Docs

Curated Kubernetes content from AKS, EKS, GKE, OpenShift, Rancher/K3s and more—auto‑aggregated daily.

  • 2025-12-01
    CNCF

    A guide to restarting pods in Kubernetes using kubectl

    When should you restart a Kubernetes pod? What are the different pod states in Kubernetes? How to restart pods in Kubernetes using kubectl Conclusion Posted on December 1, 2025 by Kevel Bhogayata, Principal Engineer, Middleware CNCF projects highlighted in this post This Member Blog was originally published on the Middleware blog and is republished here with permission. kubectl is the command-line interface for managing Kubernetes clusters.

    #cncf
  • 2025-12-01
    Redhat Blog

    Frequently asked questions about Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform 2.6

    Frequently asked questions about Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform 2.6 Installations, upgrades, and migrations Automation dashboard Ansible Lightspeed intelligent assistant Self-service automation portal Additional resources Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform | Product Trial About the author Tricia McConnell More like this A 5-step playbook for unified automation and AI AI ambitions meet automation reality: The case for a unified automation platform Technically Speaking | Taming AI agents with observability You Can't Automate Buy-In | Code Comments Keep exploring Browse by channel Automation Artificial intelligence Open hybrid cloud Security Edge computing Infrastructure Applications Virtualization Share Last month, we launched Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform 2.6, and introduced several new features including an automation dashboard, a self-service automation portal, and the Ansible Lightspeed intelligent assistant. We hosted a follow-up webinar, What’s new with Ansible Automation Platform 2.6 , during which we received some great questions from the audience about how to install, migrate, and upgrade to the latest version.

    #kubernetes
  • 2025-11-28
    Tigera

    KubeCon NA 2025: Three Core Kubernetes Trends and a Calico Feature You Should Use Now

    🤖 Trend 1: Kubernetes is Central to AI Workload Orchestration 🌐 Trend 2: Growth in Edge Deployments Increases Complexity 🛠️ Trend 3: Platform Teams Seek Consolidation to Combat Tool Fatigue You Might Be Missing Key Calico Features 💡 🎉 Community & Engagement Highlights Your KubeCon Recap Reel 🤝 Stay Connected: Join the Calico Community! The Tigera team recently returned from KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America and CalicoCon 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. It was great, as always, to attend these events, feel the energy of our community, and hold in-depth discussions at the booth and in our dedicated sessions that revealed specific, critical shifts shaping the future of cloud-native platforms.

    #tigera
  • 2025-11-28
    CNCF

    runc container breakout vulnerabilities: A technical overview

    The vulnerabilities Exploitation scenarios and threat model Kubernetes and cloud native implications Affected versions and patches Mitigations The bigger picture: Secure-by-default configurations Credits Posted on November 28, 2025 by Matteo Bisi, DevSecOps Team Leader at ReeVo and CNCF KCD Organizer CNCF projects highlighted in this post A set of high-severity vulnerabilities in runc were publicly disclosed in November 2025, allowing for full container breakouts. Runc is the cornerstone of containerization on Linux, serving as the default low-level container runtime for industry-standard tools like Docker, Podman, and Kubernetes.

    #cncf
  • 2025-11-27
    CNCF

    From chaos to clarity: How OpenTelemetry unified observability across clouds

    The problem: Observability tool sprawl The turning point: Why OpenTelemetry The solution: Implementing OpenTelemetry Benefits realized Lessons learned Conclusion Posted on November 27, 2025 by Arunvel Arunachalam, Infosys CNCF projects highlighted in this post Modern applications rarely live in a single place anymore. One organization’s application footprint was spread across AWS, Azure, and GCP , with some workloads still running on-prem.

