Pods are the rough equivalent of a machine instance (physical or virtual) to a container. OpenShift leverages the Kubernetes concept of a pod , which is one or more containers deployed together on one host, and the smallest compute unit that can be defined, deployed, and managed.
The Kubernetes scheduling unit is the Pod, which is a grouping of containers sharing a virtual network device, internal IP address, TCP/UDP ports, and persistent storage. A Pod can be anything from a complete enterprise application, including each of its layers as a distinct container, to a single microservice inside a single container. Kubernetes manages replicas to scale pods. A replica is a set of pods sharing the same definition. OpenShift treats pods as largely immutable; changes cannot be made to a pod definition while it is running.
Posted Date:- 2021-11-09 07:19:04
Do you know what source-to-image strategy is?
How does the Docker and Kubernetes work with Openshift?
Name some of the prominent DevOps tools? Have you ever worked with any?
Name few of the build strategies which are used in Openshift?
How will you define routes and services in Openshift?
What is the source-to-image strategy?
What do you mean by Application Scaling?
Explain Blue/green deployments.
What does the OpenShift Container Platform include?
What are the types of Security controls in OpenShift?
What is in OpenShift Container Platform?
What is in OpenShift Container Platform?
What is containers Orchestration in Kubernetes?
What do you know about the OpenShift pipeline?
What are the unique components you can find in OpenShift as compared to Kubernetes?