International Journal of Advanced Science and Computer Applications
Vol. 2 No. 1: March 2023

Kubernetes in Microservices

Sarah R Nadaf (Department of Computer Science & Engineering R V College of Engineering Bengaluru)
H. K. Krishnappa (Department of Computer Science & Engineering R V College of Engineering Bengaluru)



Article Info

Publish Date
12 Nov 2022

Abstract

The move towards the microservice grounded armature is well underway. In this architectural style, small and approximately coupled modules are developed, stationed, and gauged singly to compose pall-native operations. still, for carrier- grade service providers to resettle to the microservices architectural style, vacuity remains a concern. Kubernetes is an open source platform that defines a set of structure blocks which inclusively give mechanisms for planting, maintaining, spanning, and healing containerized microservices. therefore, Kubernetes hides the complexity of microservice unity while managing their vacuity. In this paper, we probe further infrastructures and conduct further trials to estimate the vacuity that Kubernetes delivers for its managed microservices. We present different infrastructures for public and private shadows. We estimate the vacuity attainable through the mending capability of Kubernetes. We probe the impact of adding redundancy on the vacuity of microservice grounded operations. We conduct trials under the dereliction configuration of Kubernetes as well as under its most responsive bone . We also perform a relative evaluation with the Vacuity operation Framework( AMF), which is a proven result as a middleware service for managing high- vacuity. The results of our examinations show that in certain cases, the service outage for operations managed with Kubernetes is significantly high

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