Kubernetes in Action
G**H
one of the Best kubernetes resource
I liked the structure of the book and coverage of topics but like any open source tool book always lags the actual tool by few versions this book has not been updated in a while and needs a revision but it can always be used as reference in conjunction with the latest product documentation
R**I
One of the best books for Kubernetes
This is one of the best book for kubernetes, amazing detailing of each topic. No comparison to the level of explanation this book has, its worth every penny. Once you start reading it won’t let you t put down, its that interactive.All topics are very well explained, it goes from basic to advanced.Go and grab you’ll love it.
A**R
Quality
Papers are not binded properly and it is not upto Mark.
M**I
Very good book. Highly recommended.
Hi there.Very good book. BUT! this book is not for Kubernetes system administrators! it will not teach you how to install, support, maintain K8S. This book is for Developers! How to get most of it.
M**.
Excellent
The book is well written and introduces the reader step by step to each of the primary resources of kubernetes. The use of diagrams within each section reinforces the concepts the author is trying to get across allowing the reader to either be sat at a terminal tapping in the commands or sat on the sofa. I read the book from start to finish to grasp the overall architecture and primary concepts of K8 and afterwards as a reference of how to get things done step by step.
B**N
Very good overview of Kubernetes
This book is a good combination of introduction with some amount of deep-dive topics. You can read it as beginner or as medium experienced Kubernetes user / admin. It explains well, but not too long for a single topic, so you have a good flow of reading. It covers the basics, but also more advanced topics like Kubernetes architecture, the REST Api or ServiceAccounts. Only critics: Most of the examples are working with current Kuberentes versions, but not all (kubectl run vs create Pod/Job). All in all still a very good read.
M**M
The passion that went into this book....
This book has it all. It's conversational enough to be readable, but dense enough to be challenging. What you'll get out of it is what you put in. I suggest reading with a highlighter, because you're going to read things on practically every other page that practically jump off the page at you.It's a little old now. The book mostly talks about Kubernetes 1.7-1.9, but as of this writing we're on Kubernetes 1.16. I was looking at the author's twitter to see if he's working on a 2nd edition when I saw a comment he made about appreciating reviews. Well, I appreciate the intense labor you so obviously put into this book.I kept a strict pace of a chapter a day and it took me about 2 hours per chapter. Now, I was reading very carefully and trying to make sure I took in every word, so it might not take you as long. A friend of mine read it at the same time as me and he could sit down and read 4 chapters in a night, whereas... well... I couldn't really manage more than 2 in the same day without feeling like I didn't take it all in.The content is EXPERTLY organized. I'm a hawk for typos and I only found like 3 or 4 in all 559 pages. There were a few topics (mainly, GitOps workflows, Skaffold, Istio, etc.) that this book would really really benefit from touching on. Especially GitOps.
G**E
In the paper version the content is black and white?
In the paper vsrsersion The content is black and white or color?
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago