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Kubernetes for Developers

You're reading from   Kubernetes for Developers Use Kubernetes to develop, test, and deploy your applications with the help of containers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788834759
Length 374 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Joseph Heck Joseph Heck
Author Profile Icon Joseph Heck
Joseph Heck
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. Setting Up Kubernetes for Development FREE CHAPTER 2. Packaging Your Code to Run in Kubernetes 3. Interacting with Your Code in Kubernetes 4. Declarative Infrastructure 5. Pod and Container Lifecycles 6. Background Processing in Kubernetes 7. Monitoring and Metrics 8. Logging and Tracing 9. Integration Testing 10. Troubleshooting Common Problems and Next Steps 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Discovering services from within your Pod


There are two means by which services are visible from within your Pods. The first is through environment variables that are added to all Pods in the same namespace as the service.

When you add a service (using kubectl create, or kubectl apply), the service is registered within Kubernetes and thereafter any Pods that are started will get environment variables set that reference the services. For example, if we created the preceding first example service, and then ran:

kubectl get services

We would see the service listed:

NAME            CLUSTER-IP   EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)   AGE
flask           10.0.0.61    <none>        80/TCP    2d
kubernetes      10.0.0.1     <none>        443/TCP   5d

If you looked inside that container, you would see environment variables associated with both services listed previously. Those environment variables are:

env
KUBERNETES_PORT=tcp://10.0.0.1:443
KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT=443
KUBERNETES_PORT_443_TCP_ADDR=10.0.0.1...
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