Files
kubernetes/docs/getting-started-guides
Rohit Jnagal a02194d372 Merge pull request #4925 from resouer/patch-1
Fix broken validation tips and typo in ubuntu-multi-nodes-guide
2015-03-03 14:46:02 -08:00
..
2015-02-23 23:17:46 +05:30
2015-02-22 16:08:00 +00:00
2015-02-23 23:15:23 +05:30
2015-02-02 06:16:46 -05:00
2015-02-02 18:12:32 -08:00
2015-02-14 21:48:16 +13:00
2014-11-25 17:41:53 -08:00
2014-10-20 12:14:20 -05:00

IaaS Provider Config. Mgmt OS Docs Support Level Notes
GCE Saltstack Debian docs Project Tested with 0.9.2 by @satnam6502
Vagrant Saltstack Fedora docs Project
Vagrant custom Fedora docs Project Uses K8s v0.5-8
Vagrant Ansible Fedora docs Project Uses K8s v0.5-8
GKE docs Commercial Uses K8s version 0.9.2
AWS CoreOS CoreOS docs Community Uses K8s version 0.11.0
GCE CoreOS CoreOS docs Community (@kelseyhightower) Uses K8s version 0.11.0
Vagrant CoreOS CoreOS docs Community (@pires) Uses K8s version 0.11.0
CloudStack Ansible CoreOS docs Community (@sebgoa) Uses K8s version 0.9.1
Vmware Debian docs Community (@pietern) Uses K8s version 0.9.1
AWS Saltstack Ubuntu docs Community (@justinsb) Uses K8s version 0.5.0
Vmware CoreOS CoreOS docs Community (@kelseyhightower)
Azure Saltstack Ubuntu docs Community (@jeffmendoza)
Bare-metal custom Ubuntu docs Community (@jainvipin)
Bare-metal custom Ubuntu Cluster docs community (@resouer @WIZARD-CXY) use k8s version 0.10.1
Local docs Inactive
Ovirt docs Inactive
Rackspace CoreOS CoreOS docs Inactive
Bare-metal custom CentOS docs Community(@coolsvap) Uses K8s v0.9.1
libvirt/KVM CoreOS CoreOS docs Community (@lhuard1A)
Definition of columns:
  • IaaS Provider is who/what provides the virtual or physical machines (nodes) that Kubernetes runs on.
  • OS is the base operating system of the nodes.
  • Config. Mgmt is the configuration management system that helps install and maintain kubernetes software on the nodes.
  • Support Levels
    • Project: Kubernetes Committers regularly use this configuration, so it usually works with the latest release of Kubernetes.
    • Commercial: A commercial offering with its own support arrangements.
    • Community: Actively supported by community contributions. May not work with more recent releases of kubernetes.
    • Inactive: No active maintainer. Not recommended for first-time K8s users, and may be deleted soon.