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8 posts tagged with "tutorial"

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· 4 min read
Atulpriya Sharma

It’s a great day for all of us in the Paralus community as Paralus is now listed as a 1-click app on the DigitalOcean marketplace. You’ve seen in the past how easy it is to install Paralus on various environments, right from public cloud platforms like Amazon EKS, Microsoft AKS, Google GKE to your own laptop using Micro K8s and Kind.

However, with the launch of Paralus 1-click app on DigitalOcean marketplace, it’s even easier for you to try Paralus. In fact, we recommend using this 1-click offering to try Paralus quickly. So how does it work? Read on to learn more.

· 8 min read
Atulpriya Sharma

One of the best things that comes with Paralus is that it can be easily deployed to virtually any Kubernetes cluster. We have shown that in our previous blog posts where we deployed Paralus on GKE, Kind and even MicroK8s.

In this blog post, we'll take you through the steps to setup Paralus on Digital Ocean (DO) using a custom domain and import a local cluster into it. Let's get started!

· 10 min read
Atulpriya Sharma

In the previous blog posts we showed how you can set up Paralus on various cloud based Kubernetes clusters like Azure, AWS and GCP. We also shared a tutorial on setting up Paralus on a Kind cluster.

All these posts have helped people get started with Paralus. However, there have been requests for details on how to set up Paralus on MicroK8s cluster. In this blog post, we do exactly that.

· 5 min read
Atulpriya Sharma

Kubectl is one of the most widely used tools to work with Kubernetes. The command line tool allows you to deploy applications, inspect and manage resources. It basically authenticates with the control plane for your cluster and makes API calls to the Kubernetes API. In short if you are working with Kubernetes - you will use kubectl the most.

In most modern day scenarios, there are multiple users who are accessing various clusters. This makes it all more important to ensure that every user or group has access to only those resources that they are allowed to. Few ways to achieve this is using namespaces and role based access control. While these are good, most enterprise grade application deployments require something more robust.

· 6 min read
Atulpriya Sharma

Setting up Paralus is quite simple irrespective of the infrastructure you're deploying it on. You've seen in the previous blog post, where we showed how to deploy Paralus to Azure's Kubernetes Service (AKS)

In this blog post, we'll take you through the steps to setup Paralus on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) using a custom domain and import a local cluster into it. Let's get started!

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