| name | kubernetes |
| description | Kubernetes container orchestration with Helm, operators, and service mesh. Use for cluster management. |
Kubernetes (K8s)
Kubernetes is the standard for orchestrating containerized applications. In 2025, the Gateway API has replaced Ingress as the standard for traffic routing, and Sidecars are native.
When to Use
- Scale: You have hundreds of microservices.
- Resilience: You need self-healing, auto-restart, and multi-zone availability.
- Platform Building: You are building an internal platform (IDP) for developers.
Quick Start (Gateway API)
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: my-gateway
spec:
gatewayClassName: nginx
listeners:
- name: http
protocol: HTTP
port: 80
---
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: my-app
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: my-gateway
rules:
- matches:
- path:
type: PathPrefix
value: /api
backendRefs:
- name: my-service
port: 8080
Core Concepts
Control Plane
API Server, etcd, Scheduler. The brain of the cluster.
Gateway API
The successor to Ingress. Split roles between Infrastructure Provider (GatewayClass), Cluster Operator (Gateway), and Developer (HTTPRoute/GRPCRoute).
Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs)
Extend K8s API. Used by Operators (e.g., Prometheus Operator, Postgres Operator) to manage complex stateful apps.
Best Practices (2025)
Do:
- Use Gateway API: Stop writing new
Ingress resources.
- Use GitOps: ArgoCD or Flux to manage cluster state.
- Set Requests/Limits: The scheduler needs them to bin-pack nodes efficiently.
- Use Native Sidecars: K8s 1.29+ supports
restartPolicy: Always for init containers, making sidecars first-class.
Don't:
- Don't use
latest tag: Always pin image versions (SHA or specific tag) for reproducibility.
References