Thanks Kyle, is there any easy way to "verify" a kubernetes cluster is 
operational after bringing it up and before pushing containers to it?? 

On Wednesday, June 8, 2016 at 9:21:23 PM UTC+1, Kyle Brown wrote:
>
> Gary,
>
> You could create a Jenkins job that uses our kubernetes AWS deployment 
> tool: kube-aws 
> <https://github.com/coreos/coreos-kubernetes/tree/master/multi-node/aws>. 
> This tool uses CloudFormation to bring up a cluster using the latest 
> release of coreos-kubernetes. 
> <https://github.com/coreos/coreos-kubernetes> You can find more 
> documentation on kube-aws here. 
> <https://coreos.com/kubernetes/docs/latest/kubernetes-on-aws.html>
>
> Cheers,
> Kyle Brown
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jun 8, 2016 at 12:40 PM, Gary Denner <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Folks
>>
>> What is the best way to do the following
>>
>> 1. Build a Jenkins job that goes off to AWS and provisions CoreOS machines
>> 2. Then push Kubernetes to these configs.
>> 3. The ability to be able to blow away these images and bring them back 
>> up simply using the latests versions.
>>
>> I looked at CloudFormation files but can't see an easy way to do this 
>> without having to manually login to AWS etc
>>
>> Thanks for any insights
>>
>>
>

Reply via email to