Migrating from monolithic applications to microservices carries many benefits, cost reduction and reliability included. So why isn’t everyone doing it yet? Moving from a monolithic application to one that’s run by microservices comes with many many challenges! There are a number of good ways to implement this, and one of them is to use containers.Kubernetes, an extremely popular orchestration tool for containers, has a lot of moving pieces to worry about – and that’s before you even get to see a “Hello World” app. AWS’ managed Kubernetes service, EKS (Elastic Kubernetes Service), is a great option, and facilitates access to other AWS services like IAM, AutoScaling, and CloudWatch.Learning how to manage all of this can be a tough journey. The more you learn, the more you realize there are a ton of other things to tackle. In this course we’ll be building a whole architecture where you can learn best practices and advanced techniques around Kubernetes, EKS, AWS, as well as the skills required for maintaining a production-ready environment. We are going to take a real-world project and develop it over the duration of the course. There is a LOT in here, so you will need to be confident with AWS already.In this course you’ll learn how to: Apply what you’ve learnt to production environments running on EKS. Solve common issues and improve solutions on a normal Kubernetes setup. Find room for improvement on existing EKS environments, and implement solutions to close them. Develop architectures that are aligned to the five pillars of the Well-Architected Framework. Make better decisions at the start of a new project in EKS, or migration from another Kubernetes architecture. Make your applications scalable, reliable, and highly available in Kubernetes, running under EKS.Please note that this course does not use the Hands-On Labs environment. The labs in this course build on each other, and they’re designed for you to follow along and build out the solution in your own environment, developing it over the duration of the course. We estimate USD $10-15 to cover the costs of EKS, Route53, VPC and your EC2 and Spot Instances, along with a domain name.
Overview
Syllabus
- Introduction
- Networking and EKS
- Achieve Least Privilege Principle
- More Power for Less Money
- CI/CD
- Service Mesh with AppMesh!
- Wrap Up
Taught by
Mario Mercado