Linkerd: Up and Running: A Guide to Operationalizing a Kubernetes-Native Service Mesh

Jason Morgan & Flynn

Language: English

Publisher: O'Reilly Media

Published: May 28, 2024

Description:

With the massive increase of microservices, operators and developers face far more complexity in their applications today. Service meshes can help you manage this problem by providing a unified control plane to secure, manage, and monitor your entire network. This practical guide shows you how the Linkerd service mesh enables cloud-native developers—including platform and site reliability engineers—to solve the thorny issue of running distributed applications in Kubernetes.

Tech evangelists for Buoyant—the creators of Linkerd—demonstrate how this service mesh can help ensure that your applications are secure, observable, and reliable. YouÃ?¢??ll understand why Linkerd, the original service mesh, can still claim the lowest time to value of any mesh option available today.

  • Learn how Linkerd works and which tasks it can help you accomplish
  • Install and configure Linkerd in an imperative and declarative manner
  • Secure interservice traffic and set up secure multi-cluster links
  • Launch a zero trust authorization strategy in Kubernetes clusters
  • Organize services in Linkerd to override error codes, set custom retries, and create time-outs
  • Use Linkerd to manage progressive delivery and pair this service mesh with the ingress of your choice

About the Author

Jason Morgan is a DevOps practitioner who has helped many organizations on their cloud native journeys. Jason helps teams adopt cloud native ways of working so they can deliver for their customers and learn how to go fast forever. Jason has given talks, written a number of articles, and contributes to the CNCF.

Flynn is a technology evangelist at Buoyant, working on educating people about Linkerd, Kubernetes, and the fundamentals of secure, reliable cloud-native development in general. Flynn is also the original author of the Emissary-ingress API gateway. His career in computing spans nearly forty years and runs the gamut from bringup on bare metal to distributed applications, with a common thread of communications and security throughout.