I'm running probably 100 services in Kubernetes in my homelab, most of it is made up of manifests that I've written translated over from docker compose files where I used to run the services. I also run some helm charts, but mostly just for more complex sets of services. I commit everything to a private GitHub repository, Flux replicates it to the cluster, and Renovate handles updates. Obviously writing manifests for Kubernetes is way more complex compared to Docker, but that's kinda the point right, Kubernetes is way more powerful than Docker, so it's going to come with extra complexity to match
this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2023
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Do you mind to explain when to use Helm charts and when to use standard deployments? You said that they are useful for more complex deployments, why is that?
Try kubeapps, it's like a playstore for kubernetes
I have ran the majority of the containers you listed above, in kubernetes.
It worked fine.