the areas you focus on now?

Topic 2 - Let’s talk about the basics of Kubernetes networking. Walk us through the core elements from container addressing, pod/cluster networking, and things like ingress/egress routing (direct or through proxies).

Topic 3 - Kubernetes has a standard called “CNI” (Container Networking Interface). What does this do, and how does it interact with various SDN projects/products?

Topic 4 - A recent enhancement to Kubernetes was “Network Policy”. What does this provide, and where does it overlap with some commercial SDN capabilities?

Topic 5 - Let’s talk about inbound and outbound routing of traffic. What are some of the biggest issues that people need to take into consideration (proxies, traffic sources, protocols supported, etc.)?

Topic 6 - What are some of the things you’re working on to bridge the networking between CaaS/PaaS layers and IaaS layers?

Feedback?

URL copied to clipboard!