Concepts

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Configuration Best Practices

This document highlights and consolidates configuration best practices that are introduced throughout the user guide, Getting Started documentation, and examples.

This is a living document. If you think of something that is not on this list but might be useful to others, please don’t hesitate to file an issue or submit a PR.

General Configuration Tips

“Naked” Pods vs ReplicaSets, Deployments, and Jobs

A Deployment, which both creates a ReplicaSet to ensure that the desired number of Pods is always available, and specifies a strategy to replace Pods (such as RollingUpdate), is almost always preferable to creating Pods directly, except for some explicit restartPolicy: Never scenarios. A Job may also be appropriate.

Services

  FOO_SERVICE_HOST=<the host the Service is running on>
  FOO_SERVICE_PORT=<the port the Service is running on>

If you are writing code that talks to a Service, don’t use these environment variables; use the DNS name of the Service instead. Service environment variables are provided only for older software which can’t be modified to use DNS lookups, and are a much less flexible way of accessing Services.

If you only need access to the port for debugging purposes, you can use the apiserver proxy or kubectl port-forward.

If you explicitly need to expose a Pod’s port on the node, consider using a NodePort Service before resorting to hostPort.

Using Labels

A Service can be made to span multiple Deployments by omitting release-specific labels from its selector. Deployments make it easy to update a running service without downtime.

A desired state of an object is described by a Deployment, and if changes to that spec are applied, the deployment controller changes the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate.

Container Images

An alternative, but deprecated way to have Kubernetes always pull the image is to use the :latest tag, which will implicitly set the imagePullPolicy to Always.

Note: You should avoid using the :latest tag when deploying containers in production, because this makes it hard to track which version of the image is running and hard to roll back.

Using kubectl

Analytics

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