    #cncf
  • 2025-11-27
    AWS Containers Blog (EKS)

    Amazon EKS introduces Provisioned Control Plane

    Amazon EKS introduces Provisioned Control Plane Delivering predictable and high performance at scale How did we unlock this? Getting started with Provisioned Control Plane Creating a cluster with Provisioned Control Plane Updating control plane scaling tier Monitoring control plane scaling tier utilization Benchmarking with Provisioned Control Plane Conclusion About the authors Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) powers tens of millions of clusters annually, with an architecture refined by years of real-world insights from thousands of customers running diverse workloads. EKS automatically scales your cluster’s control plane to meet your workload demands.

    #eks #aws
  • 2025-11-26
    AWS Containers Blog (EKS)

    Amazon EKS Blueprints for CDK: Now supporting Amazon EKS Auto Mode

    Amazon EKS Blueprints for CDK: Now supporting Amazon EKS Auto Mode What is EKS Blueprints for CDK? What is EKS Auto Mode? Prerequisites Implementing EKS Auto Mode with EKS Blueprints for CDK Pattern 1: Basic EKS Auto Mode cluster Pattern 2: EKS Auto Mode cluster with custom ARM NodePool for workloads Pattern 3: EKS Auto Mode cluster with custom AI Accelerator NodePool for AI/ML workloads Cleaning up Benefits of using EKS Auto Mode with EKS Blueprints Conclusion About the authors Amazon EKS Blueprints for CDK has recently added support for EKS Auto Mode , a significant enhancement that streamlines Kubernetes management by automatically provisioning infrastructure, choosing optimal compute instances, dynamically scaling resources, continuously optimizing costs, managing core add-ons, patching operating systems, and integrating with Amazon Web Services (AWS) security services. EKS Blueprints for CDK is an open source framework that helps AWS customers bootstrap and configure production-ready Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) clusters with the AWS Cloud Development Kit (AWS CDK).

    #eks #aws
  • 2025-11-26
    AWS Containers Blog (EKS)

    Enhancing and monitoring network performance when running ML Inference on Amazon EKS

    Enhancing and monitoring network performance when running ML Inference on Amazon EKS Current challenges with network observability for ML inference workloads Deep-dive into Container Network Observability in Amazon EKS ML inference workload scenario Setting up Container Network Observability use cases for ML inference workload Visualize and confirm intercommunication between services for troubleshooting Analyze Availability Zone (AZ) traffic pattern between deployments Network Health Indicator Investigating ML inference Latency using performance metrics in Amazon Manged Grafana Cleaning up Conclusion About the authors Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) has become a popular choice for customers looking to run their workloads in the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Cloud with customers increasingly choosing to run their AI and Machine Learning (AI/ML) workloads on Amazon EKS. Customers can use Amazon EKS to customize configuration to match their workload requirements.

    #eks #aws
  • 2025-11-26
    CNCF

    Announcing Kyverno release 1.16

    CEL policy types Kyverno Authz Server Introducing the Kyverno SDK Other features and enhancements Getting started and backward compatibility Roadmap Conclusion Posted on November 26, 2025 by Shuting Zhao, Kyverno Maintainer and a Staff Engineer at Nirmata CNCF projects highlighted in this post Kyverno 1.16 delivers major advancements in policy as code for Kubernetes, centered on a new generation of CEL-based policies now available in beta with a clear path to GA. This release introduces partial support for namespaced CEL policies to confine enforcement and minimize RBAC, aligning with least-privilege best practices.

    #cncf
  • 2025-11-26
    Tigera

    How to Turbocharge Your Kubernetes Networking With eBPF

    Why eBPF Matters for Kubernetes Networking What is eBPF? Performance Improvements Through eBPF Key Performance Advantages Observability: Real-Time Insights Without Agents Key Observability Advantages Security at the Kernel Layer Key Security Advantages of eBPF: eBPF Use Cases When Not to Use eBPF: How Calico Uses eBPF Examples of Calico’s eBPF Capabilities Modern Kubernetes Needs a Modern Data Plane Explore eBPF Further with Calico When your Kubernetes cluster handles thousands of workloads, every millisecond counts. And that pressure is no longer the exception; it is the norm.

    #tigera