Timo Reimann 604dfb3197 Relax restrictions on environment variable names.
The POSIX standard restricts environment variable names to uppercase
letters, digits, and the underscore character in shell contexts only.
For generic application usage, it is stated that all other characters
shall be tolerated.

This change relaxes the rules to some degree. Namely, we stop requiring
environment variable names to be strict C_IDENTIFIERS and start
permitting lowercase, dot, and dash characters.

Public container images using environment variable names beyond the
shell-only context can benefit from this relaxation. Elasticsearch is
one popular example.
2017-07-28 22:11:26 +02:00
2017-07-20 10:08:49 +08:00
2017-07-20 11:03:49 -07:00
2017-07-20 11:03:49 -07:00
2017-03-08 09:59:30 -08:00
2017-07-11 11:21:18 -07:00

Kubernetes

Submit Queue Widget GoDoc Widget


Kubernetes is an open source system for managing containerized applications across multiple hosts, providing basic mechanisms for deployment, maintenance, and scaling of applications.

Kubernetes builds upon a decade and a half of experience at Google running production workloads at scale using a system called Borg, combined with best-of-breed ideas and practices from the community.

Kubernetes is hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). If you are a company that wants to help shape the evolution of technologies that are container-packaged, dynamically-scheduled and microservices-oriented, consider joining the CNCF. For details about who's involved and how Kubernetes plays a role, read the CNCF announcement.


To start using Kubernetes

See our documentation on kubernetes.io.

Try our interactive tutorial.

Take a free course on Scalable Microservices with Kubernetes.

To start developing Kubernetes

The community repository hosts all information about building Kubernetes from source, how to contribute code and documentation, who to contact about what, etc.

If you want to build Kubernetes right away there are two options:

You have a working Go environment.
$ go get -d k8s.io/kubernetes
$ cd $GOPATH/src/k8s.io/kubernetes
$ make
You have a working Docker environment.
$ git clone https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes
$ cd kubernetes
$ make quick-release

If you are less impatient, head over to the developer's documentation.

Support

If you need support, start with the troubleshooting guide and work your way through the process that we've outlined.

That said, if you have questions, reach out to us one way or another.

Analytics

Description
No description provided
Readme 1,019 MiB
Languages
Go 97%
Shell 2.6%
PowerShell 0.2%