Alessandro Cannarella
Multi-Tenant federated approach to resources brokering between Kubernetes clusters.
Rel. Fulvio Giovanni Ottavio Risso, Marco Iorio. Politecnico di Torino, Corso di laurea magistrale in Ingegneria Informatica (Computer Engineering), 2022
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Abstract
Cloud computing has been a key technology in the last two decades, enabling the digital transformation that has shaped the current technology landscape. Within this trend, Kubernetes is currently the most prominent solution, promoting a model where applications are split into many loosely coupled components, each packaged as a Docker container and configured as a microservice. This paradigm effectively decouples the infrastructure - which can be scaled up or down on demand - from the application, which is then said to be cloud-native. Liquid computing deals specifically with the difficulties of a computing infrastructure that backs cloud-native workloads. Such an infrastructure is effectively "liquid" in that it can shift resources and applications from host to host.
Liqo is an open source project launched at Politecnico di Torino that enables liquid computing on top of Kubernetes: with Liqo, Kubernetes clusters can join each other in a peer-to-peer fashion to seamlessly create a larger network, with each cluster still retaining full control over its resources
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