Catalog Details
CATEGORY
workloadsCREATED BY
UPDATED AT
May 17, 2024VERSION
1.0
What this pattern does:
A ReplicationController ensures that a specified number of pod replicas are running at any one time. In other words, a ReplicationController makes sure that a pod or a homogeneous set of pods is always up and available. If there are too many pods, the ReplicationController terminates the extra pods. If there are too few, the ReplicationController starts more pods. Unlike manually created pods, the pods maintained by a ReplicationController are automatically replaced if they fail, are deleted, or are terminated. For example, your pods are re-created on a node after disruptive maintenance such as a kernel upgrade. For this reason, you should use a ReplicationController even if your application requires only a single pod. A ReplicationController is similar to a process supervisor, but instead of supervising individual processes on a single node, the ReplicationController supervises multiple pods across multiple nodes.
Caveats and Consideration:
This example ReplicationController config runs three copies of the nginx web server. u can add deployments , config maps , services to this design as per requirements .
Compatibility:
Recent Discussions with "meshery" Tag
- Apr 14 | Unable to deploy meshery to minikube
- May 08 | No reachable contexts found in the uploaded kube config
- May 08 | Meshery Development Meeting | May 8th 2024
- May 01 | WEBINAR: Making the CNCF Landscape interactive with Meshery
- Apr 24 | Meshery Development Meeting | April 24th 2024
- Mar 11 | [Help Wanted] A list of open DevOps-centric needs on Meshery projects
- Apr 16 | Help needed for setup of meshery cli
- Apr 17 | Meshery Development Meeting | April 17th 2024
- Apr 12 | What exactly is this sistent design system project
- Nov 11 | Unable setup local Meshery development server