Kubernetes Pod and Container Concepts: Difference between revisions
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A '''pod''' is a group of one or more [[#Container|containers]] Kubernetes deploys and manages an an atomic compute unit, and the specification for how to run the containers. Kubernetes will not manage compute entities with smaller granularity, such as containers or processes. | A '''pod''' is a group of one or more [[#Container|containers]] Kubernetes deploys and manages an an atomic compute unit, and the specification for how to run the containers. Kubernetes will not manage compute entities with smaller granularity, such as containers or processes. | ||
The containers of a pod are deployed and managed as a group | The containers of a pod are [[#Operation_Atomicity|atomically deployed]] and managed as a group. | ||
==<span id='Operation_Atomicity'></span>Pod Operation Atomicity== | |||
==Pod Lifecycle== | ==Pod Lifecycle== |
Revision as of 18:12, 24 September 2021
External
- https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/ (fully synced ✓)
Internal
Overview
Pod
A pod is a group of one or more containers Kubernetes deploys and manages an an atomic compute unit, and the specification for how to run the containers. Kubernetes will not manage compute entities with smaller granularity, such as containers or processes.
The containers of a pod are atomically deployed and managed as a group.
Pod Operation Atomicity
Pod Lifecycle
Pods and Nodes
Pods and Containers
Container
TODO:
Container Types
Application Contaier
Init Container
Ephemeral Container
Container Probes
Summary of a relationship between container probe result and overall pod situation.