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My struggle from a UNIX background in the modern "cloud" world
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In the case of
vmalert
, the binary makes no assumptions as to default behaviour because it was not meant to be run standalone. It comes as part of a container with specific environment variables, which in turn is packaged as a Helm chart which has sane configurations. Taking thevmalert
binary by itself is like taking a kerberos server binary without its libraries and config files in/etc
files and complaining that it's not working.I am very well versed in jails, chroot, openvz, LXC, etc. OCI containers are in a different class - don't think of them as an OS-like environment, think of them as a self-contained, packaged service. Docker is then one example of a runtime runtime on which those services run, and Kubernetes is an orchestrator that managed containers in runtimes. And yes, there are some tradeoffs and compromises, but those are well within the bounds of the Pareto principle - remove the 10% long tail of features on the host, reduce user-facing complexity by 90%.
Are you arguing that Kubernetes doesn't do that for you? Because with Kubernetes I can say "run the service in this container with these settings and so many replicas", attach some conditions like "stop sending traffic to any one container that takes longer than N seconds to respond" and "restart the container if a certain command returns an error", and just let it run. I can do a rolling upgrade of the nodes and Kubernetes will reschedule the containers on any other available node, it can load balance traffic, I can update the spec of a deployment and Kubernetes will do a zero-downtime upgrade for me. Try implementing the same on a Unix system. You'd need a way to push configs (Ansible, Puppet, etc?). You need load balancing and leader election (Keepalived?). You need error detection. You need DNS. You need to run the services. You need to ensure there's no library conflict. There's a LOT of complexity that a Kubernetes user does not need to worry about any more. Tell me that's not serious smarts and technology at its best.
You seem to be conflating Kubernetes and cloud services. Being a cloud native technology does not mean it has to run on a managed cloud service. It just means that it has certain expectations as to how workloads run on it, and if those expectations are met then it makes certain promises about how it will behave.
I have contributed to several similar open source projects, yes. What about it?
I am comfortable with my knowledge of this part of the software industry. There is no status quo - there's currently an equilibrium, yes, but it is a tenuous one. I know the tools I use today will likely not be the same tools I will be using a decade from now. But I also know that the concepts and architectures I learn from managing these tools will still be applicable then, and I can stay agile enough to adapt and become comfortable in a new ecosystem. I would urge you to consider the same approach for yourself.